It is one of the times of the year when
we take time to contemplate the blessings of life in the United
States of America. July 4th is the day we set aside to
honor the signing of that document that began us on the road to
rebellion and independence from Great Britain which was the
preeminent power in the world in that day.
It is reckoned that at any given time
prior to victory in our war of revolution there was never more than
a third of the population dead set on taking on the might of Great
Britain. Most were simply desirous of a little tweaking in the
relationship and many were outright loyalists.
Well, we all know who won, against all
odds, by simply outlasting the British until they tired of trying to
keep supply lines open across the pond. It was an incredible amount
of resolve on the part of not too many rebels to persevere and not a
little assurance they would surely hang if they lost.
The freedoms enumerated in our
foundational document have been a noble experiment unknown to the
world prior to this. It was just off the wall to think that the
common people would have enough wisdom to govern a nation and, to be
sure, sometimes we still think that. In truth, no one was really
sure exactly what they had voted for and disagreements began to
surface almost immediately and have continued to this day. Much to
the consternation of Jefferson and Madison the Federalists under
Alexander Hamilton enacted the Alien and Sedition Act which, among
other things, placed restrictions on what we now consider a given,
our Freedom of Speech. This act was designed to keep down the
criticisms of the governmental power with everyone in fear of the
damage to the fledgling nation. The opposition was certain it went
too far. Surely, if it were enacted today it would be found lacking
but we see similar actions even today. Most of the act was allowed
to die a quiet death since the precedent establishing judicial review
had not been decided yet.
As a nation we have been in a unique
place in history by being protected by oceans on both sides and
friends to the North and South. But there have been a few attempts
at a direct attack on the mainland and all of them have been
repulsed. But the attacks against our freedoms do not come so much
from outside as it does from inside. We have our brave men and women
in uniform who have given their lives to further the aims of the
United States but they are by no means the only ones who have fought
on behalf of their country.
There are those who fought the long
fight to bring the freedoms we enjoy to all people regardless of
creed, color or race. Some lost their lives in the fight, some carry
scars even now from those battles for freedom. During World War II
we embraced one of the provisions of the defunct Alien and Sedition
Act by imprisoning the Japanese-Americans without due process or
recourse through the courts but there were those who knew the
wrongness of that and defied persecution to bring freedom.
It has always been the danger from
within that is our greatest enemy. People who are not aware that a
simple denial of liberty can lead to a greater one may see no fault
in compelling behavior they perceive as right but often that coercion
denies a person the right to assemble, freedom of movement, freedom
to be secure from unreasonable search and seizure and the freedom to
speak out against our government if we perceive it to be acting
wrongly.
After 9/11 our country passed some laws
that allow unusual amounts of surveillance of electronic and other
types of media. The ability to peer into vast amounts of data and
extract a significant fact reaches lengths we can only imagine and
yet legislators from both parties approved it and it is ongoing. It
is giving us valuable insight into threats but at what cost? There
are those who are engaged in the ongoing battle to protect those
freedoms that define our nation for without them who or what are we?
On the 4th we will set off
great fireworks as Washington envisioned and we will celebrate the
rockets red glare and bombs bursting in air and that is as it should
be. A great nation needs to remember the foundational circumstances
that gave birth to our country that we love. We will celebrate the
men and women who serve in our armed forces so that we can live the
kind of life here that will never know the horror they see. But
there are others that are often unsung and they are the ones that
fought in streets with demonstrations and in courts with lawsuits to
reclaim or ensure the blessings of liberty.
This year take an expansive view of who
fights for our country and think not only of the revolutionaries or
our armed forces but also of someone who fights on the home front in
a different way. It is recounted that Benjamin Franklin upon exiting
the session that drew up the Constitution was asked by a woman what
he and his cohorts had given them. His reply was, “a republic,
Madam, if you can keep it.” Never forget that it all began with
citizens talking among themselves about ideas that had only been know
heretofore in books of philosophy. Let that be a cause for
celebration in your life and a renewal of dedication to the notion
that all men are created equal. And don't leave out the women. They
have fought as hard as the men. And remember that we can only lose
it from within.
My take on this July 4th
celebration. The 236th of our history. Tell me what you
think.
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