In this exceptionally ugly and moronic presidential
election year, I feel like a fish out of water. Not in the sense of a cute plot
device for a movie starring Tom Hanks, but in the sense that I am up to my
gills in the toxic output of candidates and their followers all up and down the
food chain, and I’m gasping for some air that’s actually capable of getting
oxygen to my blood. So let’s focus on something good about America.
Know what I love about
Independence Day?
Well, naturally I love
revisiting the Declaration of Independence, that exquisitely beautiful document
that sets out the legal and moral case for the American colonies separating
themselves from Mother England. I’ve written
about this before, and it never grows stale.
And I love the notion of the
Founding Fathers weighing all their options and agreeing that—much as they were
sons of the Enlightenment hoping for a reasonable solution to all the tsuris
they were getting from His Majesty’s Government—force of arms was going to be
necessary to achieving and protecting those “certain unalienable Rights…Life,
Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” The price of freedom would include both
blood and treasure, and toward that end, “we mutually pledge to each other our
Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.”
Well, damn—can’t see that happening in any political body around
the world today. Can you? Certainly the onliest pledges our pols care about are
the campaign contribution variety. And they no more possess honor of any stripe
than they possess the ability to squirt cider out of their ears.
And when I think of the
Founding Fathers and stunningly beautiful political documents (which you’d
naturally imagine is an oxymoron of the first order, but it turns out you’d be
wrong), I include the Constitution of the United States. Even though it came
nine years and a war later, the Constitution demonstrates the mindset of the
men who wrote it—devising an entirely new form of government
of checks and balances, not easily susceptible to coups, which gave the
people various guaranteed means of seeking redress.
And beyond that—it was what
software product managers would call “a scalable platform”: it provided for
growth and change as the nation did the same. Stuff happens; they wanted the
government to be able to accommodate it, even though they understood they had
no idea what form it might take.
(Yes, a lot of stuff has
been happening in the past decade, in all three of the branches of government.
And the evil that men do does indeed live after their terms in office or on the
bench. But I have to believe that this is more of a cha-cha than a straightforward
and inexorable march in any direction. Those Founding Fathers, man—they had
soul.)
But here’s my point
(finally) about what just makes me do the happy dance for our national holiday.
Americans—the folks reviled pretty much everywhere at one time or another in
the second half of the last century as being warmongering minions of the military-industrial
complex—celebrate the adoption of the Declaration of Independence.
Not the day shots were first fired; or the day of the final surrender.
It’s the day when the
representatives of the people (not the generals or the corporations; those were
the days, huh?) resolved that these colonies should be independent. And by
resolving, they made it so.
Yeah—guff me no guff about
them all being wealthy white males, or that they did not conceive of a time
when non-white non-males might be represented in ruling bodies. (Guff me no
guff and see above about the scalable governmental platform.) And pick me no
nits about the actual date-stamp on the actual signing of the actual document.
Sometimes you just have to drive a stake in the ground and work with it. July 4th was, as they say, close enough for government
work.
And what we work with is the
fundamental idea that the thing to be commemorated—not with gigantic displays
of military might, with tanks, self-propelled guns, marching divisions and
fly-overs, but with homemade floats in community parades, picnics and
barbecues, and children waving sparklers—is not a victory in battle, but the
victory of an ideal.
The thing about this
particular victory is that it’s not one-and-done. It has to be renewed every
day, again and again. Signing the Declaration of Independence, defeating
British armies, writing the Constitution—that was all just the beginning. The
Founding Fathers did their jobs as best they could; we have to keep doing ours,
as best we can.
And I’m grateful that we’ve
made it this far, despite all the missteps along the way.
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