In middle age, I fell in love with my country all over again during a tour of England's stately homes. The sight of all that grandeur reserved for a hereditary few to live in mansions at the expense of miserable lives for so many was a reminder of what Jefferson, Adams and the rest resisted translating to America in 1776.
Today, as we celebrate what they gave us--"a republic, if you can keep it" in Benjamin Franklin's words--with flags, parades, fireworks and speeches, it may help to remember he was answering an anxious question at the close of the Constitutional Convention, "What have we got, a republic or a monarchy?"
America was not inevitable. As children, we drink in our freedoms like mother's milk and, except on the Fourth of July, may forget what it took, and still takes, to give us such nourishment.
At the age of 81, Franklin told the Convention that "when you assemble a number of men to have the advantage of their joint wisdom, you inevitably assemble with those men, all their prejudices, their passions, their errors of opinion, their local interests, and their selfish views."
In this year of political turmoil, as men and women bring all that and more to the continuing American debate, it may help to remember how we got here and what we avoided along the way.
Showing posts with label Independence Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Independence Day. Show all posts
Friday, July 04, 2008
Thursday, July 05, 2007
Bush as George Washington
The cliché about people gone over the edge used to be thinking they were Napoleon. George Bush, who never falters in his patriotism, is convinced he’s George Washington.
The delusional attempt to impersonate a great military commander is understandable in those who feel overwhelmed by stress and impotent to deal with it.
Yesterday Bush told a huge hangarful of Air National Guard members: “Our first Independence Day celebration took place in a midst of a war--a bloody and difficult struggle that would not end for six more years before America finally secured her freedom.
“Like those early patriots, you’re fighting a new and unprecedented war--pledging your lives and honor to defend our freedom and way of life.”
The President did not wear the dress-up flight suit of the “Mission Accomplished” speech on the aircraft carrier so no one had the heart to tell him that Iraq is not colonial America, the al Qaeda folks are not Redcoats and he is not Washington crossing the Delaware--not until January 2009 when the proper attire may be a straightjacket.
The delusional attempt to impersonate a great military commander is understandable in those who feel overwhelmed by stress and impotent to deal with it.
Yesterday Bush told a huge hangarful of Air National Guard members: “Our first Independence Day celebration took place in a midst of a war--a bloody and difficult struggle that would not end for six more years before America finally secured her freedom.
“Like those early patriots, you’re fighting a new and unprecedented war--pledging your lives and honor to defend our freedom and way of life.”
The President did not wear the dress-up flight suit of the “Mission Accomplished” speech on the aircraft carrier so no one had the heart to tell him that Iraq is not colonial America, the al Qaeda folks are not Redcoats and he is not Washington crossing the Delaware--not until January 2009 when the proper attire may be a straightjacket.
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