Sunday, July 5, 2026

A DSA America? Not Okay

By James Lileks

Sunday, July 05, 2026

 

When I got off the T in Boston last Sunday, I saw a table near the exit with some fliers and signs. A cheerful young lady handed me a piece of paper, and as I took it, she asked, “Considering voting socialist this November?” The flier had a red rose, the symbol of the Democratic Socialists of America, and I handed it back as if it was a piece of blotter paper soaked with Ebola and said “Oh GOD no.”

 

“That’s okay!” she chirped as I walked away. Glad to know. Of course, it won’t be okay if the DSA takes over everything, because then every area of life will be a miserable struggle session to ensure uniform purity. People will be trashing grocery stores and destroying all the eggs because the Chicken-American Community has not expressed the right opinion on Gaza. That will be Monday; Tuesday, they will burn cars to protest inflation-adjusted rent hikes. Wednesday, they will want to throw eggs at a rally of fascists — you know, the people protesting a mandate to install a drag queen in every elementary school to lead everyone in a fierce rendition of The Internationale every morning — except of course the eggs were all destroyed in the prior protest. Thursday, they will occupy the offices of all the grocery store chains to protest Egg Insecurity.

 

I have a long-standing aversion to collectivists and socialists and other flavors of Marxism, because A) it’s dreary, boring nonsense cranked out by a hairy fool who probably had the B.O. of a donkey in August; B) it views humans as vast murmuring mobs, devoid of individuality; and C) I’m supposed to follow some 19th century white guy instead of a 20th century black intellectual like Thomas Sowell? Fine, racist.

 

At the heart is the hammer and sickle, which terrified me as a child. It was a good symbol of the enemy: They either want to cut your throat or hit you on the head. It’s like a political movement whose symbols are a straight-edge razor and a claw hammer.

 

The DSA is more of the same, as their new platform suggests. Give more money to everything that doesn’t work, nationalize every industry that is successful, cut open Elon Musk to get all the golden eggs, turn on the infinite money machine, and replace Presidents’ Day with something that honors some frumpy collectivist who shot a cop and fled to Cuba.

 

If you doubt their ultimate objectives, well, there’s always a tweet. DSA candidates are rarely held to account for their stupid tweets. It wouldn’t matter if they were, but it would be nice.

 

“So when you tweeted, ‘I hate America and want to destroy it,’ what were you implying?”

 

“You can cherry-pick all you like, but it doesn’t change the fact that housing insecurity has created generational trauma among marginally served people with intestinal maladies, or Persons of Cholera, but I’d like to point out that I’ve grown in my thinking and intended that to be a dialectical metaphor for the power imbalances that characterize our oligarchy.”

 

“Right, but your next tweet says, and I quote, ‘and I mean that about hating and destroying, not as a dialectical metaphor for the power imbalances that characterize our oligarchy.’”

 

“Again, this isn’t putting a roof over people’s heads or soup on the table.”

 

I’m sure they think there’s a direct relationship between destroying the American system and putting soup in a bowl for the soupless, or the unsouped, as they’re probably called now. But as long as we’re talking about that, CNN recently ran a piece about DSA darling Darializa Avila Chevalier’s past tweet history:

 

In April 2020, Avila Chevalier shared a post lamenting that people wouldn’t accept communism over a lack of varieties of soup — a reference to the critique that the political system leads to fewer consumer choices.

 

“I just cannot get over the fact that the universe has foisted upon us the perfect illustration of literally every failing of capitalism and people are still like we can’t be communists cuz there won’t be enough types of soup,” the post she retweeted read.

 

Oh, you say, that explains it! She’s stupid! No smart person can talk about the manifest failures of capitalism and off-handedly admit we have a bewildering multiplicity of soup options. The nation abounds in soup choices because of capitalism. Under communism, there is one soup, and they are out of it.

 

Luxury beliefs arise when you think that nationalizing Campbell’s and handing the planning, manufacturing, and distribution of soup to The People results in anything other than bare shelves. The guys who think they’ll be writing poems about soup or designing clever soup labels after the revolution will be sent to chicken-plucking farms. Why? The automated plucking machinery stopped working because the guys who knew how it worked were either purged for saying men cannot give birth through their urethras, or quit because the new egalitarian society decreed that people with technical expertise shouldn’t make more than the people who scoop feed out of bags and dump it on the floor. Now that the automatic machines don’t work, it’s a good thing, because it created new jobs — why, Columbia U’s entire class of ’34 is out there now, plucking — and it has reduced the supply of chickens available for consumption, leading to people “exploring vegan options” in the sense that a sack-of-bones alley cat digging fish guts out of a trash can is “exploring piscine cuisine.”

 

All of this is acceptable, of course, because the goal is equity, racial spoils, and reduced standards of living to save the planet, except for the tireless inner-party members who simply must have real coffee and proper jam and air conditioning to keep their strength up for The Struggle.

 

But why would there need to be a struggle after the revolution? The dewy-eyed young DSA voter asks. Ah, child, just you wait. That’s when the real work begins. Those big pits lined with quicklime aren’t going to fill themselves, you know.

Yet Again, the U.N. Is Treating Hamas Lies as Fact

By Brett Schaefer

Sunday, July 05, 2026

 

In June, an Independent International Commission of Inquiry (COI) appointed by the United Nations Human Rights Council issued a lengthy conference-room paper accusing Israel of “deliberate targeting and killing of Palestinian children” and other crimes in its war against Hamas after the October 7, 2023, terrorist attack. Israel and the United States rejected the report as another example of bias from the commission for failing to address the complicity of Hamas in civilian deaths. Others criticized the report for relying on one-sided allegations lacking in evidentiary support.

 

What has been less noticed, however, is the paper’s heavy reliance on flawed or disproven claims, allegations, and reporting from U.N. humanitarian agencies.

 

The litany of crimes alleged by the COI paper is extensive, including, but not limited to, use of torture, sexual violence, deliberate killing of children, targeting of civilian infrastructure including hospitals and schools, and an imposition of conditions — such as preventing access to adequate food — leading to excessive morbidity of children. These allegations, if substantiated, would constitute war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide.

 

However, there are reasons to doubt that the allegations, which are presented as fact, are fully substantiated through investigation and concrete evidence.

 

First is the record of bias against Israel in the Human Rights Council and among some past and current members of the commission who have a record of antisemitic statements and support for sanctions against Israel. While not dispositive, it does speak to the objectivity of the COI.

 

Most important, however, is the lack of uncontrivable proof of the charges. The report alleges the deliberate targeting of children and civilians by Israel with no purpose other than killing or harming Palestinian children. As explained in the methodology section, for evidence, the paper relies on open-source reporting and information gleaned from interviews with children, parents, health-care workers, academics, and journalists. Such input, often based on secondhand or anonymous reports, is insufficient to prove intent or guilt. Physical evidence is often absent and, when available, chain of custody is generally broken. The report often dismisses or fails to consider important information about circumstances relevant to intent, such as whether combat was occurring nearby or the fact that Hamas habitually placed arms and command centers near, in, and under civilian buildings, hospitals, and schools. Additionally, the report classifies a child as anyone under 18 years old ignoring the fact that Hamas regularly recruits teenagers into its ranks.

 

As noted by researcher Salo Aizenberg, “In each case, the COI constructs an entire narrative of intentional killing through stacked assumptions rather than verified facts, transforming uncorroborated allegations into definitive findings of criminal conduct.”

 

The COI paper states that “at least 20,179 children were killed and 44,143 children were injured as a direct result of the hostilities in Gaza, constituting 30 percent of those killed and 26 percent of those injured” in the first two years of the conflict. Tragically, children have died in the conflict. But deaths of noncombatants in urban warfare is not proof of intentional targeting. Indeed, John Spencer, Chair of Urban Warfare Studies at West Point’s Modern War Institute, has argued, “Israel has taken extraordinary steps to limit civilian harm.”

 

Beyond intent, there are reasons to question the data. The paper cites U.N. organizations, including the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), World Food Programme (WFP), the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and the World Health Organization (WHO). Ultimately, however, each of these organizations derives its Gaza casualty data from the government entities in Gaza operating under the political direction of Hamas, a U.S.-designated terrorist organization. The appearance of being broadly sourced is an illusion.

 

Hamas has every incentive to distort deaths for political advantage. In fact, early claims from the Hamas government media office proved so unreliable that OCHA stopped reporting them in May 2024 and sharply revised downward its estimates of women and children killed using Gaza Health Ministry data. The OCHA revisions are welcome, but explanations and public corrections were lacking. UNICEF, WFP, FAO, and WHO have failed entirely to publicly and directly correct the record.

 

The Gaza Health Ministry is more reliable but also flawed in that it does not provide complete verification of identity for every claimed death. Nor does the ministry differentiate between civilians or combatants, which is critical to the COI investigation. Analysis of deaths by age and sex indicate that men and teenage boys are heavily overrepresented among verified deaths, while women, girls, and young boys are significantly underrepresented. This analysis is evidence against deliberate targeting of noncombatants.

 

Likewise, the COI devotes five pages of its report to starvation and malnutrition, relying heavily on U.N. organizations, the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET), and the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC). But the record involves two separate evidentiary failures: the May 2024 FEWS NET claim that famine may already have existed in northern Gaza, which the IPC’s own Famine Review Committee considered flawed and declined to endorse; and the August 2025 IPC famine declaration, which relied on contested malnutrition data, later addenda, discounted Israeli food-flow figures, and Hamas-administered health inputs. As with casualty data, these claims of famine were amplified by U.N. organizations without formal correction, retraction, or independent audit after they were shown to be flawed. The COI cites the disputed famine findings as settled fact.

 

In alleging such serious crimes, the COI hopes to advance international legal proceedings against Israel and Israeli officials at the International Criminal Court and the International Court of Justice. The report also expressly calls for additional UN Security Council sanctions on Israel and urges governments to prohibit sale of arms and other goods in its recommendations. This is troubling as international courts and many governments have proven willing to accept U.N. reports as impartial, verified, and corroborated. This is not the case with the COI paper nor many of the claims of U.N. humanitarian organizations it relies upon.

 

Repeatedly, U.N. humanitarian organizations receiving U.S. funding have promulgated biased data and narratives regarding Israel and, when disproven, failed to publicly correct the record. A humanitarian system that cannot correct its own errors or resist politization undermines its credibility. The U.S. must demand accountability and public retractions. Otherwise, our tax dollars will be funding the next anti-Israel slander based on Hamas lies.

What Marx and Engels Thought About Socialism in the United States

By Rich Lowry

Friday, July 03, 2026

 

Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels weren’t right about much, but they made some astute observations about America while trying to explain its resistance to socialism.

 

According to Marx’s theory, as the world’s most advanced capitalist country, and one that was industrializing at a rapid clip, the United States was supposed to be closest to the inevitable socialist revolution.

 

“The country that is more developed industrially shows to the less developed the image of their future,” Marx wrote in Das Kapital.

 

This meant that “Americans will be the first to usher in a Socialist republic,” a leader of the German Social Democrats said in 1907, one of countless such confident predictions.

 

If Polymarket had existed at the time — and socialists had been okay with prediction markets — all the Marxists would have bought “yes” shares on a proletarian revolution in the U.S.

 

But it became pretty clear that this wasn’t happening, at least not on the schedule that the socialists were expecting. So, Marx and Engels had some explaining to do.

 

In his stilted terms, Marx remarked how the mobility of American workers kept a dispossessed class from developing: “The wage-worker of today is tomorrow an independent peasant, or artisan, working for himself. He vanishes from the labor-market, but not into the workhouse.”

 

Engels noted how we never experienced feudalism. Americans, he wrote, “are born conservatives—just because America is so purely bourgeois, so entirely without a feudal past and therefore proud of its purely bourgeois organization.”

 

Then, there was our prosperity.

 

“The native American workingman’s standard of living is considerably higher than even that of the British,” Engels observed, “and that alone suffices to place him in the rear for still some time to come.”

 

Granted, Marx and Engels never met Darializa Avila Chevalier, the socialist congressional candidate in New York City who made favorable references to communism in a since-deleted Twitter account.

 

She represents a socialist movement that is making a serious bid to take over one of the country’s major political parties and that has some chance to nominate one of its own as the Democratic presidential nominee in 2028.

 

If this movement succeeds, it will do it by running against the grain of American tradition and mores.

 

As the late political scientist Seymour Martin Lipset noted in his incisive book, It Didn’t Happen Here: Why Socialism Failed in the United States, left-wing intellectuals long grappled with the question of the failure of socialism in the United States and blamed a cluster of attributes and values that they called “American exceptionalism” (conservatives later adopted the term as a positive descriptor).

 

Lipset and his co-author, Gary Marks, worked through the explanations for the lack of a significant socialist movement, from the difficulty cracking the two-party system, to the ideologically uncompromising nature of the Socialist Party of America in the early 20th century, to the inability of the Socialist Party and labor movement to work together.

 

But they found that America’s distinctive culture, with its emphasis on anti-statism and individualism, was most fundamental to the socialist fizzle. Before the Great Depression, even labor organizations in the United States tended to be anti-statist.

 

This is not to say that there weren’t early-20th-century socialist successes in select cities, especially Milwaukee. The Democratic Socialists of America organization is beginning to duplicate these advances and is in a position to play for bigger stakes, although it will require overcoming inherent resistance in the United States.

 

In the 1930s, the radical socialist Leon Samson wrote of Americanism as “a solemn assent to a handful of final notions—democracy, liberty, opportunity, to all of which the American adheres rationalistically much as a socialist adheres to his socialism—because it does him good, because it gives him work, because, so he thinks, it guarantees him happiness. Americanism has thus served as a substitute for socialism.”

 

Bernie Sanders, Zohran Mamdani, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez hope to reverse this dynamic and substitute socialism for Americanism, a project that even Marx and Engels had their doubts about.

America’s Naysayers Need to Get a Grip

By Guy Denton

Saturday, July 04, 2026

 

This weekend, America’s 250th birthday deserves an explosive, unapologetic national celebration. Apparently, though, many of those fortunate enough to call this country home won’t be joining the party.

 

In recent weeks, celebrities and  political figures have offered predictable twaddle about America’s supposed wickedness. Robert De Niro, evoking a senile Travis Bickle, equated modern patriotism with domestic violence: “I hate to say it, but loving our country is starting to sound like an abused spouse saying they love their abuser.” Joy Reid derided Independence Day as a “celebration of slaveholders.” And Gavin Newsom declared, “The Founding Fathers did not live and die for this moment. I can’t celebrate July 4th.”

 

Such negativity isn’t simply a luxury belief. A slew of new polls have shown widespread public pessimism toward America and its future. Would the signers of the Declaration of Independence be satisfied with the modern United States? Do the country’s best years still lie ahead? Is democracy in a healthy state? In the eyes of the majority, the answer to all of these questions is a decisive no. One in five Americans don’t even plan to mark the Fourth of July this year.

 

This moment of bad feelings, however, is absurd on its face. America, for all its flaws and complexities, remains a singularly magnificent nation whose promise is alive and well. Anyone who considers it too tainted to celebrate should be brought back to reality.

 

Certainly, things are not perfect, and we should recognize our various ills. Our  political culture has grown frantic, and rabid polarization rules the day. Our formative institutions — families, schools, and local communities — are in decline, and this decay has left many Americans adrift. Our system of government is threatened by dysfunction.

 

But these problems are surmountable, and history suggests that they will be solved. Americans have made a remarkable habit of overcoming far greater challenges. With each year, the United States has moved closer toward fully realizing the promise of its founding. Ingenuity, courage, and a commitment to first principles have guided that evolution for 250 years. The thought of where they will lead us over the next 250 should stir full-throated excitement.

 

American life today is noisy. Smartphones perpetually consume our attention, bombarding us with horrifying headlines and drawing us into vitriolic social-media arguments. But in the real world, America’s civil society is enviably vibrant, and its culture is defined by friendliness and generosity. When I step outside and talk to ordinary Americans — be it in suburban Virginia, or in New York City, or in South Florida — I seldom encounter cynicism or resentment. Instead, I am continually amazed by their warmth, humor, and kindness. In the “real America,” I don’t see a nation on the verge of collapse. I see a uniquely open and prosperous country, rich with greater opportunity than anywhere else can offer, that remains the world’s great beacon of liberty and abundance.

 

What’s more, I see a country that offers staggering diversity. America is a land of sprawling deserts, towering mountains, verdant forests, and majestic cities. It’s a place where the opera is as easily attended as a wrestling match. Its food, weather, music, and literature are spectacular. Its culture is innovative, dynamic, and endlessly surprising. Its Constitution is the most perceptive political document ever composed, and its institutions of government endure despite new attacks.

 

Fleeting difficulties may threaten the American promise, but they should not deter us from championing everything that makes this country extraordinary. The wisdom of the Declaration of Independence is as true today as ever, and it has brought us to a time of extraordinary human flourishing. July 4, 2026, is a moment to reflect on all that America has provided, and all that is still to come.

 

Let’s celebrate.

What Trump’s July 4 Speech Revealed

By David Frum

Sunday, July 05, 2026

 

Donald Trump’s favorite movie is Sunset Boulevard. That movie tells the story of an aging silent film star, Norma Desmond, who has locked herself away from the real world so that she can endlessly replay past glories until she loses her mind entirely. In his Independence Day speech, Donald Trump indulged in his own protracted Norma Desmond moment.

 

The 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence has been a Trump-made fiasco from start to end. The grand finale was disrupted by a thunderstorm that postponed Trump’s speech until past 11 p.m. eastern—and pushed the costly fireworks show into the early hours of July 5.

 

Trump’s speech honored living heroes of past American wars. Each man was called to the stage to be recognized before a notable historical American flag. Trump dutifully read his speech more-or-less as written, indulging in only a few brief ad libs delving into personal grievances or political agendas. As written, the speech was a typical product of the Trump speechwriting shop: turgid and boastful, without a single memorable line or inspiring grace note. ChatGPT would have done better—probably a lot better.

 

But it also had a Sunset Boulevard aspect.

 

The very first sentence of the document honored on July 4 invoked “a decent respect for the opinions of mankind.” Throughout their history, Americans have been highly conscious of the opinions of others about their experiment in republican government. In his first July 4 message to Congress in 1861, Abraham Lincoln declared the fate of the American Union a contest of urgent interest to “the whole family of man.” Or as Ronald Reagan often said, quoting the Bible via John Winthrop: America is like a city on a hill; the eyes of the whole world are upon it.

 

Whoever wrote last night’s speech for Trump retained some memory of this ancient American rhetorical tradition. Like the aging actress Norma Desmond, Trump and his writing team replayed favorite scenes: the liberation of Europe from Nazi rule, the defeat of communism. And, as with the actress, those scenes—once so powerful—have become poignant, because they took place so long ago and the actress has lost her stardom and been forgotten.

 

Under Donald Trump, the United States has fought military conflicts in Venezuela and Iran. It nearly fought a war with Denmark to seize Greenland. It often speaks of annexing all or part of Canada. It has waged economic war on allies and partners in violation of international trade agreements and domestic law. Soon the United States may be engaged in a war in Cuba. Already, the U.S. has cut back aid to Ukraine as that country fights for its survival and freedom. Trump has repeatedly made clear that the goal of his wars is plunder: that he wishes to seize oil and other resources. In turn, the course of his most ambitious war, with Iran, appears to have been swayed by client states, which have made payments to him and his associates.

 

Trump’s preferred rhetorical style on such occasions is to brag about the strength of the U.S. military, how nobody can equal it, how it crushes all before it. He reportedly tells his inner circle that he personally is a more powerful warlord than Attila the Hun or Genghis Khan. The authentic Trump does not care about any ideals beyond national fearsomeness and personal enrichment. But somebody got some ill-remembered fragments from the Before Times about freedom onto Trump’s teleprompter—and on this unusual occasion, Trump read the fragments without balking.

 

Americans are accustomed to those fragments. When Trump rejects them, as he usually does, Trump’s domestic audiences may feel uneasy that something has been omitted that used to be important. But when Trump pronounces them, as he did on July 4, he reminds his global audience how he has jettisoned the generous principles and emancipatory ideals that once made America not only feared but trusted and admired. Trump’s speech demanded credit for a history that Trump regards as a sucker’s mistake. Trump is building an American future oriented toward authoritarian and corrupt states: Russia, Turkey, Saudi Arabia. Democratic allies are treated, at best, as subjects to be bullied and, at worst, as targets to be carved up into new American territories.

 

To the extent the decision is up to Trump, the United States that his speech celebrated on July 4 will exist no more. Trump’s grotesque botch of the 250th anniversary of “We hold these truths” aptly demonstrates how far his leadership has already pushed the United States away from its noblest past. Americans may not wish to acknowledge what Trump has done to their standing in the world. Such denial does not change reality. Norma Desmond’s last lover—and doomed narrator—delivers a verdict on the fading star’s descent from delusion into madness: “The dream she had clung to so desperately had enfolded her.”

 

Americans have not clung to their dream nearly desperately enough, but they too are now enfolded in something dark and diminished.

Saturday, July 4, 2026

America at 250: Reflections of a Patriot by Choice

By Jianli Yang

Saturday, July 04, 2026

 

As the United States celebrates the 250th anniversary of its Founding, I have found myself reflecting on my own journey in America and what this extraordinary nation has meant to me. I owe my freedom and even my life to this country. I have told before the story of returning to China from my graduate studies in the U.S. to participate in the 1989 Tiananmen democracy movement, surviving the massacre, later earning my doctorate in political economy from Harvard University, returning once again to China to promote peaceful democratic reform, being imprisoned by the Chinese Communist Party, and finally being rescued through the determined efforts of the United States. My gratitude to America is permanent and profound.

 

But this is not that story. Instead, I want to share experiences that I have never written about before, moments that shaped my understanding of America long before I was forced to depend upon it.

 

In 1986, I left what many considered an exceptionally promising future in both academia and politics in China. I came to the United States to pursue a Ph.D. in mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley. For the first time in my life, I breathed the fresh air of freedom.

 

Only those who have lived under dictatorship can fully appreciate what freedom feels like. It is not merely a constitutional principle or a political slogan. It is an atmosphere. It is the quiet confidence of ordinary people who do not live in fear. It is the ability to speak without constantly calculating the consequences. It is the simple dignity of walking through life without wondering whether someone is watching every move you make. Despite the tremendous academic pressure and the formidable language barrier I faced at UC Berkeley, I experienced a sense of inner peace unlike anything I had known before.

 

To a young man who had grown up in a country still emerging from decades of political terror, poverty, and isolation, the San Francisco Bay Area seemed almost unreal. The Pacific breeze carried not only the scent of the ocean but also the spirit of liberty. People laughed openly. They debated passionately. They dressed however they pleased. They criticized their government without fear. Individuality was not merely tolerated; it was celebrated.

 

Berkeley itself was an intellectual revelation. The university demanded excellence. The competition was intense. Yet what impressed me even more was the institution’s moral seriousness. Mathematics, philosophy, economics, history, and political science were not treated as isolated disciplines but as different paths toward understanding truth. Ideas mattered. Evidence mattered. Debate mattered.

 

In China, intellectual inquiry was constrained by ideology. At Berkeley, questioning authority was considered one of the highest academic virtues. That experience permanently changed how I viewed both scholarship and citizenship.

 

Naturally, I was also astonished by America’s prosperity.

 

Only days earlier I had left behind a country where scarcity remained a defining feature of daily life. Standing in San Francisco, I was amazed to learn that most of the magnificent skyscrapers before me were privately owned. Banks, automobile manufacturers, and countless other great enterprises were built and operated not by the state but by private citizens.

 

This was a society that rewarded initiative, innovation, and hard work. It was a country where individuals were encouraged to create, build, and succeed. I began asking myself: Is this what people mean by the American dream?

 

Ironically, this did not seem entirely foreign to Chinese civilization itself. Classical Chinese philosophy never condemned prosperity. The Zhou Yi (Book of Changes), one of the foundational texts of Confucian thought, recognizes the pursuit of wealth as part of human nature and encourages productive labor, creativity, and prosperity pursued with virtue. Why then, I wondered, had the communist regime deprived generations of Chinese citizens of private property, economic opportunity, and personal dignity? Why had a civilization with such rich philosophical traditions become trapped in a political system that denied so much of human potential?

 

America’s prosperity and intellectual freedom dazzled me. But something else moved me even more.

 

On weekends I often drove my old used car into small towns throughout Northern California simply to see more of American society. Their beauty impressed me. Their cleanliness impressed me. Their harmony with nature impressed me. Yet what touched me most was something remarkably ordinary: Every town had a beautiful public library. Every library had wheelchair access. Soon I noticed that buses, public buildings, sidewalks, and countless other public facilities were also designed to accommodate people with disabilities.

 

One day I found myself in tears. Throughout China, I had seen poor people and disabled people humiliated, ignored, and mistreated, often with no legal recourse whatsoever. I remembered the helplessness I felt witnessing their suffering. Here, by contrast, a wealthy society had chosen to measure itself not only by economic achievement but also by how it treated those who could contribute least to material prosperity.

 

That reminded me of a story from a Chinese classic The Book of Chuang Tzu. An inspector asked a livestock trader how he judged whether a pig was truly healthy. The trader replied that he examined the parts of the animal least likely to accumulate fat. If those weakest parts were healthy, then the whole animal must be healthy. Chuang Tzu used this story to teach that the true measure of a society is found not at its strongest points, but at its weakest.

 

I came to believe that the same principle applies to politics. A just society is judged by how it treats its most vulnerable citizens. America, imperfect as every nation is, understood this truth better than many societies I had known.

 

In every human heart, two aspirations should coexist: the desire to pursue individual happiness and achievement, and the responsibility to care for the vulnerable and protect the common good. The healthiest society is one that safeguards liberty, protects private property, rewards excellence, creates opportunities for success without artificial ceilings, and simultaneously ensures that those who are disadvantaged are not abandoned. Freedom and compassion are not enemies. They are partners.

 

This conviction has deep philosophical roots in both the East and West. Nearly simultaneously, Confucius and the great philosophers of ancient Greece arrived at remarkably similar conclusions. Confucius taught the Doctrine of the Mean — a politics of balance, moderation, and moral restraint. The Greeks engraved upon the Temple of Apollo the timeless injunctions: “Know thyself” and “Nothing in excess.”

 

Long before I entered politics, I came to believe that the first principle of good government, or the golden rule of politics, is simple: Do not go to extremes. Political extremism almost always begins by claiming moral certainty. It often ends by denying the humanity of those who disagree. History repeatedly confirms this lesson.

 

The Chinese Communist Party has governed through successive extremes. First came radical communism, which abolished private property and devastated society through campaigns such as the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution. Later came state-directed crony capitalism, in which political privilege — rather than free competition — determined economic opportunity. In both systems, ordinary citizens ultimately served the interests of those who held power. Dissent was criminalized. Independent institutions were crushed. Human rights became subordinate to political control.

 

America offered something fundamentally different. Here, competing political parties represented different interests and different philosophies, yet they remained bound by constitutional rules, elections, federalism, and the rule of law. Citizens disagreed vigorously, but disagreement itself was not a crime. Americans of different races, religions, backgrounds, and beliefs could largely live together in mutual tolerance while participating in the same democratic experiment.

 

I began to believe that the ideals I had encountered in both Chinese philosophy and Western political thought had found their most successful practical expression in the American constitutional order. My own dream merged with the American dream.

 

The society I envisioned decades ago remains the society I hope for today: one that firmly protects fundamental human rights, places no artificial ceiling on individual achievement, guarantees a basic floor of human dignity for the vulnerable, rewards work and innovation, and preserves liberty under the rule of law.

 

Looking back, I recognize that my first impressions of America were necessarily idealistic and incomplete. Over the years, my education, friendships, scholarship, and experiences taught me that America’s history is richer, more complicated, and more self-critical than I initially understood. Yet complexity has only strengthened, not weakened, my admiration for this country.

 

Generation after generation, Americans have expanded the promise of liberty while preserving constitutional continuity. The country’s remarkable network of families, churches, civic associations, local governments, independent courts, and voluntary organizations forms the social fabric upon which freedom ultimately depends.

 

After World War II, America became not merely the world’s strongest nation but the principal defender of the free world, the leading advocate for human rights, and the brightest beacon for countless people struggling against tyranny — including me.

 

I love America not because it is perfect. I love America because it possesses the moral capacity to correct itself without abandoning its founding principles.

 

Of course, America today faces profound challenges.

 

Political extremism increasingly feeds upon itself, with excesses on one side often serving to justify excesses on the other. Identity politics has deepened social divisions. Confidence in the rule of law has weakened. Constitutional boundaries among the branches of government have become subjects of growing controversy. America’s retreat from confident leadership within the free world has created uncertainty about the future of the international order that generations of Americans built at enormous sacrifice.

 

Even more consequential may be the revolutionary impact of information technology, especially artificial intelligence. AI is reshaping democracy, economic competition, national security, human relationships, and even our understanding of what it means to be human. The extraordinary concentration of wealth and power in a handful of technology companies, combined with their increasingly complex relationship with government, challenges many of our traditional assumptions about capitalism, liberty, equality, markets, and constitutional governance.

 

These are questions that neither conservatives nor progressives can afford to ignore.

 

Yet the principles that first inspired me nearly 40 years ago remain unchanged. A free society should protect human rights. It should reward excellence without limit. It should guarantee basic dignity to those who struggle. It should preserve ordered liberty under the Constitution. Above all, it should reject political extremism and seek the wisdom of moderation.

 

As someone who has experienced both totalitarianism and democracy, I remain convinced that America’s greatest strength has never been ideological purity. It has been constitutional balance, civic virtue, and an unwavering belief that free people, governed by laws rather than passions, are capable of self-government.

 

Those convictions continue to guide my own thinking. They also shape my hope that America can overcome its present challenges and enter the second half of its third century stronger, freer, and more confident than ever. In future essays, I hope to explore these questions in greater depth and details.

 

May God continue to bless the United States of America.

What the Declaration Declared

By Thomas Sheppard

Thursday, July 02, 2026

 

Two hundred and fifty years ago, John Adams could barely contain his excitement. “I am apt to believe that [this day] will be celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary Festival,” he wrote to his wife, Abigail. “It ought to be commemorated, as the Day of Deliverance by solemn Acts of Devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time forward forever more.” He believed he was living on one of the greatest days in history, and he refused to let anyone dim his ardor. “You will think me transported with Enthusiasm but I am not… The Second Day of July 1776, will be the most memorable Epocha, in the History of America.”

 

That Adams was slightly off on his date has long been a source of humor, but he was right in the main. While the Continental Congress did vote to declare America’s independence on July 2, it still needed time to finalize the wording of the official statement, and thus it was not until July 4 that the Declaration of Independence rolled off the printer’s presses. At the time, Adams was far from alone in seeing the actual vote as the crucial point and the declaratory document as something of an afterthought. The moment of declaring independence was history-making; no other colony had severed relations with its metropole and become a new nation before. But at the time, it competed for attention with multiple other dramatic events. The Continental Army was scrambling (ultimately without success) to hold onto New York, while many members of the Continental Congress wished they were back in their respective home states for what was seen as the more important work of drafting new constitutions for 13 now-autonomous states. With independence declared, political momentum focused on the much more immediate concerns of state building and war-fighting. It is probable that, if all the Declaration of Independence had done was announce separation from Great Britain, it would amount to little more than a historical footnote today.

 

Instead, this document has become the political heart of the American nation. The Declaration of Independence still matters a quarter of a millennium after its signing because it did more than state what “these united states” were not—appendages of the British Empire; it declared what the new nation is, arguably the first creedal nation in world history. A political entity born of Enlightenment ideals and then-radical beliefs about humanity, the Declaration of Independence matters not only because it announced a change in the relationship between the American colonies and London, but because it forever altered how the world perceives the connection between human beings and their governing institutions. It was a document that created an American nation, but it was also a document written for the world, and the world could never be the same once its words were promulgated.

 

***

 

In May 1776, Adams believed the colonies had already effectively broken with Great Britain. No one could deny an open war existed on American soil—blood had been spilled at Lexington, Concord, and Bunker Hill more than a year earlier, and George Washington’s army had just driven a British force out of Boston. Meanwhile, all of the British royal governors had been ousted from their capitals to new lodgings in Royal Navy ships offshore, and British rule on the ground was nonexistent. In light of these momentous events, Adams pressed through a resolution calling on all the colonies to “adopt such Government as shall in the Opinion of the Representatives of the People best conduce to the happiness and Safety of their Constituents in particular and America in General.”

 

If all the Continental Congress had wanted to achieve was declaring a separation from Britain, Adams’ resolution came incredibly close. The preamble to Adams’ resolution bluntly excoriated the British government for attempting “the destruction of the good people of these colonies,” and “hostile invasions and cruel depredations,” and called for new, American governments whose responsibility would include quashing any lingering vestiges of royal authority. This was the language of severed ties and independent action. For Adams, as far as the matter of independence was concerned, the Declaration itself was a bit superfluous.

 

Some members of the Continental Congress, still harboring dreams of rapprochement with the mother country, felt Adams had swindled them, slipping his preamble condemning Britain and essentially announcing independence into a straightforward bill to sustain governance in chaotic times. But the mood of the Congress, and much of public opinion, had moved beyond the reconciliationists. Thomas Paine’s Common Sense had swept through American culture like wildfire at the beginning of the year, and with every drop of American blood spilled, the reality became more inescapable that the 13 American colonies had become a distinct entity.

 

On June 7, Virginia made it official. Richard Henry Lee of Virginia put forward a resolution “that these united colonies are and of right ought to be free and independent states.” A few delegates dithered or requested time to receive official instructions from their respective legislatures, and the vote on Lee’s resolution was pushed to the following month. But Congress as a whole felt confident enough in the outcome to go ahead and name committees for managing foreign alliances and establishing plans for “the form of a confederation” of the soon-to-be independent states. As for the committee that has earned iconic status in American history, it seemed far less consequential at the time. Congress designated a Committee of Five to write up a statement to go with the forthcoming declaration of independence.

 

 The group tasked with drafting a statement of independence formed on June 11. Adams was obviously included, as were Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, and Robert R. Livingston. The bulk of the writing fell to Jefferson, a man who had clearly distinguished himself as a gifted writer through his “A Summary View of the Rights of British America,” and having the bulk of the writing come from a Virginian would be helpful for all-important sectional unity. At the time, the Declaration was seen by virtually everyone as decidedly secondary to the vote itself and the formation of a confederated government, and no one seemed to attach much urgency to the words their colleague from Virginia was crafting. Jefferson worked quickly, completing most of the draft in only a few weeks.

 

Jefferson identified his first task as presenting “the causes which impel them to the separation.” He acknowledged that taking such a momentous step for “light and transient causes” would be a serious mistake. The grievances driving Americans to cut ties with the empire they had been loyal members of for well over a century were far from light and transient, though. They amounted to “a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism.” In a series of fiery blasts against King George III, Jefferson drew on highly emotive language more suitable to describing the collapse of a marriage than a political severing; in his original draft, Jefferson said of Americans, “we must endeavor to forget our former love.”

 

The Declaration’s charges against the king were intended as a call to arms, not a dispassionate discussion of the political scene. As such, we must own that a few of those charges were more than a little dubious. In his biography of King George III, Andrew Roberts chips away at some of Jefferson’s overwrought language and vague accusations, sharply dissecting the ogre-like image of the British monarch that had come down through history. But even if he was a reasonably enlightened monarch, he had reduced his American subjects to a second-class status and deprived them of the basic rights and liberties that all Englishmen expected—indeed were entitled to under the British constitution. He had made the population of the 13 American colonies his enemies in practice, and now they would be his enemies on the battlefield.

 

However, the Declaration was not written with the king as its intended audience, nor was it written for the British people, though Jefferson addressed them explicitly in some passages. The document was not even written with an American audience primarily in mind—had he intended it only for his countrymen, Jefferson could easily have stopped with a discussion of the reasons the king was no longer fit to govern. There was ample precedent on that point, and he did draw on Britain’s own 1689 Declaration of Rights that had ousted King James II. Moreover, several states had already issued formal statements on the need to sever ties with the British government.

 

None of these were sufficient for Jefferson’s purposes, though. “State and local resolutions on Independence said nothing about the flaws of the British constitution, or the future of mankind, or the birthday of a new world,” as Pauline Maier notes in her study of the American Declaration’s origins. Jefferson was writing for the world, because he intended to rally global public opinion to the American cause, a cause of liberty that he considered universal. Thus, he drew not only on English precedents, but on Enlightenment principles, particularly the ideas of natural rights and government by consent. He especially pulled from John Locke, though Locke’s “life, liberty, and property” was ennobled to life, liberty, and “the pursuit of happiness.” The result was a statement of political philosophy more than a mere collection of grievances.

 

After completing the draft, Jefferson shared it with Adams, Franklin, and the rest of the committee, who suggested revisions. It was at this stage that “sacred and undeniable” truths became “self-evident” truths in the preamble, but overall the other four drafters were happy with Jefferson’s work. The same could not be said for the Congress as a whole, which set to work editing Jefferson’s draft once it was received from the committee. Delegates debated certain passages, removing or altering sections they found controversial. Jefferson’s line criticizing the fact that “Scotch and other foreign auxiliaries” were heading to American shores offended a few delegates proud of their Scottish heritage. The comment had to go.

 

More controversial in the eyes of later generations was the deletion of a clause criticizing the slave trade. The clause was cut in part because it made the absurd claim that King George had dispatched slave ships to seize Africans and then impose them as a labor force on an unwilling American population, a wildly implausible fiction that helped salve the consciences of Americans fighting for liberty while holding their fellow men in bondage—Jefferson himself prominent among these. His denunciations of slavery were unacceptable to the overwhelming majority of Southern delegates, who would never have signed a document that included such stark condemnations of slavery.

 

Jefferson reacted to all these changes in roughly the same manner as every writer throughout history whose work has been subjected to an editor. Years later, he still stewed over the repeated “depredations” and “mutilations” to his essay. Sensing his misery at the time, Franklin tried to console him with an amusing anecdote about a hat-maker who tried to get a sign for his shop designed by committee. Whether the tale did Jefferson any good in the moment, he appreciated the attempt. Adams likewise expressed a preference for Jefferson’s earlier version, but historians have generally endorsed Congress’ work. The final version of the Declaration was leaner, more focused, and more reflective of a broad consensus of opinion that could get 13 disparate colonies on board with a united war effort against the world’s preeminent military power.

 

On July 2, 1776, Congress voted itself free of the British Empire. Two days later, it officially adopted the Declaration of Independence. In the immediate aftermath, the primary effect was to crystallize the goals of the fight, to abandon forever any notions of salvaging the relationship with Great Britain. If that was all it had done, the document would be largely forgotten today, of as minor significance as its crafters initially suspected. The Declaration’s transcendent ideas have come down through history in words that even the critical Roberts concedes stand as “superb prose which will justly live for as long as democracy and self-government still matter in the world.”

 

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal. That they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. That, to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.” With these opening lines, the Declaration became an American Scripture, a statement of national creed that made the nation far more than a mere breakaway of the British Empire, but a beacon of Enlightenment ideals for all the world.

 

The Declaration of Independence has no legal standing in the United States. It cannot be cited in court nor used as binding criteria for legislation. As a statement of political philosophy, though, it is the cornerstone of the nation. To be an American is not to hold a certain ethnic identity or to trace a certain lineage; it is to venerate the transcendent truth that human beings—regardless of race, class, capability, or social standing—all stand equal before their Creator. Their capacity to live, to live free, and to live well comes from a power above all human governments and can never be denied by institutions made up of mere mortals. To be an American is to believe that government exists for the people—all of them—and not the other way around. Governments are established to protect inalienable rights, not to give and take rights based on the whims of the ruler or even some conception of what those in power paternalistically decide is best for those under their boot. To be an American, in short, is to believe, affirm, and cherish a set of truths that plant the responsibility for a virtuous society squarely on the shoulders of its citizens and plant responsibility for keeping those rights safe and sacred on the shoulders of the people’s government.

 

It was Abraham Lincoln who best encapsulated this truth. Speaking at Independence Hall as the country was on the brink of a horrific civil war, Lincoln reminded the nation what its founding document stood for. “It was not the mere matter of the separation of the Colonies from the motherland; but that sentiment in the Declaration of Independence which gave liberty, not alone to the people of this country, but, I hope, to the world, for all future time. It was that which gave promise that in due time the weight would be lifted from the shoulders of all men. This is a sentiment embodied in the Declaration of Independence.”

 

Two hundred years ago, John Adams struggled for breath. He wheezed out his last words, “Thomas Jefferson survives,” just before passing into eternity. Once again, he was wrong on the details but right on substance. Jefferson had died hours earlier, memorably asking, “Is it the 4th yet?” before lapsing into his final coma. But he does survive. Two centuries after his death, he lives on in immortal words that split history. Through civil war, domestic discord, economic roiling, and seasons of terrifying global turmoil, the idea that birthed this nation and the experiment in liberty it inaugurated endures. Today, perhaps more than at any time since the Civil War, America’s standing as an exceptional inspiration for liberty and human rights, a shining “city on a hill,” is suffering under dire strain. May we all—native and newcomer, Democrat and Republican, contented and zealous—take up the ideals that Jefferson penned and dedicate ourselves anew to seeing that they remain a beacon of what is best in humanity for another 250 years.