250 years
#8610040
Yesterday at 07:11 PM
Yesterday at 07:11 PM
|
Joined: May 2011
Oakland, MS
yotetrapper30
OP
trapper
|
OP
trapper
Joined: May 2011
Oakland, MS
|
With summer just around the corner, I have begun seeing stuff showing up in the stores marketed for the semiquincentennial this year. I had to smile, as it didn't take long for the capitalists of the country to capitalize on an event that only comes around once every 250 years.  But as I think on the first 250 years of this most wonderful country, I have to wonder if it will be around still to celebrate it's quincentennial year. My guess would be not. Our forefathers fought hard and succeeded in creating a country, and constitution, that was the envy of the rest of the world. And still is. But, now our generations are squandering it, and it makes me sad. This morning I came across this editorial written by Supreme Court Justice Gorsuch regarding his thoughts on the country at this time. I enjoyed reading it, and thought some of you may as well. The Declaration of Independence is a short document, not much longer than this essay. Even so, it contains three ideas that shocked the world in 1776: Each of us is born equal; God grants us all inviolable rights, including the rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness; and “We the People” have the right to govern ourselves.
Those three ideas represent America’s creed. When Thomas Jefferson drafted the Declaration in rooms he rented from a Philadelphia bricklayer, few in Europe believed in them. More than that, many considered them a threat to the existing social and political order. But to the patriots who fought in the long and brutal years of the American Revolution, those three ideas were worth the sacrifice of “our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.”
The Declaration’s three great ideas still speak to us. Really, the Declaration serves as our nation’s report card. At any point in history, the American people can assess how well we are living up to the Declaration’s promises—and what challenges remain. In 1848, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and her colleagues at Seneca Falls, N.Y., reminded the American people that men and women are created equal. Years later, Abraham Lincoln called on the country to live up to the Declaration’s promises in the face of slavery, secession, and a bloody Civil War. Martin Luther King Jr.—standing before the Lincoln Memorial in 1963—challenged Jim Crow and called on the country to redeem the Declaration’s “promissory note” for all Americans. Our nation will always be a work in progress, but the Declaration stands as a constant reminder of who we aspire to be.
Nor should our nation’s imperfections blind us to the tremendous inheritance we have received. Even a quick glance through history and around our world today confirms how rare it is for a nation to be founded on the hope of realizing equality, liberty and self-government for its citizens. As Daniel Webster observed, it took thousands of years of human history for a nation devoted to the Declaration’s three great ideas to arise, and “miracles” like that “do not cluster.”
The legacy of the Declaration, though, owes only a partial debt to the genius of the document and those who wrote it. Its real guardian, and its hope for the future, lies in the hearts of the American people. Equality, liberty and self-government became the nation’s creed because Americans in generation after generation chose them. And the survival of those ideas depends on each passing generation learning about them anew, engaging with the history that gave rise to them, and choosing them all over again.
Yes, we have our differences. But that was true even at our nation’s founding. Americans hotly debated whether to part ways with Britain. The first vote on the Declaration of Independence split the colonies. Federalists and Anti-Federalists disagreed over whether to ratify the Constitution. Today Americans disagree strongly about important matters, as they always have and perhaps always will. But that, in many ways, is our nation’s greatest strength. By allowing everyone to speak and vote, we seek to harness the ideas of not only one ruler or group of elites; we seek to tap the full wisdom of the American people. In the face of disagreement, we speak and listen, debate and compromise, vote and then chart our way forward together. All of that is exactly what the Declaration hoped for us, and all of it lies at the core of the great American experiment.
The American story is like no other, and this year we celebrate a milestone like no other: the founding of the longest-living republic in the world. I look forward to the celebrations—the parades and picnics, the speeches and fireworks. But I also hope that all Americans will spend some time reflecting on the Declaration and recommitting to its creed. I hope, too, that each of us takes this opportunity to learn more about some of the ordinary people who sacrificed so much to make America possible: those who fought a revolution against the most powerful empire on earth, who began our improbable experiment in self-government, who challenged the nation to live up to the Declaration’s promises throughout our history, and who in every generation have given their lives for the cause of liberty, equality, and self-government. To them we owe a debt beyond repayment, and thanks to them we have the opportunity to continue the work of forming “a more perfect Union.”
Gotta find a way, a better way, I'd better wait
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not after you
|
|
|
Re: 250 years
[Re: yotetrapper30]
#8610064
Yesterday at 08:02 PM
Yesterday at 08:02 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
williamsburg ks
danny clifton
"Grumpy Old Man"
|
"Grumpy Old Man"
Joined: Dec 2006
williamsburg ks
|
You don't need religion IMO to be a moral person. IMO morality comes from thousands of people living together in civilization and recognizing the harm immorality does.
Those who would give up essential liberty, to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety. Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)
|
|
|
Re: 250 years
[Re: yotetrapper30]
#8610065
Yesterday at 08:06 PM
Yesterday at 08:06 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
Alabama (Bama for short) 108 y...
Jtrapper
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Alabama (Bama for short) 108 y...
|
I was 10 years old sitting on a sandstone rock ledge at the end of town with my dog King whom id had all my life eating a red white and blue popsicle watching the parade go by for the bicentennial. I imagine in another 50 years people will be saying it won't last another 50 all over again.
Not my circus, not my clowns.
|
|
|
Re: 250 years
[Re: Jtrapper]
#8610125
Yesterday at 09:05 PM
Yesterday at 09:05 PM
|
Joined: May 2011
Oakland, MS
yotetrapper30
OP
trapper
|
OP
trapper
Joined: May 2011
Oakland, MS
|
I was 10 years old sitting on a sandstone rock ledge at the end of town with my dog King whom id had all my life eating a red white and blue popsicle watching the parade go by for the bicentennial. I imagine in another 50 years people will be saying it won't last another 50 all over again. I'm sure the country will be around in 50 years. It won't look the same as today just like it doesn't look the same today as it did in 1976. What I was pondering is if it will exist in another 250 years, at what will be/would have been it's quincentennial year... 2276.
Gotta find a way, a better way, I'd better wait
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not after you
|
|
|
Re: 250 years
[Re: yotetrapper30]
#8610135
Yesterday at 09:17 PM
Yesterday at 09:17 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
Coldspring Texas
Savell
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Coldspring Texas
|
…. Got Mescins coming in to lower the pay on labor jobs
… Indians and Chinese coming in to lower the pay for the tech and engineering jobs
… white people being told they’re evil and lazy and they actually buy into it and lost their pride
… dual citizens running the finance industry media and politicians..promoting destructive ideas
…. Women allowed to vote even if it’s that time of the month
… we don’t stand a chance boys lol
Insert profound nonsense here
|
|
|
Re: 250 years
[Re: Savell]
#8610154
Yesterday at 10:22 PM
Yesterday at 10:22 PM
|
Joined: May 2011
Oakland, MS
yotetrapper30
OP
trapper
|
OP
trapper
Joined: May 2011
Oakland, MS
|
…. Women allowed to vote even if it’s that time of the month
… we don’t stand a chance boys lol
I shouldn't even be allowed to decide what to make for dinner at that time of the month, let alone who should run the country!! LOL
Gotta find a way, a better way, I'd better wait
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not after you
|
|
|
Re: 250 years
[Re: yotetrapper30]
#8610163
Yesterday at 10:33 PM
Yesterday at 10:33 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
Coldspring Texas
Savell
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Coldspring Texas
|
lol … that’s funny right there
… but we usually only get 2 bad options… so I guess it doesn’t really matter
Insert profound nonsense here
|
|
|
|
|