By Star Parker
Monday, July 08, 2013
A Fourth of July Gallup poll presented an interesting
picture about our country.
Americans overwhelmingly express pride in being American,
yet the division is wide and deep about what being an American means.
Eighty-five percent of respondents say they are
“extremely” or “very” proud to be an American.
Yet, 71 percent say they think the signers of the
Declaration of Independence would be “disappointed” how the country has turned
out.
Only 15 percent of conservatives and 12 percent of
Republicans say the signers of the Declaration would be “pleased” with how the
country has turned out. But, 41 percent of liberals and 42 percent of Democrats
say the signers of the Declaration would be pleased.
Clearly, there are very different ideas between the two
parties and between conservatives and liberals about what “truths” the signers
of the Declaration felt were “self evident” and what exactly rights to “Life,
Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness” means.
That’s not to say that there was unanimity of opinion
even among those who signed the Declaration of Independence.
To state the obvious, there are signatures affixed to the
bottom of the Declaration of men who saw no inherent contradiction in a nation
founded on the idea of liberty in which slavery was legal.
My guess is that the 85 percent who today express pride
in being an American do so because they believe this is a free and moral
country. We all agree, I think, on these principles.
But, like the difference of opinion about slavery two
centuries ago, we have huge disconnects among large parts of our population
about what a free and moral country is about.
Anyone who follows what I write can guess where I stand.
It is hard for me to believe that many in our country see
no contradiction in believing that freedom can be an American ideal while half
of Americans live in households getting some sort of government benefits.
Or that somehow a country can be thought of as free in
which forty cents of every dollar the national economy produces goes to
government at either the federal, state, or local level.
Or that government can put us in debt to the tune of the
total value of the annual output of our economy.
Or that the real debt burden sitting on the American
public is some $90 trillion – more than five times the size of our GDP – that
represents the unfunded liabilities of social security, Medicare, and other
government programs.
How can we see this as a free, moral country when we
legally and casually use abortion as a means of birth control and provide
hundreds of millions of taxpayer funds to Planned Parenthood, the nation’s
largest abortion provider?
Or that government can tell us what kind of health care
we need and must buy and can tell employers what kind of health care they must
provide.
Or that government can force employers to provide birth
control and abortion pills to employees, even, as in the case of the Christian
owners of Hobby Lobby, it violates their religious convictions.
Or that children go to public schools where it is illegal
to pray or teach traditional family values.
There’s been a lot of writing recently about the battle
of Gettysburg.
When Lincoln gave his famous address at Gettysburg, he
said the nation’s business was “unfinished” and he defined the task ahead that
“this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom.”
The challenges to freedom stand before us today as they
stood before Lincoln then.
America is deeply divided and confused today, as it was
when the bloody battle at Gettysburg was fought.
We again need courageous leadership that will lead us
back to the path of freedom and moral principle that inspired our founders and
which is our destiny.
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