NAPOLITANO: The Only Moral War Americans Ever Fought Was the Revolution
Rev. Mather Byles, a Loyalist, famously said, “Which is better — to be ruled by one tyrant three thousand miles away or by three thousand tyrants one mile away?”
Gerald Celente and Judge Andrew Napolitano held their “Celente and the Judge” YouTube broadcast on Wednesday and spoke about the Fourth of July holiday in the U.S.
NAPOLITANO: Independence Day, of course, marks the beginning of the last just, moral war that Americans ever fought, which was a war to secede from a tyrant, King George III.
Most people can only probably name about a half a dozen wars that the U.S. fought since then but there’s been well into the hundreds, but they were all wars of opportunity, or wars of empire. The only moral one was the Revolution.
Napolitano noted in a recent column that Boston’s Rev. Mather Byles, a Loyalist, famously said, “Which is better — to be ruled by one tyrant three thousand miles away or by three thousand tyrants one mile away?”