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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: James Carroll: What we love about America - IHT. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

James Carroll: What we love about America - IHT
by ubernoir at 5:36 pm EDT, Jul 3, 2006

It is better to be a half-formed and rough idea than a brilliant cliché. Such preference for the imperfect new defines America. As we Americans celebrate the birth of our nation, can we put words on the reason we love it? Let me try.

Because Europeans measured what they found here against what they had left behind, newness was the main note of the settled land. In the beginning, religiously enflamed politics had made life intolerable in the old country, a story that achieved its master form with the coming to Virginia and Massachusetts of the English dissidents.

But even the mythic 1492 had carried an implication of the New World's liberating significance, for in addition to sponsoring Christopher Columbus, the monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella chose that year to expel Jews and Muslims from Spain, establishing the totalitarian principle in Europe.

Even as Spaniards then wreaked purposeful and accidental havoc in the New World, they opened an unforeseen escape route from the old.

America, for all of its nascent idealism, began as an instance of brutal European imperialism, with the exterminating of indigenous peoples and the enslavement of Africans as essential elements.

But because that nascent idealism found articulation in the solemn compacts of the early generations - culminating first in the Declaration of Independence that we commemorate on Tuesday, then in the U.S. Constitution, then in the Bill of Rights - American imperialism contained principles of its own self-criticism. Slavery came to be seen as an abomination less in contrast to the practice of other nations than to the establishing theory of this one.

America began, that is, as a half-formed and rough idea, but that idea became the meaning against which all life in the United States has been measured ever since. That idea has been a perpetual source of newness, even as it has become more fully formed and clearly articulated.

And what is that idea? It comes to us by now as the brilliant cliché of the Fourth of July, but with stark simplicity it still defines the ground of our being: "All men are created equal."

That the idea is dynamic, propelling a permanent social transformation, is evident even in the way that word "men" strikes the ear as anachronistic now.

That Jefferson and the others were not thinking of women matters less than the fact that they established a principle that made the full inclusion of women inevitable. And so with those who owned no property, and those who were themselves owned property.

How new is this idea today? Its transforming work continues all around us.

Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court faulted the Bush administration for its treatment of detainees in Guantánamo, implicitly affirming that one need not be a U.S. citizen to claim basic rights. The foundational principle extends to enemy combatants. They, too,... [ Read More (0.2k in body) ]


James Carroll: What we love about America - IHT
by k at 9:44 am EDT, Jul 6, 2006

The irony, of course, is that those who declare their loyalty to the brilliant clich� of an unchanging past are themselves at the service of the imperfect new. After all, to be an American traditionalist - and isn't this what Americans celebrate on July 4? - is to affirm the revolution.

Hmm. an interesting take...


 
 
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