The Celebration of a Progressive Holiday

by: Mike Lux

Sat Jul 04, 2009 at 10:00


On this holiday celebrating the courage of America's brave revolutionary founders, all Americans can celebrate.  But progressives should take special pride in this holiday, for it was the ultimate achievement of progressive values that brought us this day.

As I discuss in my book, The Progressive Revolution: How the Best in America Came to Be, the Tories who opposed American independence were the conservatives of their day.  They revered tradition, and proudly followed orders from the king and the aristocracy in London.  They hated and feared the idea of democracy, and thought the idea of equality was laughable.  As Tory Samuel Seabury, the first Bishop of the American Episcopal Church, argued:

"If I must be enslaved, let it be by a king at least, and not a parcel of upstart lawless committeemen.  If I must be devoured, let me be devoured by the jaws of a lion, and not gnawed to death by rats and vermin.

In a letter to the editor of a British newspaper, another American Tory argued that the colonists had shown:

...an extravagant zeal for liberty without considering...that nothing is as essential as a due obedience to the government they live under.

The Tories valued tradition over justice, feared the unintended consequences of change, and hated the idea of being "gnawed to death by [the] rats and vermin" of democracy.

Our progressive revolutionary founding fathers like Thomas Jefferson and Tom Paine argued that we should "make the world new again." Paine's pamphlet Common Sense lit a fire under the American people, reaching working class and poor people as well as the elites, and fundamentally changed the debate. Before Common Sense was published, most Americans were debating how they could best claim their rights as Englishmen.  Afterwards, the debate was about revolution itself.

And make no mistake: the ideas we take for granted today were truly radical in 1776. Before our revolution, every country on earth was ruled by some kind of king and aristocracy. Ideas like democracy and equality were shocking and terrifying to the conservatives of the day. Even among the brave leaders who came together in Philadelphia, their list of grievances with the king and Parliament were pretty basic.  But in Jefferson's stunning opening paragraph of the Declaration of Independence, he blew away thousands of years of assumptions about government - the divine right of kings, citizens owing obedience to whatever government they lived under, adherence to tradition, rule by aristocracy.  And he set the stage for an American debate about the progressive values of equality and justice that have inspired our debates ever since.  

Listen to the words again with fresh ears.  Think about how radical they were then, and how their values should inform our modern debates:  

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and pursuit of Happiness.  That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just power from the consent of the governed.  That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to affect their Safety and Happiness.

Those ideas are progressive ideas.  Those values are progressive values.  So as we are fighting today's battles - to expand our definition of equality to all of our people, to protect our rights as free citizens, to make sure all of the children growing up in a great country have a legitimate chance at their own pursuit of happiness - let's remember and embrace that history.

Happy Independence Day.

Mike Lux :: The Celebration of a Progressive Holiday

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Well, Sort Of... (4.00 / 1)
While this is basically:

And make no mistake: the ideas we take for granted today were truly radical in 1776. Before our revolution, every country on earth was ruled by some kind of king and aristocracy. Ideas like democracy and equality were shocking and terrifying to the conservatives of the day.

This is pushing things too far:

But in Jefferson's stunning opening paragraph of the Declaration of Independence, he blew away thousands of years of assumptions about government - the divine right of kings, citizens owing obedience to whatever government they lived under, adherence to tradition, rule by aristocracy.

The ruling assumptions had been repeatedly questioned for centuries before Jefferson wrote those words.  What distinguished Jefferson's words was that they were in a political document proclaiming the birth of a new polity (not yet determined to be a single nation).  He was drawing on a long line of previously developed liberal thought, which in turn echoed the earlier development of republicanism in early modern Europe, which in turn drew on classical republicanism.

It's important to recall these earlier traditions for a variety of reasons--including the recognition that we're involved in a struggle that's thousands of years old.  America represents a singular development in the history of that struggle, a "great leap forward" if you will.  But that is no guarantee of anything.  As the old saying goes, "Freedom is a constant struggle."


"Senate passes expanded GI bill despite Bush, McCain opposition"


Hall of Mirrors in a House of Horrors (0.00 / 0)
I know this is the Fourth of July and not Halloween, but there is a link: the House of Horrors government that rules us.

America is truly the world's shining example of a democracy brought into being by citizens who overthrew oppressive rulers to make the people sovereign instead of hereditary monarchies (like many current U.S. allies in the Middle East.)

But by the 21st century, America's dysfunctional democracy has become an equally shining example of how a democratic government can be sabotaged by moneyed interests, like the wealthy corporations, banks and financial institutions that now determine which legislation will or will not be passed at virtually all levels of American government.

The refusal of Congress and the White House to even consider the single payer option preferred by more than 70% of Americans is a case in point.

The founding fathers of the U.S. were fearful of the threat posed by these interests, fears that Thomas Jefferson echoed in 1816 when he wrote the following:

I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our moneyed corporations which dare already to challenge our government in a trial of strength, and bid defiance to the laws of our country.

By the arrival of the 21st millennium, the "moneyed corporations" have used their financial leverage to defy the laws of the country by using campaign contributions to buy the votes of the large majority of the nation's lawmakers to make sure they do the corporations' bidding at the expense of the general welfare of their constituents.

The $12.8 trillion bailout of corrupt, insolvent banks is a case in point.

The end result is that when we look at our elected representatives, especially those in Congress, they do not look like or act like us, the constituents they are supposed to represent. Worse still, the actions they take do not reflect the popular will.

Walking through the halls of Congress is like walking through the Hall of Mirrors in a House of Horrors. Instead of reflecting their constituents' concerns and vital needs, like their dire need for affordable healthcare, the faces of our elected representatives are bloated and disfigured by greed and self-interest.

Instead of being racked with anxiety like the rest of us, who have either lost their health insurance, jobs and homes, or about to lose them, the vast majority of Congressional representatives are millionaires on easy street.

They enjoy a government paid health insurance they voted for themselves but refuse to provide the rest of us, homes and businesses they have financed thanks to special favors from the financial sector, and profits from investments in the very industries they are supposed to be regulating.

So let's do celebrate the courage and wisdom of the American revolutionaries who defeated the British against all odds and kicked them out of North America.

But let's also follow in their footsteps and become 21st century American revolutionaries. Let's re-invent our democracy and get control of government by kicking out the moneyed interests and the influence peddlers who have sabotaged our democracy.

 


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