by J. Kennerly Davis

As our fall elections rapidly approach and we consider the differing positions taken on particular issues by the individual candidates competing for our votes, it is vitally important that we first carefully consider a fundamental question not on the ballot but tied closely to the deeper meaning of this and every election. Itโs a deceptively simple question, but one that encompasses the essence of every significant policy issue that confronts our Commonwealth.
The question for us to ponder before we vote is, simply: Where do our rights come from?
The most basic decision that the members of every society must make is how to define the place of the individual in the society, and from there to determine the relationship of the individual to the group, the distribution of legitimate authority, and the system of government.
In any system of government, ultimate authority, or sovereignty, must be located somewhere in the system for the government to function. For most of recorded history, in most places, sovereignty has been located in anti-democratic authoritarian rulers supported by the dominant classes from which they emerged: monarchs and their nobles, military strongmen and their armed forces, party leaders and their ruling political parties.
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