I appreciate the 4th
of July and all it historically stands for – liberty, and the willingness of
men and women to risk their lives, fortunes and sacred honor to have it. Many
of the signers of the Declaration of Independence for which the day is famous
actually lost those things for their ideal of liberty. Freedom isn’t free.
Freedom – liberty – is important to me. I once put my own life on the line and swore to uphold and defend the Constitution of the
I like fireworks, and bands and celebrations, and I have
always enjoyed observing the festivities of “The 4th.” An American
flag waves in front of my house as I write. Long may it wave.
But I fear for that flag, and I fear for this nation that it
represents.
I have difficulty this year getting excited about the 4th
of July.
What really are we celebrating?
We are remembering what used to be –what used to exist in our ideals, in our founding principles. We are celebrating things to which we once at least aspired.
What really are we celebrating?
We are remembering what used to be –what used to exist in our ideals, in our founding principles. We are celebrating things to which we once at least aspired.
We never completely reached those ideals, but, at least, we
wanted to.
We intended to.
We tried.
Now, I fear, we have, as a nation, completely given up on those aspirations. We have sold our national soul to expedience. We have surrendered our highest intentions to our lowest inclinations.
Now, I fear, we have, as a nation, completely given up on those aspirations. We have sold our national soul to expedience. We have surrendered our highest intentions to our lowest inclinations.
We still wave our flags, and we still trot out the patriotic
blather of speeches. We hold church services and public gatherings to cheer for
our troops in their unnecessary wars, and we keep sending those brave young
people off to “fight for their country.”
But, in the name of “freedom,” aren’t we really mainly
sending them to extend the American Empire? Aren’t we really using up these
precious lives just so we can be the biggest bully in the sandpile? Aren’t we
really committing internationally some of the very same evils for which we
condemned the British in our classic Declaration
of Independence? (http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/declaration_transcript.html)
For my generation, there was Vietnam . We drank the poisonous patriotic
Kool-Aid while politicians talked of dominoes falling, and we marched proudly away.
Most of us had no idea then how our own government was lying to us. We thought
that our greatest danger was from some peacenik burning a flag. We didn’t
realize that our true hazard might be masked by a pseudo-patriotism.
At least in those days, we had the integrity to be outraged when we finally learned that our President was breaking the law.
At least in those days, we had the integrity to be outraged when we finally learned that our President was breaking the law.
And now? Our
once-great nation has completely forgotten the heights to which it once attempted
to ascend.
There is a vast difference between greatness and mere power.
We are a powerful nation. Can we honestly still claim greatness?
I think not.
Neither major political party can claim any moral high
ground. The politicians of both parties continue to put personal power before
principle and party one-up-manship before national good. And they sell their
souls, and their votes, to the highest bidder, whether such be a Soros or a
Koch.
As a nation, we are divided like a husband and wife locked
in a long-moribund marriage and for whom the other party cannot possibly do
anything right. Every word and action is interpreted through a haze of
suspicion of motives, and every fear becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
We are divided “left” and “right,” but there is no balance.
We are divided “have” and “have-not,” but both are alike in their greed.
We are divided “have” and “have-not,” but both are alike in their greed.
We are divided “liberal” and “conservative,” but the liberals
are only liberal with other people’s money and with those who agree with them,
while the conservatives have forgotten whatever it was they intended to
conserve – except the money and power they have or wish they had. (Giving away
other people’s money is not “liberal,” and selfishness is not really
“conservative.”)
Oh yes … there are also the non-aligned, the would-be “third
party” folks, but most of them seem to be wrapped in the self-indulgence of
either the childish arrogance of some green/reform/justice “socialism” or just
wanting to be able to do “their own thing.”
We are divided “religious” and “secular,” with both claiming
the blessings and support of our national heritage. The main difference,
really, seems to be that the secular folks know they do not worship the God of
the Bible, while the religious folks still think they do.
Both God and Lincoln
have warned us that a house divided against itself cannot long stand.
But we keep talking of patriotism, while we and most of our elected officials have forgotten what real patriotism is.
We call wiki-leakers “traitors,” but we ignore a President
and Cabinet officials who flout the law and their oaths. We certainly say
nothing about the treason of a Congress that trades our freedom for false security
and whose primary work is to keep itself in office.
Meanwhile, the Church – liberal, moderate,
conservative, or by whatever name, and
with few exceptions – works hard to rearrange the chairs on the deck of the
Titanic, even after she has struck the iceberg, thinking that some fresh combination
of behavior-modification and political influence will hold back the frigid
flood that is so surely sinking our ship of state – keep it out at least long
enough for “us” to fly away. And we wonder why the watching world rejects or
ignores us.
I love this country.
Particularly because I have lived much of my life overseas, I love the United States
and her history, her varied and mixed cultures, her interwoven strands of
heritage. I love the liberty of personhood and opportunity for which the United States
used to stand. As much as I enjoyed living in other countries, I was always
proud and pleased that I was an American, and I was glad I could look forward
to returning to these United
States . Because I love the United States , my sadness for her
is the greater.
I do not believe that any other country is doing “better”
than we are. In fact, most are far worse, which is why so many of their people
still want to come here.
Nevertheless, we are not what we could be.
We are not even what we were.
We certainly are not what we want to think we are.
If, as Lincoln
said, we are “the last best hope of earth,” then the world is in deep trouble.
(To be continued….)