Campaign For Liberty: Steve Bierfeldt

Steve Bierfeldt
Steve Bierfeldt
Local Coordinator
Location: Alexandria, VA
Last login: 03/21/11
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Hello,

My name is Steve Bierfeldt.  I am currently the Director of Development for the Campaign for Liberty.

I graduated Magna Cum Laude from Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Connecticut in 2006.  I served as Field Program Director in a non-profit in Arlington, Virginia until 2008 and in the spring of that year managed the Congressional campaign of Amit Singh, a Republican candidate in Virginia’s 8th District.

I served as Sponsorship Director for the Campaign for Liberty's "Rally for the Republic" in Minneapolis in September, 2008.  Recently, I co-authored the book Who is the Real Barack Obama?  I am currently blessed to act as the Director of Development for the Campaign for Liberty.

I was raised catholic my entire life, but never found a relationship with God. I did not enjoy going to church, and felt like I was simply going through the motions. When the priest sex abuse scandals came out, I saw that there were bishops and cardinals who covered up what happened, and I began to "boycott" the church.

Mr freshman year of college, I began to wonder about a number of things. I avoided many of the vices that a lot of college kids fall into, but I still did not feel like my life was fulfilling.

I began dating a girl who was an absolute sweetheart. Unfortunately my mind was really elsewhere because I wasn't set in order. I was not able to treat her as well as she deserved. I transferred schools because I thought perhaps that's what was bothering me, and we faded apart. I've thought of her and that situation nearly every day since then.

In May of 2003, the end of my freshman year of college, a friend of mine showed me a video outlining the debate between creation and evolution. Having never believed in evolution, I was very interested by it. At the end of the tape, the man teaching the seminar leads the audience in something called "The Sinner's Prayer."

The basis is "Jesus, I know I am a sinner, and I know I have broken your laws. I ask you to forgive me and please save me right now. I realize that I need you in my life."

I kind of said that in my head while watching the tape, and later on before I went to bad, I said it privately. I was not completely sure what would happen, whether or not I was once again "going through the motions," but I know now that if you are sincerely looking for God in your life, then the exact words you use are irrelevant."

From then on I was a different person. I desired to read the Bible and learn about God. I wanted to do good things not because someone told me, but because I knew Jesus had died due to my failures.

So many people hear that "Jesus died for your sins," but never know what that means. I know I didn't. It means that your sin caused Christ to be killed, so that he could pay the price for your sin. If you have even one sin on your soul when you die, you are not permitted into Heaven.

If God let everyone with sin in, Heaven would soon turn into earth. As you have sinned, you are guilty of breaking God's laws and will be judged by Him. Therefore you need to find a substitute to take the penalty. If you get a speeding ticket and the law says you must pay 100 dollars, it does not matter if you pay it, or your parents or your friend pays it for you. As long as someone pays it, then the law is satisfied.

The same thing exists for God's laws. Since you have sinned, the price of sin is death. You are not permitted into Heaven. Jesus Christ lived a perfect life however, and is willing to take your place. That is what it means when you hear someone say, "Jesus died for you."

 

The best way to contact me is through email or mobile phone.  Contact me when needed, do not worry about the time or time difference.  You can also contact me via facebook as well.


Remember, it's not work, if you enjoy it...

 

 

 

"To whom much is given, of him much shall be required." - Luke 12:48

 

 

 

Steve Bierfeldt
Director of Development
steve@campaignforliberty.com
stevebierfeldt@gmail.com
914.420.8669





Steve Bierfeldt's weblog


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Posted by Steve Bierfeldt on 04/17/09


The Forgotten Right
By Tom Mullen
Published 04/17/09

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"The moment the idea is admitted into society that property is not as sacred as the laws of God, and that there is not a force of law and public justice to protect it, anarchy and tyranny commence. If 'Thou shalt not covet' and 'Thou shalt not steal' were not commandments of Heaven, they must be made inviolable precepts in every society before it can be civilized or made free."

- John Adams (1787)[1]

It is starting to become apparent to even the most disinterested observer that something much bigger than even a worldwide recession is happening. The seeds of revolution have taken root. Iceland led the way by taking to the streets to force regime change through peaceful demonstration. The French are currently protesting en masse against their government's bailout of the banking system. One would be naive to think that these are isolated incidents. It is apparent that these are just early warning signs of a worldwide cauldron that is about to boil over, catalyzed by the financial and economic cataclysm that will plunge untold millions into poverty and desperation. 

While I applaud the peaceful demonstrations going on in France and Iceland, I also recognize that they are premature. As did Americans in the last election cycle, these Europeans are demanding "change." However, also like Americans in the last election cycle, they have failed to first answer the crucial questions, "From what? To what?" They have not looked within to assess who they are, what their society is, and what they want it to be. Therefore, they run the risk of simply replacing one oppressive tyranny for another. 

Likewise, we will never regain our freedom in America until we address the fundamental problem in our society. I say "the problem," because at the root of all of what we perceive as a myriad of problems, including the police state, the welfare state, the warfare state, the military industrial complex, the Wall Street oligopoly, the high cost of healthcare and education -- everything -- there is one philosophical problem that ultimately leads to them all: the repudiation of property rights. 

It is likely difficult for most 21st century Americans to absorb this statement, based upon the fact that they have been told now for generations that property is about greed, that accumulating property is oppression, or even that "property is theft." However, let us look back at the philosophers who inspired our founders and see what they have to say about property. Of course, as I have written here, the primary philosophical basis for the American Revolution came from Locke. What did Locke have to say about the purpose of government? 
The great and chief end, therefore, of men's uniting into commonwealths, and putting themselves under government, is the preservation of their property.[2]

Certainly this statement must be startling to most 21st century Americans, who believe that they are supposed to look to their government to fight unemployment, manage the economy, ensure access to healthcare, promote democracy abroad, and pursue a myriad of other ends outside of protecting property. Surely, Locke has over-emphasized property rights here, has he not? Certainly he is alone in his simplistic assessment of the role of government, is he not? 

He is not. In seeking guidance on how to construct our government, the American founders also looked to the ancients, particularly the Roman Republic. There, we find Cicero writing, 
For the chief purpose in the establishment of constitutional state and municipal governments was that individual property rights might be secured. For, although it was by Nature's guidance that men were drawn together into communities, it was in the hope of safeguarding their possessions that they sought the protection of cities."[3] [emphasis added]

The conditioned response of Americans today is to view these ideas as a defense of one class of people at the expense of another. We have been trained to associate "property" as a concern of the "property class," or in more common American terms, "the haves," as opposed to the "have nots." This is a great deception that has lead directly to our ruin. In fact, it is the poor and those of modest means for whom property rights are most important. It is they who, not possessing significant material wealth, must all the more jealously guard the property that they do have. In the end, however, we are all property owners when one considers the most fundamental, most important property of all: our labor itself. 

We learn from Locke that all property has its roots in labor. In order to survive, man must work to produce the means of his survival. This is true for people no matter what their financial circumstances. The doctor, the lawyer, the construction worker, the janitor -- yes, even the Wall Street financier -- must sell his efforts to his fellow man in order to acquire the means of his survival. Therefore, whoever has control over the individual's labor has control over the individual's life, and control over the individual's future. If I steal all of your possessions, you can acquire more. However, if I appropriate your labor, I own all of the property you can ever or will ever acquire. This is an undeniable reality that we have lost sight of, to our peril. 

America was founded upon the idea that each individual had an unqualified right to the fruits of his labor.[4] This more than anything was what the founders meant when they spoke the word "liberty." It was the extent to which this right was respected that made America different than every other society in history, before or since. This was the great secret that made America the engine of prosperity and innovation that it was. This is what made America the land of opportunity to change one's lot in life. It was this right that gave birth to the American dream. 

However, we no longer hold this right up above all others. Instead, we have become a society that is based upon competing groups seeking to plunder each other via the force of government. The rich plunder their neighbors with corporate bailouts, subsidies, and regulatory fascism. The middle class plunder their neighbors with Social Security, Medicare, and criminal unions. The poor are forced to accept legal plunder that they do not want and which provides them with the most miserable quality of life, when the stolen capital that underwrites it could employ them all if it weren't seized from its rightful owners. Of course, these examples are only the tip of the iceberg; there is much, much more. Virtually every political movement in America is based upon a promise to provide its followers with other people's property. 

This scenario is neither unprecedented nor has it been unrecognized by the great lights of liberty. Bastiat wrote, 

Men naturally rebel against the injustice of which they are victims. Thus, when plunder is organized by law for the profit of those who make the law, all the plundered classes try somehow to enter - by peaceful or revolutionary means - into the making of laws. According to their degree of enlightenment, these plundered classes may propose one of two entirely different purposes when they attempt to attain political power: Either they may wish to stop lawful plunder, or they may wish to share in it.[5]

This vision of Bastiat's has become reality in America. However, it cannot go on forever. Fortunately for humanity, a society based upon legal plunder is ultimately unsustainable. Just as respect for property rights provides the means to prosperity, violation of them leads to poverty and want. As force replaces voluntary exchange, productivity decreases, and subsequently more force is required to plunder even more. This cycle repeats until society is reduced to an authoritarian nightmare, the first signs of which are becoming apparent in the former "land of the free." If the people wake up, the nightmare can end. If they continue to slumber, the nightmare can get much, much worse. 

This is the great truth that we must rediscover before any revolution can be successful. Before we commit to "change," we must answer the questions, "From what? To What?" The answers to those questions must be "from a nation of looters to a nation of free individuals who acquire property in the only civilized manner: via voluntary exchange." We must reject the use of force as the means to pursue our happiness, and renew our faith in freedom. Once this great work has been accomplished, let the revolution begin. 

Notes 
[1] Adams, John A Defense of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America (1787) 
[2] Locke's Second Treatise Ch. IX, Sec. 124 
[3] Cicero, Marcus Tullius De Officiis Book II Chapter XXI 
[4] "Individuals" who were included in the system. Of course, the founders recognized but did not remedy the obvious contradiction to this inherent in slavery. 
[5] Bastiat, Frederic, The Law 


Copyright © 2009 Tom Mullen



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Showing comments 1—1 of 1

Posted 04/18/09

Thunderbird
Kealakekua, HI
Labor is private property. It used to be protected under the constitution. What happened? People lost focus and then the nerve to protect their private property.

My observation is that the banks are being bailed out because those institutions are the means of control of the people. Those who control the flow of money control the people.

I can remember when I was paid in cash for my labor. How many of you can remember that?

I am a traveler and have lived in many different places. Physical property ownership is cumbersome for a traveler. But my labor easily provides for the necessities of life for me and my family. But over the years taxes on my labor have increased along with inflated prices so now it is much more difficult to provide.

On the other hand those that have accumulated property and stayed put have seen the value of their property increase. Property owners have many tax write offs. The tax code favors these property owners that aquire more houses than they need. Tax write offs offset taxes that would normally be paid on income.

In essence, labor is carrying a great load of taxes to pay with no write offs, while property owners are benfiting from the write offs they enjoy.

Many young people starting out in life are suffering from this imbalance of taxes. Due to price inflation many young people cannot afford to purchase a home or provide for their basic necessities.There is no tax relief for them; only suffering from the excessive burden of over taxation, by not only the federal government but by state government as well.

What I have found to be true in my life is that the scope of my Liberty is directly related to the fruits of my labor. If the fruits of my labor are excessively taxed by government or lowered by the high cost of living where I live then my liberties are deminished. It is no accident that many wealthy people got their wealth from the sweat equity of cheap labor. We that labor for our essentials have to be careful to protect ourselves from those individuals and corporations that would exploit us; as well as politicians that are in business to tax our labor.

For me the only real private property is my labor. It is being ravished by taxes but it is still mine. As far as physical property is concerned we only possess it by title deed. Stop paying taxes on it and it is gone.









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