James Madison Returns
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A Thanksgiving Proclamation 2025

By the President of the United States
James Madison (Were he President Today)**

The year now drawing toward its close has been marked by trials not unknown to the human condition; yet, amidst the difficulties that attend a free and populous Republic, the hand of Providence hath not withdrawn itself from our favored land. The liberties for which our fathers contended remain secure beneath the guardianship of the Constitution; the Union, though often exercised by diverse opinions, still advances in its proper orbit; and the arts of peace, industry, and knowledge continue to enlarge the happiness of our fellow-citizens.
While the national Government is restrained by its charter from prescribing forms or modes of religious worship, it is both suitable and becoming that the people of the United States should, of their own free will, unite in acknowledging the many blessings which no human policy alone can bestow. And though the Executive cannot rightfully compel observance in matters of conscience, he may, without violating that sacred line of separation, recommend to the people an occasion for grateful reflection.
In this spirit, I therefore designate Thursday, the Twenty-Seventh of November, to be observed by those who are so disposed as a Day of Thanksgiving and Peaceful Recollection.
Let it be a season in which citizens, assembling as their faiths and judgments incline them, shall render thanks for the bounties of the year; and for the continued capacity of this free people to govern themselves through reasoned debate rather than force.
Let us likewise commend to the Author of all good the welfare of the widowed, the orphaned, the poor, and the afflicted; beseeching that compassion and public virtue, no less than prosperity, may characterize the American example. And let us remember that gratitude is best shown not in words alone, but in renewed fidelity to the principles of liberty, moderation, and mutual respect—principles which, when faithfully observed, preserve both the dignity of the individual and the harmony of the whole.
Given under my hand at the City of Washington, this 24th  day of November, in the Year of our Lord Two Thousand and Twenty-Five, and of the Independence of the United States the Two Hundred and Forty-Ninth.
James Madison
President of the United States

Letters to America

9/30/2023

 

Dear Friends,
You must forgive my "in absentia" status of the near 2 months past.  Matters of tending to renovations to the manor have occupied my very being, given their importance.  During this time away, I have witnessed events in the political and governing spectrum that are without precedent and of great concern.  I speak most directly to the matters of indictment of a former President.
As to the indictments of former President Donald Trump:  If such was done in accordance with the law and no violation of his Constitutional rights was manifested, then it shall be a matter for the courts to decide.  I confess that I am far more concerned with the personal motivation and political agenda that has precipitated these indictments.  Though the sheer number of indictments as well as the 91 counts collectively are unprecedented, the outcome of the trials that follow shall be equally unprecedented.  However, they shall, indeed, form new precedent and there-in lies the danger.  History is rife with unintended, debilitating social, legal, and governing consequences from such far-reaching and significant legal proceedings.  It is critically important that such matters that may affect Constitutional interpretation have only the highest moral and ethical application of the human spirit, lest further decay of the same be promulgated.  I fear that the current social and political environment is such that I have little hope for a positive outcome where the United States is the better for it.  However, I shall pray for the imposition of righteous reason in these matters.  I remain...

Your most humble and obedient servant,


JM



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