First Principles: Responsibility, In Order To Be Reasonable, Must Be Limited To Objects Within the Power of the Responsible Party

“Responsibility, in order to be reasonable, must be limited to objects within the power of the responsible party, and in order to be effectual, must relate to operations of that power, of which a ready and proper judgment can be formed by the constituents.” – James Madison (1788)

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Thought For the Day: Music Is the Greatest Communication In the World

“Music is the greatest communication in the world. Even if people don’t understand the language that you’re singing in, they still know good music when they hear it.” – Lou Rawls

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Of Space and Time

Of Space and Time
by Michael Doyle

I sat back as the nurse checked my vitals
Thinking of all the drama queens and teen idols
Starting there, as I sincerely try to explain
All that I have seen, and to try to make it plain

Words and pictures I had fused into expression
Vagueness and specificity made their impression
Transforming time and words into artistic space
All of the moments spent left their lasting trace

Astral aliens are superior in their secret identity
Beautiful as they are in pages of comic book tapestry
It was a different time in what seems a different age
As story after story played out on the ragged page

Honed styles and thematic concepts in each edition
Offered us all a perceptive analysis of the human condition
Hip to the panels and meaningful balloons of dialogue
It was as if stereo was confined in a functional analog

It was storytelling that smoothly seemed to flow
Illustrations marking time with expressions that show
All those words really had no vivid way to say
What it was to make it through an artist's busy day

Astral aliens are superior in their secret identity
Beautiful as they are in pages of comic book tapestry
It was a different time in what seems a different age
As story after story played out on the ragged page

Whistling past yesterday's graveyard of passing memory
Life's storm clouds are felt through their familiarity
Mine too were micro-novels in vivid panels of cartoons
Those were pieced together in study hall before noon

Each in scrawled passages of colors and fine lines
Begging to be something that a life lived refines
Somewhere between almost real and feigned abstraction
Were stories etched out as a moment's distraction

Astral aliens are superior in their secret identity
Beautiful as they are in pages of comic book tapestry
It was a different time in what seems a different age
As story after story played out on the ragged page

(c) April 9, 2025 Michael Doyle
All Rights Reserved

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Thought For the Day: Art Is An Infinitely Precious Good, A Draught Both Refreshing and Cheering Which Restores the Stomach and the Mind To the Natural Equilibrium of the Ideal

“Art is an infinitely precious good, a draught both refreshing and cheering which restores the stomach and the mind to the natural equilibrium of the ideal.” – Charles Baudelaire

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First Principles: Never Suppose That In Any Possible Situation Or Under Any Circumstances, It is Best For You To Do A Dishonorable Thing, However Slightly

“Give up money, give up fame, give up science, give the earth itself and all it contains rather than do an immoral act. And never suppose that in any possible situation, or under any circumstances, it is best for you to do a dishonorable thing, however slightly so it may appear to you.” – Thomas Jefferson (1785)

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An Introduction To First Principles

There is but one straight course, and that is to seek truth and pursue it steadily.” —George Washington (1795)

In the affirmative:

Though the founding principles of the United States were drawn from another era, these principles remain essential to comprehend in the contemporary world. This is especially true for the Republic of the United States of America. Yet, these principles need to be understood globally. This republic is predicated on the fundamental notion that certain rights are provided to all of humanity from the providence of God. These are not government-provided privileges that are quickly taken away by the government. These rights are unalienable. This means that the government, by the matter of natural rights, should never seek to strip away these fundamental rights, as it is not the government’s prerogative.


This very issue was brought to bear in drafting the Declaration of Independence. After decades of an unspoken agreement that the British government would leave British America essentially to its own governance, the British government began systematically levying excessive taxation on the colonists. Further, there were other demands, such as the quartering of British troops in American homes. Many Americans believed these impositions to be intolerable. This was especially true because these conditions were imposed on the Americans without any representative voice given in return (Galiani & Torrens, 2018).

This led to a growing resistance movement. Today, the taxes paid by the middle class in the United States of America are higher than they were at the point of the American Revolution. In today’s America, the elite again seeks to disenfranchise the voices of nearly half the nation to impose the urbane voice of metropolitan America over the more rural America that the elitists feel is somehow backward from the agenda of so-called progressives.  The interesting thing about the progressive agenda is it is regressive in seeking to consolidate power into the hands of a technocratic elite and out of the hands of The People.   This must never be allowed to happen again.  Our founders fought hard against the idea of any sort of aristocracy taking power in the republic.

          One of the first references to why this notion of the natural equality of mankind in the nation’s history is The Declaration of Independence. This foundational document seeks to preserve the ideal that all mankind was created equal in the ability to pursue their best outcomes in life, regardless of color, creed, natural gender, or any other qualification.  While it does not bestow a guaranteed equal outcome, it does set out that all of humanity has the equality of opportunity starting at God’s foot and having no other king or unequal superiors in life without merit. This is bestowed on us all by God above and not to be hindered by anyone below. None of humanity is born to be enslaved by others.

          The authority given to others is not based on any inheritance or inherent right of one or some over the rest of humanity.  Given the agreement made under the philosophical ideal of social compact and representative government, it is a necessary evil.  This is necessary rather than living in anarchy because mankind does not consist of a society of angels.  Humanity is not necessarily all that humane.  History has shown this time and again. To circumnavigate the brutish world written about by Thomas Hobbes and yet not succumb to the absolute sovereign, Hobbes believed it necessary (Hobbes, 1651). The People have come to understand the need to submit to acceptable authority and leadership for the purposes of order and the preservation of safety.

          This government’s three primary purposes were national security, criminal justice, and civil law.  The goals sought were to guard against that Hobbesian brutish world.  It was to do so by acting to preserve a right to live without fear of death and violence. Such a government would also act to protect property rights. All of this is necessary to preserve all societies.  This, too, must be balanced with the rights of all others in any given society. The right to protect the rights of one must be subjugated to the rights of all others to have their rights protected too. In the midst of this balancing, it is also necessary to provide a safety net of last resort for those who genuinely need assistance to prevent starvation and destitution. 

          As Madison has pointed out, though, we must avoid going too far into the areas of the general welfare. This exceeds the bounds of the Constitution. This constitutional excess reaches into other areas of contemporary government too. For example, administrative agencies are a problematic overreach that blends areas of government that are intended to be separated into a system of checks and balances. Further, the delegated roles of the executive, judicial, and legislative branches have become blurred at best. This must be rectified. This came about because the nation has not adequately disseminated the founding principles of this nation. 

In seeking justice for some in our nation’s laws, we have often provided less justice for all. We should heed Aesop and stop grasping at shadows lest we lose the substance of what this nation is meant to be as the exemplary city on the hill, as a shining example of the fruits of rational freedom and liberty.

(c) April 8, 2025 Michael Doyle All Rights Reserved

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Losing Light

Losing Light
by Michael Doyle

In modern life's twist
Where nothing is missed
We earn by the moment
Felt in every torment

Exposing our inner soul
To continuously extol
That which wins the money
False tears seem funny

Reborn into a hard day's night
It's the hurt exposed to light
When forced for eight days a week
To find something new to speak

Trained to lie, forced to cry
All for the glory of the camera's eye
Influencers have gone far too far
To be social media's darling star

Wickedness might lead to some dramedy
But the worst is played out in the family
When a child is deprived of individuality
Might that be bordering on brutality?

Losing light becomes the sacrifice
Cruelly clinging to the artifice
Of pretending something that is not
Wile true motherhood cannot be forgot

(c) April 8, 2025 Michael Doyle
All Rights Reserved
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First Principles: Nature Intended Me For the Tranquil Pursuits of Science, By Rendering Them My Supreme Delight

“Nature intended me for the tranquil pursuits of science, by rendering them my supreme delight. – Thomas Jefferson

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Thought For the Day: It Has Become Appallingly Obvious That Our Technology Has Exceeded Our Humanity

“It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity.” – Albert Einstein

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Dollar Days

Dollar Days
by Michael Doyle

Here in the noonday's faded haze
Stuck in the cheap seats of dollar days
Daydreams wear a sense of modesty
That sneaks in past our integrity

There are poems written as confessional
At the realization that no one is special
No more special than anyone around
But then again, that's where special is found

As the world moves on, we do our part
Each of us carries what's in our hearts
From a Dickensian chronicle of life's garden
We find ourselves reflecting on our fortune

A double flash of a peace sign and a smile
Some live life in their own particular style
Fame knows the game of wide-eyed impersonation
To which the world turns in its timid relation

Not to be pretentious or seem overly clever
The problem with immortality is that it's forever
But as with all things, the time does come
And there you are with your toes wading in the kingdom

As the world moves on, we do our part
Each of us carries what's in our hearts
From a Dickensian chronicle of life's garden
We find ourselves reflecting on our fortune

(c) April 7, 2025 Michael Doyle
All Rights Reserved
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