OPINION

DANA D. KELLEY: America the unique

Oftentimes, in public discourse over current divisive or polarizing issues, comparisons are thrown up with other countries. On matters such as gun crime, or taxation, or health care, it's easy to present statistics from nations elsewhere and portray the variances as persuasive to the partisan point. Sometimes, in some ways, such contrasts contain some validity.

But the inherent problem in all comparative analysis invokes the old fruit cliché, and its justified invalidation when differences in the subjects compared are too great. Practically put, it's impossible to ever have an "apples to apples" comparison between the United States and any other nation on earth.

The holiday on next week's hump day highlights this truth.

There simply is not now and has never been another democratic republic of our geographic size or population or age, self-chartered and self-governed according to the set of principles, morals and social precepts that culminated in our Declaration of Independence.

In addition to America the Beautiful, we are America the Unique.

We're the third most populous country--and none of the other top 10 remotely resemble us in form of social construct and constitutional governance. That's primarily because none of them have our history. Indeed, most other countries have histories that run completely at odds with ours regarding life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

Our singularity is not a slam against other nations, but rather a celebration of distinctive national achievement, albeit one that falls short of the ideal in preserving the ideas that delivered it.

Business leaders today see value in employees understanding the corporate core values and "living the mission" of the organization. But if all a CEO did toward that end was host an annual picnic, few would expect much in the way of results.

Those businesses that excel in that regard do much more: They take a practical approach involving multiple communication channels, from posters on the wall and pocket guides, to accountability measures that improve work habits to align with company values.

By the same token, there is supreme value to the republic in our citizens understanding the core values that produced our independence.

The festivities each Fourth of July can commemorate and celebrate our core principles and self-evident truths, but it is not enough to perpetuate them.

Businesses encourage employees to be able to recite a 30-second "elevator speech" about the company. How many Americans can summarize the Revolution so concisely? More alarmingly, how many would misstate the matter entirely?

"What do we mean by the American Revolution?" John Adams wrote in a letter in 1818. "Do we mean the American war? The Revolution was effected before the war commenced. The Revolution was in the minds and the hearts of the people; a change in their religious sentiments, of their duties and obligations ...

"This radical change," he said, "in the principles, opinions, sentiments and affections of the people was the real American Revolution."

But what brought on that change? The piece of paper adopted in Congress on July 4, 1776, wasn't the spark; it was, as titled, a declaration and explanation.

Many people don't want to be bothered with "getting into the weeds" of the philosophers and thinkers--some from antiquity--who shaped the founders' views. Likewise, many employees get annoyed with so much focus on vision, mission and core values, when there's actual work to be done.

The key in both instances is that knowledge and understanding are critical to performance.

Part of our political polarity today stems from fundamental misunderstandings about the spirit of liberty as conceived in colonial America.

Indeed, it's impossible to understand how radical our nation's notion of liberty was without first understanding what it was before to other nations and other civilizations. Without appreciating the longstanding social orders of royalty, nobility and commons, and the traditional relation between law and divine right, it's difficult to fathom the full attainment of freedom achieved by the American colonists.

Even the word "constitution" conveyed an altogether different meaning in 1760 than it does for us today. Comprehending how that word evolved from its common definition then as describing the entwined existence of a political system to a limiting charter of government power in 1787 is central to grasping American liberty--and its need for fervent protection.

We take the world we live in for granted. Our plenty is an anomaly among the world's hungry billions; intellectually we might know of starving peoples in faraway places, but it is disconnected from our daily consumption, as evidenced by our sizable BMI statistics.

We take our liberty even more for granted.

There are tens of millions of people trying to reduce their weight, and countless weight-loss programs and speakers and websites and documents to assist them. Were that even half as many people sought to truly understand the radical change in Americans that produced the United States!

Mention Algernon Sidney or Cato's Letters at your cookout next week and gauge the blank stares. Better yet, commit to yourself to Google them (both were foundational to the Revolution). Even if you only read a little, you and your holiday spirit will be better for it.

------------v------------

Dana D. Kelley is a freelance writer from Jonesboro.

Editorial on 06/29/2018

Upcoming Events