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Tag Archives: Fourth of July
blowing up the 4th
In general, I LOVE the 4th of July. It celebrates the adoption by the Continental Congress of one of Thomas Jefferson’s greatest pieces: The Declaration of Independence.
The Declaration was the first formal statement, by a people, asserting their right to choose their own government. Read that again. The Declaration was the first formal statement, by a people, asserting their right to choose their own government.
We were, with the Declaration, and again with the US Constitution, a nation of firsts. I like to go to the National Constitution Center. One of my pick fave things to do is to go up to the second floor, to the front of the building, out onto the balcony, and look south across Independence Mall, to Independence Hall, where the Constitution was written. I think of the men who negotiated and finally agreed to this marvel that made us a country of laws. They were guilty of treason against the Crown, as America was still part of Great Britain. They, and all the men, women and children who stood up, offered their lives so that going forward, we could breathe free.
The Fourth of July and Ancient Greece and Rome
One of my personal traditions for the 4th of July is watching 1776. For those who are unfamiliar with this movie, it is based on the 1970s musical of the same name and starts the recently deceased Ken Howard as Thomas Jefferson. In part because of the era when this musical was written, it takes a more open-eyed view of the events of the Spring of 1776 leading up to the Declaration of Independence — including the flaws of the founding fathers, the difficulty in getting the resolution on independence passed, and how slavery almost prevented independence.
Aside from its willingness to confront the history mostly head on — it acknowledges the existence of a faction in the Continental Congress that was more interested in compromise than independence but glosses over the large loyalist contingent in the country as a whole — another interesting thing about the musical numbers is that the last musical number — sung by John Adams — includes some allusions to the Roman Republic. At the time of the framing, Rome and Athens were seen as models of ancient democracies and what could go wrong with them. This admiration can be seen in Washington identifying himself with Cincinnatus — an early Roman statesman who was called to serve Rome in a time of crisis — receiving emergency powers — who resigned to return to civilian life when the crisis had passed and the three authors of The Federalist Papers using the pseudonym Publius. Putting aside the fact that, in reality, both Rome and Athens were much less democratic than the United Kingdom, a major interest of the framers (discussed at length in their writings) was why Athenian democracy and Roman democracy ultimately fell and what that meant for the new country that they were building. In both cases, the problem was that the small country became an empire.
In the case of Athens, Athens sought to use its preeminent position after the Persian Wars for its own benefit at the expense of its supposed allies (who quickly became client states) and its neighbors. The result of this “Athens First” policy was to encourage revolts in the subject states and an anti-Athens alliance among its neighbors leading to constant warfare until another regional power crushed all of the Greek city-states. In the end, putting Athens First did not make Athens Great Again.
In the case of Rome, the problem was more internal than external. To combat its external foes, the Roman military grew. And the best way to keep those soldiers well paid was by waging war on and defeating other regional powers. As a substantial part of the income of soldiers came from looting defeated enemies, soldiers began to identify their interests with their successful commanders rather than the elected leaders of the country. Eventually, power shifted to the generals who were able to dictate the allocation of offices. In the end, the failure of the civilian power to keep the military under civilian control led to the military controlling the civilian power.
The Framers understood that American greatness was not guaranteed. They understood that the same problems that led to the downfall of democracy in other countries could also happen here. They understood that the continued success of democracy in their new countries would require vigilant devotion to the ideals of democracy combined with a structure that would place barriers in the place of a would-be dictator who would use the misguided passions of the moment to crush domestic opposition.
Since the time of the framers, this country has survived multiple threats to democracy. While some of those threats have been foreign, a significant number of have been internal demagogues who were willing to trade a lot of liberty for imaginary security. In other cases, the threat has been internal debates in which the passions of the moment led to divisions which temporarily appeared to be irreconcilable and voters forgetting that we are all in this together In all of these moments, the better angels of our nature emerged in time to save us from permanent damage to our democratic enterprise. While there is no guarantee that we will always be able to turn away from the brink in time, it is important to remember those foundational principles and the fears of the framers and work to assure that the self-created problems of today will also pass.
Self-Evident Truths: 1776 and 2015
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” To paraphrase the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., despite this strong affirmation of basic principles of government in the Declaration of Independence, the practice of these basis principles by the United States has been somewhat schizophrenic.