Mr. Putin is correct.
To what degree is America an exceptional nation? To answer that we must ask ourselves, to what degree has America forgotten itself and those who made it exceptional? Virtually purged from American history books is any serious discussion of uniquely American ideals, of radical early-American Christian Unitarianism, of the revolutionary Declaration, the first American confederacy, or the counter-revolutionary Constitution. Missing from those pages and the national consciousness are any in-depth knowledge of the ideas of Sam Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine, Frederick Douglas, Andrew Jackson, Nat Turner, or John Brown, exceptional men all, who made exceptional decisions, exceptional contributions and exceptional sacrifices. As well absent are Robert Ingersoll, Mark Twain, Lewis Sinclair, Garet Garett, Emma Goldman, Stephen Vincent Benét, Will Rogers, Rose Wilder Lane, Dorothy Day and H.L. Mencken, exceptional men and women who chronicled the American experience in an exceptionally American way. We have forgotten Main Street and American Names, both Common Sense and Roger's common sense. We have, in large, turned our backs on what made us exceptional in order to make ourselves like every other place else on the planet, most especially to make ourselves like the place our ancestors were escaping from: Europe. Mr. Putin is correct, we are no longer exceptional, because we chose not to be. We chose to forgo exception, to forsake radicalism, and to instead embrace dogma and sameness. And for that we are the poorer.
I found the following in "The Path To Restoring America" by KrisAnne Hall "Our founders believed that only a truly informed and educated people could maintain liberty. Sam Adams said in a letter written to James Warren on November 4, 1775, "…when People are universally ignorant, and debauched in their Manners, they will sink under their own weight without the Aid of foreign invaders."
Knowledge equals power, Ignorance foretells destruction.
1816 January 6. (to Charles Yancey) "if a nation expects to be ignorant & free, in a state of civilisation, it expects what never was & never will be." Thomas Jefferson
Ayn Rand
We The Living
The Fountainhead
Atlas Shrugged
Maybe my legacy will be determined by how well I did in saving one young mind at a time.
"The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step." - Lao Tzu
Republican nominee Thomas E. Dewey, the governor of New York, announced support of an amendment that would limit future presidents to two terms. According to Dewey, "Four terms, or sixteen years, is the most dangerous threat to our freedom ever proposed." Long live the 22nd amendment.
One thing that gives me comfort is that I believe when the average American hears the phrase "He did something disruptive that no one had ever done," without even knowing what it is, the American thinks "cool. Maybe it was something awesome" The average foreigner thinks, "Who does he think he is to do something new and disruptive?" That's just an initial reaction. What people think will obviously depend on the details. But the FIRST reaction in America is new / disruptive = cool.
The thing that concerns me most about the US is I think when people hear the phrase "gov't should help the poor" the average person thinks he's the poor. I know most people here think, "no, I shouldn't be forced to help the poor." Some people think they should be forced to help the poor. We could debate that point, but the important thing is that most people should hear that and think of *themselves* taking action (or not) to help the poor. If most people (i.e. the 99%) think they need some kind of handout, that's a huge problem.