A majority of college students support shouting down speakers
From Moral Majority to Vocal Minority
Super Tuesday is the day when the most states hold contests to pick a presidential nominee, the most voters can go to the polls, and the most delegates are allotted to candidates. (For its history, go here.)
Fourteen states and American Samoa held nominating contests yesterday, awarding a total of 1,357 delegates. These constitute 34 percent of the nearly four thousand delegates available through the process.
How Joe Biden won the day
Here’s what we know so far.
Joe Biden won nine states last night, seizing control of the Democratic presidential process. He scored a dramatic upset victory in Texas and surprising wins in Minnesota and Massachusetts and now leads the race with 453 delegates.
Bernie Sanders won California, Colorado, Utah, and his home state of Vermont. He is in second with 382 delegates.
Elizabeth Warren did not win a single state and now has fifty delegates. Michael Bloomberg managed to win American Samoa and now has forty-four delegates. Maine remains too close to call this morning.
Before yesterday, less than 5 percent of the delegates had been allotted. After Super Tuesday, 38 percent have been determined.
“Across Europe, this wall will fall”
Whatever your beliefs regarding President Trump or the Democrats seeking to replace him, it’s worth remembering that yesterday’s primaries gave nearly 130 million people a chance to participate in our democracy. They would constitute the tenth largest nation on earth.
In Give Me Liberty: A History of America’s Exceptional Idea, Richard Brookhiser explores the history of liberty in the US through many of our most significant historic documents. Here are some of the lesser known:
The minutes of the Jamestown General Assembly in 1619 established the principle of local control or home rule in the New World.
The Flushing Remonstrance of 1657 mandated that local government “allow everyone to have his own belief,” helping to establish the principle of religious liberty.
The Constitution of the New York Manumission Society, founded in 1785, promoted the freeing of slaves and the abolition of slavery in New York.
The Monroe Doctrine made America an advocate for freedom in the world.
The Seneca Falls Declaration in 1848 promoted rights for women, including the right to vote.
The “New Colossus,” a poem written to raise money for a pedestal for the Statue of Liberty, welcomed to our country “huddled masses yearning to be free.”
And Ronald Reagan’s “Tear Down This Wall” speech in 1987 extended liberty to Eastern Europe. He concluded by proclaiming, “Across Europe, this wall will fall. For it cannot withstand faith; it cannot withstand truth. The wall cannot withstand freedom.”
The freedom for which President Reagan appealed was a freedom 130 million Americans had the right to exercise yesterday.
Demonstrators cancel Klobuchar’s rally
Such freedom is changing in our culture, however.
In the Old World, the majority submitted to the minority, specifically to the king and the ruling monarchical class. In the New World, as the documents above show, we sought to replace the rule of kings with the rule of the people.
Today, however, we are witnessing the rise of a new ruling class: the minority who insist on their rights so loudly that they are intimidating the majority.
When Sen. Amy Klobuchar returned to her home state of Minnesota Sunday night to speak, a group of protesters entered the room, took over the stage, and refused to leave. Their demonstration prompted her campaign to cancel the event.
The LGBTQ population of America is 4.5 percent today. However, the advocacy group GLAAD successfully persuaded networks to make LGBTQ characters on prime-time broadcast TV exceed 10 percent of the total. They now want 20 percent representation by 2025.
There was a day when the Moral Majority made news. Now it’s the Vocal Minority.
How to prove our love and faith
Super Tuesday was an expression of participatory democracy in which every vote counts as much as every other vote. Such egalitarian inclusion for those who defend biblical morality is declining rapidly.
From the trial of Peter and the apostles (Acts 4:3) to the stoning of Stephen (Acts 7:58), the “great persecution against the church in Jerusalem” (Acts 8:1), and the beheading of James (Acts 12:2), Jesus’ followers have always faced the same opposition as did our Lord (John 15:18).
Our response, like that of Jesus, must be to pray for those who persecute us (Matthew 5:44; Luke 23:34) and love those who do not love us (Luke 6:27). In fact, we prove our love by the degree to which it is not returned and our faith by its cost.
How will you demonstrate your love and faith today?