I've often featured a 2006 piece by E.J. Dionne called "A Dissident's Holiday" that acknowledges America's flaws but also affirms its aspirations. It's a short piece worth reading in full, but this passage is especially apt:
. . . The true genius of America has always been its capacity for self-correction. I'd assert that this is a better argument for patriotism than any effort to pretend that the Almighty has marked us as the world's first flawless nation.
One need only point to the uses that Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr. made of the core ideas of the Declaration of Independence against slavery and racial injustice to show how the intellectual and moral traditions of the United States operate in favor of continuous reform.
There is, moreover, a distinguished national tradition in which dissident voices identify with the revolutionary aspirations of the republic's founders.
I'll end with a videos I've featured before, Pete Seeger and Bruce Springsteen singing Woody Guthrie's "This Land Is Your Land" from Obama's first inauguration. (Past versions of the video have been taken down.) Although Woody started writing it as a critical song – and Pete includes some of the social commentary verses – it's also a celebratory and aspirational song. (I also can't see Pete pickin' and grinnin' without smiling.) Happy birthday, United States of America.
Are Trump, the GOP, and the 2025 crowd allowed to just drive the country off a cliff?
ReplyDeleteLincoln said the Constitution was not a suicide pact.
Maybe before 65 or 70 thousand people in 4 or 5 states hand those people the keys to the minivan, someone should look into this.
Hello Deep State? Now might be the time to show yourselves.
I drop by here once in a while to scan your Blogroll for links for my MBRU posts. Today I am consumed with rage at Trump (imagine that). He has shit on the closest thing we have to a Holiest of Holies.
ReplyDeleteMy parents took us as children to Arlington National Cemetery. My dad explained why Lincoln had buried the Union dead in Robert E. Lee's front yard. I was eight years old, and RFK's grave was still fresh. Charlie Pierce has put into words what eludes me. https://link.esquire.com/view/565ddda0487ccd4d228b4c22lsau0.2c/84098b6e
Others have pointed out that there are thousands, nay tens of thousands, of events at Arlington every year that go off without a hitch. Only Trump made a shitshow of something that should be easy: respecting our honored dead.