Southern National
Congress Report From The Chairman
February 2, 2009
To the SNC Family:
Warm greetings in a cold season from Tom
Moore.
With this message I’m inaugurating a regular
monthly Report from the Chairman, providing updates on the SNC’s
progress and commentary on developments that relate to our
important mission. I hope you’ll find it useful as you continue
working with your State Delegations and fellow Southerners to
build a credible, authoritative, and legitimate forum to defend
the interests of the Southern States and People.
UPDATE AND PROGRESS REPORT
While it may not seem this way unless you’ve
actually been involved in one of the ongoing projects and
committees, we have not been idle since December 7. Far from
it. Here are the major projects and initiatives we’ve been
working on.
1. Remonstrances and Petitions for a
Redress of Grievances.
The Remonstrances have been sent to all State
Delegations, twice, in fact, just to make sure. But if any State
Chairmen have not received them, please let me know and I’ll make
sure you get them. You should have the text file version and the
beautiful ‘typeset’ version rendered by Collin Houseal. The
reaction I’ve received, both as to content and appearance, has
been uniformly favourable. And even on those points where
correspondents have disagreed with our positions, we have been
credited with a mature and thoughtful effort. Even in cases of
dissent, our resolutions have stimulated thought and debate and
demonstrated our seriousness of purpose.
State Delegations are responsible for sending
the Remonstrances to your own US Congressional Delegations and
State and local officials you deem appropriate; likewise any local
media you have access to. “Headquarters” will send them to the
President and other US Government officials. And yes, I know, I
know. Few if any of these wretches are likely to pay attention to
them, although we mustn’t rule it out altogether. The point is
that we have tried; that we are exhausting all peaceful
remedies in the exercise of our citizenship responsibilities. If
the politicians who are supposed to be accountable to us the
citizen, voter, and taxpayer refuse to heed our petitions, then
the moral responsibility lies on them for whatever outcomes
follow.
2. Virtual
Congress.
The ad hoc Virtual Congress (VC)
Committee, composed of Mike Crane (GA), Doc Smith (TN), Jason
Waggoner (TX), Paul Vaughn (TN), and Terry Compton (VA), have been
working diligently since December to create a secure, online forum
in which the Congress can continue to operate – debate and vote on
measures – just as if we were in actual session, except that
Delegates will be at their keyboards instead of in an assembly
hall. The VC team has conducted several tests of the various
components, and Committee Chairman Mike Crane predicts we will be
ready to launch it sometime in February.
This is an extremely important initiative for
the SNC. It will allow us to maintain our momentum, which would
be problematical if we were limited to one physical session per
year. It will allow us to speak authoritatively on behalf of the
Southern States and People in “real time,” responding to the major
events that are unfolding around us. Concurrently, it will
provide occasions for news stories, allowing us to build our
visibility and credibility in the Southern community. We owe a
great debt of thanks to Mike Crane and his VC team for applying
their highly specialized talents and skills so assiduously. Look
for an announcement sometime in February, and for guidance on how
to participate if you’re a Delegate.
3. Information Technology (IT)
Committee
The VC Committee has been so successful – or
so it appears; we won’t know for sure until we launch – that I
asked Mike Crane and his VC team to convert to a standing IT
Committee once the Virtual Congress is operational. This effort
will rely on the same talent that built the VC, plus Collin Houseal (AR). Their mission is to look at all our IT needs and
bring about a comprehensive IT program that gives us the maximum
efficiency and effectiveness. For example, one initiative is
expanding our e-mail address list (in essence, our membership).
After roughly 120 days of sending out invitations, Mike has
doubled the size of our confirmed List. This ongoing process is
producing a growth in Southerners interested in the SNC in some
fashion by about 18% per month. Again, many thanks to the IT
Committee for this vital work.
And though this is not, strictly
speaking, an IT Committee function, Doc Smith has organized a
follow-up contact effort for all those who queried the website
recently or applied to become a Delegate. This is an interim
measure until the IT Committee perfects an automated response.
My deepest thanks to Doc for this extra but vital effort.
4. Media Committee.
Jonathan Ingram (GA) has kindly agreed to
serve as Chairman of the Media Committee. If you were at the
First Congress, you’ll recall that the Media Committee is one of
two standing committees created under the By-Laws, attesting to
its importance. (The other is the Finance Committee). Terry
Compton will assist, as will Kirkpatrick Sale (SC). But I’m sure
Jonathan can use additional volunteers for this essential mission
of seeking new and creative ways to tell our story. If you’d like
to serve, please let him know, or contact me via e-mail and I’ll
pass your name on to him. Thanks to Jonathan and his media team.
5. Finance and Banking.
On January 16 I met with Dr. John Cook (SC),
Finance Committee Chairman, in Aiken, SC to discuss the
all-important task of raising funds, and I spoke at another event
in Columbia, SC where some funds were actually pledged. John has
taken on perhaps the hardest and most critical mission of all and
will need all our help. We are all in his debt for assuming this
responsibility. I urge y’all with relevant experience to
volunteer to join him and his other Committee members, including
Peter Gemma (FL) and Treasurer Dennis Blanton (SC) to help raise
funds. Our expenses are not enormous, but we do have some
recurring costs and they will grow as the SNC continues to grow.
Treasurer Dennis Blanton is moving forward to
set up an SNC bank account, presumably done by the time you read
this. We’re now in position to receive and disburse funds.
6. Next
Congress.
Vice Chairman Mark Thomey (LA) has agreed to
put his considerable management and organisational skills to work
on our behalf to plan the next actual Congress in the fall of
2009. Cordial thanks to Mark and to the Site Selection Committee,
Steve Betsill (AL), George Crockett (NC), Mike Hicks (VA), and Pam
Baker (VA). Initially it looked like the Site Selection folks had
settled on Guntersville State Park and Resort in northeast
Alabama. Our Board of Governors has approved that choice. But
subsequently new information has emerged that caused the Site
Selection team to re-visit this decision.
In any case, there does appear to be a
consensus to hold the next event in Alabama. Mark Thomey also
recommends that we aim at an earlier date than December (as in
2008) so that we avoid conflicting with folks’ Thanksgiving and
Christmas plans.
More later; stay tuned.
‘WE ARE THE SEED CORN.’
I deeply appreciate all the e-mails that
followed the First Congress. Y’all are a high-spirited as well as
public-spirited bunch of folks, and I’m always glad to hear from
you, especially with news or media links to events that have a
bearing on our work in the SNC. (chairman@southernnationalcongress.org).
Many of you have asked me to post the
opening remarks at Kanuga, the “Chairman’s Charge to the
Delegates.” I’m chagrined to report that the Charge was not
written down. In fact, I almost never speak from a prepared
text. But the issues I raised are of vital importance not just to
us in the SNC, but to all Southerners. Consequently, I feel I owe
y’all a written commentary that can be posted on the SNC website.
I decided to expand, illustrate, and better support these themes
in what will be in effect a Second SNC Manifesto called
“Remonstrance, Resistance, and Restoration.” In this manifesto
I’m developing the ideas on the sources of legitimacy and moral
authority, the exercise of individual and collective sovereignty,
the doctrine of the interposition of the middle magistrate; moral
and lawful (and Biblical) resistance to tyranny, and the
restoration of liberty and justice in a society that has fallen
under tyranny. This is a major undertaking, and so far the pure
management responsibilities of the Chairman have taken
precedence. This is why I’m so grateful to our fine Vice Chairman
and leaders of the various key committees for assuming much of
this burden, both now and in the future. Please be patient with
me. When I said from the podium in Hendersonville that my flaws
and deficiencies weigh heavily upon me, I spoke only the truth.
‘Servant leaders.’
In that connection, here’s the kind of
leadership that I hope all of us in SNC positions can provide –
servant leadership. A vignette that says it all, far better than
I ever could, came to me on Robert E. Lee’s birthday, which we
just celebrated on January 19. It’s my practice to read something
about Lee on his day, and I thought I was intimately acquainted
with the details of his life. But here’s something new I learned
(or had forgotten) from Douglas Southall Freeman’s splendid
biography.
As you may recall, after the War
Lee accepted the presidency of struggling Washington College in
Lexington, VA. Like all other Southern institutions, it was
impoverished by four years of conflict and enemy depredation.
Lee took the job (though he could have earned far more elsewhere)
because he believed his duty was to help re-build the shattered
country by educating its young men. The most idolized man in
the South, he often hosted overnight visitors – prominent
businessmen, civic leaders, and former Confederate officers.
These unthinking gentlemen, after arriving through Lexington’s
unpaved and muddy streets, would often leave their footwear
outside the bedroom door to be cleaned, as had been the custom in
pre-War days when servants were plentiful and hospitality was
expansive. But the Lee family lived a simple life and had no
servants. Quietly, without a word, the South’s greatest hero
would gather up the muddy boots after his guests had retired,
clean them thoroughly, and replace them by the door.
I can think of no conduct that
displays the nobility of the man better than this. And I can
think of no better example of servant leadership that Robert E.
Lee. This is the spirit we need to cultivate in ourselves if
we are to earn the respect and trust of the Southern people.
It’s not enough just to be right and to speak truthfully about
current affairs, important as that is. Many of our fellow
Southerners, people all around us and maybe even some of us in the
SNC, are suffering – from foreclosures, layoffs, loss of value in
retirement pensions. Many of our Kentucky brethren are
without electricity during an unprecedented ice storm. We
need to pray for them in particular, and we need to show genuine
concern for those in our community who are struggling and hurting.
Maybe this is trite, but it’s true: “People don’t care how much
you know until they know how much you care.” If we are to lead
our People through the dark times ahead, we have to be willing to
clean their muddy boots.
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