Monday, February 27, 2012

A Return to the American Idea


I have been a student of history my entire life.  As long as I can remember, I have always loved learning about American history.  I needed to know about the country that my family had come to.  A country they came to for a new beginning, to give their children a chance to have a life that they wanted for us.  My mother, an immigrant from Ireland, and my grandparents on my father’s side coming from Scotland, they all came here with a dream of a promising future, based on the history they had learned of America’s past.  America’s story is as rich as any other country, even though we have had such a short one in comparison with so many other nations.  However, the contents of our short story can be compared to none other. 

My compassion for America’s history begins with its inception.  Not within its birth do I mean—the Declaration of Independence—but with its creation through the idea of what America was.  During the Colonial Era, our land was inhabited by a wide array of people from all types of livings.  Colonials hailed here from countries all over the world, skin colors were as plentiful as a rainbow, languages and accents were as bountiful as the fish in the sea.  There was the affluent as well as the poor, the studious as well as the illiterate.  Religious institutions were a choice, instead of a mandate.

Whether our fore-bearers were conscious of it, or oblivious—they were a part of an amalgamation of something great, something that the world had not seen yet.  The American Idea was brooding out of the society that so closely resembled it.  Borne out of the philosophies that shook the world in the Enlightenment, America catapulted these notions into practice. 

Individualism borne from liberty.

Equality borne from justice.

Responsibility borne from self-government.

These ideals pushed the colonials into a self-realization of the void of difference between themselves and the foreign rulers that slowly lost their control over them.  Thomas Paine chose his words carefully when he spoke of America having a chance to do what rarely had been done before… to create a new world.  America’s history books do not teach the American Revolution in the way that would do much justice to the event that transformed the world.  The war was one for Independence, the Revolution was in the materialization of the inception.  A country of Equal Rights, Liberty, and Individualism… Freedom is the word we know it as, today.  And Since that moment, our history has been a story of our nation’s struggle to bring that notion to fruition.

The great society of freedom has had a checkered past, most would argue, and I would not fight them on it.  Our nation has had its highs and lows without doubt.  The Civil War preceded the Reconstruction.  Our fight against Nazism preceded the Civil Rights Era and the Vietnam War.  One could say easily that our country has followed a direction of taking two steps forward, only to take one step back through most of its history. And it is time that we change this habit now.

Our nation created a society that banished hereditary aristocracy, only to allow it to build a plutocracy in its stead.  We speak of being a government of the people, by the people, for the people—but we currently hold a government of the rich, by the rich, for the rich…

Our nation created a society that strives for equality, only to continuously withhold Equality from its people and not hold others to Justice.  In a time when sex, race, and sexual orientation hinder people from Equal Rights, money and celebrity-ism allow others to act without regard for laws and consideration for others. 

Our nation created a society that promoted Individualism, only to consistently fight to take it away.  America fought for Independence not only for itself as a nation, but for the independence of its people to choose the lives they wished for themselves, to choose the beliefs they felt belonged to themselves, to possess the Individualism that true Liberty provides.

And the promise that was provided in this country was simple.  If you work hard in this “Land of Opportunity” you will achieve the American Dream.  But how true does this promise hold? Unemployment rates skyrocket while corporations send jobs away from our shores.  Tax systems exploit the middle class while the mega-rich pay a fraction of what would be a Fair Share.  Every year, the amount of families in poverty continues to grow, the amount of families considered in “low-income” levels increases, creating new records surpassing the previous record from the year before.  Meanwhile, America continues to break new records every year in the amounts of millionaires and billionaires.

But there is no wonder to why we possess a government of the rich, by the rich, for the rich.  One only needs to look to the voting habits in this country…

Of eligible voters making $150,000 or more a year, over eighty percent voted in the last election.

Of eligible voters making less than $50,000 a year, less than fifty-seven percent voted in the last election.

The rich make their voices heard, even more so today with their ability to donate unlimited sums of money to PAC’s through their own wealth or by the company’s profits.

We need to get the voices of the people heard once again, as it had been when this country began.

We need to bring this government back to being of the people, by the people, for the people.

100 Million must march!

March to the Polls and demand a Better America!

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