Tuesday, July 3, 2018

We the People

I read a disturbing opinion piece, which suggested the United States in on the verge of another Civil War.  The piece alternatively angered and terrified me.  Have we really forgotten the bitter lessons learned during the Civil War?  War, especially one which tears a country apart, is horrible even for the best of reasons. 

We were looking at a Civil War monument in one of the towns around here last week, and we calculated the town had 25% of its young men killed during the Civil War.  25%.  And, that doesn't count the ones wounded.  Can you even imagine what that kind of loss does to a community?  In 1865 that meant at the very least 1 in 4 young women wouldn't be able to find husbands.  In a time when women married for economic support, well, what were they supposed to do?  The labor market was decimated.  Old people had no one to care for them in their old age.  Land had no heirs.  Entire towns withered.  And, it was worse in the South for everybody.  The economic system based on the enslavement of people was smashed, sort of.  Even though actual slavery ended, and some historians say it took a war to make that happen; virtual slavery arose which lasted another 100 years.

Second, I find it very frustrating when we collectively decide to forget our own history.  I'm in my late 60's, and in the prime of my great-grandparents' time, they were struggling with an astonishing communication revolution, increasing mechanization of labor, the population shift to cities, an exploding urban manufacturing economy, and the change in the demographics of the population. 

The chaos caused by swift change and societal pressures were so overwhelming; fear ruled us:  We had a corrupt political system drowning in special interest money, racial and cultural fear and distrust, labor/management clashes, and the Anarchists, don't forget those idiots - think 19th and early 20th century terrorists - setting bombs to explode indiscriminately across the country). 

My point is this:  We've survived an economic revolution before.  We've survived a political system going off the rails.  We ALL come from somewhere else unless your ancestry is pure Native American, and even you came from somewhere else - just farther back than the rest of us.  As a country, we are still a unique experiment of a society based on ideas instead of blood lines.  We are:
       
We believe:  You don't have to agree with me, but you must be civil when you don't. 

We know:  Bring us your customs, your food, your values, your religion, and even your language, but our public education system will change your children into Americans. 

We should remember:  We have nothing to fear except fear itself. 

We are ALL Americans because we are 'we the people'.  All of us.  Smart, stupid, no matter what color, or who we worship, or how wrongheaded we appear to someone else. 

Happy Fourth of July.  It's more than a day off work for beer, BBQ, and fireworks. 

2 comments:

Jalyss said...

Hear! Hear! Thanks for so eloquently expressing this idea. YF Patsy

Unknown said...

Hi Jan and a belated Happy July 4 to you and Drake and the kids. I miss you all! I loved this post. I am with you on everything you expressed in this post, including the terrifying feeling when someone suggests the current state could lead to another civil war. It was just yesterday that I listened to an interview with David Cay Johnston speak and encourage everyone to read his new book, It Is Worse Than You Think, just to be sure people are aware of what is going on. He scared me with the possible scenario of our President traveling the country sowing the seeds of division like never before....if "Donald" (as he calls Trump) were ever impeached or if he were to resign (another thing he thinks is very unlikely). It is distressing to think our country is in the present state it seems to be in! I am really worried and concerned, especially when I hear Johnston speak! But as an American living abroad, the Fourth of July almost passed me by as just another day, until I remembered and made an effort to celebrate. I shared something I love with some other American expats living in Hangzhou on the fourth - a quote by Mark Twain that I am distressed to find that Donald Trump tweeted on the fourth - i was googling it to get the exact wording (!): "Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and supporting your government when it deserves it". Note my new gmail address, which I need to share with Sarah and Jay. Much love, Marianne