As the 2024 election approaches, the Democrats are much concerned with what they call "Insurrection." They, of course, refer to the events at the Capitol building on January 6, 2021, a day that will live in political opportunism for the party now planning the reelection of Joe Biden.
Democrats objected in the courts or in the halls of Congress to every Republican presidential election victory of the 21st century.
Democrats who cited the pandemic to justify such electoral anomalies during the 2020 election afterwards proposed legislation to make the changes permanent.
There are then the occasional experiments with the freedoms of speech and religion, conducted by, inter alia, government meddling with social media platforms and official persecution of those opposed, as matters of faith, to homosexuality, transsexuality, and abortion.
In that accusation, which is in one sense or another repeated in the twenty-seven clauses chronicling the wrongs compelling separation, the Declaration tracks the argument of John Locke's Second Treatise of Government, Chapter 19, "On the Dissolution of Government." Locke departed from many predecessors in ascribing the dissolution of government not primarily to the people's rebellious impulses, but to abuses by those in power.
In the latter work dissolution is occasioned by inadequate power in the government and seditious or presumptuous impulses in the population.
According to Locke, dissolution of the government occurs when the legislature is altered, by the executive assuming or hindering its functions or interfering with the "Ways of election".
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2024/02/what_does_an_insurrection_look_like.html
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