I feel it is always good strategy to stand up for the right. To stand up for the right, even when it is unpopular. Perhaps I should say, especially when it is unpopular... I think it is time for every patriotic American, to join with neighbors to study the Constitution...

– Ezra Taft Benson, Former Secretary of Agriculture, Eisenhower Admin., Stand up for freedom, 1966



If we lose freedom here,there is no place to escape to. This is the last stand on Earth...You and I have a rendezvous with destiny. We will preserve for our children this, the last best hope of man on Earth, or we will sentence them to take the last step into a thousand years of darkness. 

– Ronald W. Reagan,

A Time for Choosing, 1964


The design of Community Action Committee™ (CAC) meetings is to assist in creating the environment that can educate and activate its members to changes within their local communities.  The Framers understood the importance of dealing with government on the most local of levels. Following the Jeffersonian model, CAC meetings are held throughout the country and meet in groups of no less than four (4) and no more than ten (10) families, each of whom are located in the same, general geographical area.  A ‘Family’ can be considered a single individual Member or a husband and wife team. 

CACs are encouraged to meet as often as feasible, but the frequency is left to each individual group. At the meetings, the first portion is dedicated to discussion around The 12 Principles of Liberty™ and the United in Liberty core curriculum.  During the second half of the CAC meeting, local issues are discussed, weighed against The 12 Principles of Liberty™ and solutions proposed if necessary.  CAC members are encouraged to participate in and implement these changes in their local community and neighborhoods.  Whether the concerns are with County/City Governments, School Districts, or even as simple as Home Owner Associations, this is the time to discover the problems in your communities and, most importantly, take on assignments to volunteer and do something about the issues addressed.  Members will have opportunities to work together, formulate action plans, and implement them together as a team. 

 

We hear from so many concerned individuals who say, “I am fed up with what is going on with our government, but I just do not know what to do it about it.” United in Liberty, by way of our Community Action Committees, is the solution to this dilemma.

To see if there is already a CAC in your neighborhood, please Contact Us.

If you would like to form a CAC in your neighborhood, please gather at least three other Members and then fill out our Charter Application. Once your application is approved, you will receive an instruction guide which will assist you in forming and running your local CAC meetings.