As we celebrate our nation’s 250th anniversary today, some of the best and worst features of America are on full display for all the world to see.
As hosts of the 23rd FIFA World Cup games, we have been reminded by visitors from other nations, who have been sharing their joyful experiences across social media, about some of the simple things we take for granted (like ranch dressing), and how amazing the USA truly is.
Meanwhile, America 250, the bipartisan congressional commission tasked with planning a national celebration of our semiquincentennial, has been overshadowed by Freedom 250, a competing group launched by presidential executive order that is being accused of misleading donors, enriching political supporters, and telling a slanted, divisive version of American history.
Arguing over who and what we are is a tradition as old as the nation itself. The story of our founding and history is complex, full of progress and setbacks, and open to a wide range of interpretation.
In recent years there has been a tendency on the political left to focus on the darkest, most vile moments in that history, and to sometimes ignore the progress, and an equally strong tendency on the right to focus on the progress and ignore the problems that may still exist.
The reality, of course, lies somewhere in between.
When the founding fathers gathered in Philadelphia during the hot summer of 1787 to create our Constitution, they knew that, for all their lofty aspirations, our fledgling nation had, and would always have, its flaws.
“We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union,” they wrote in the Constitution’s Preamble, not a perfect one.
For my part, I’ve always practiced what I think of as a sort of clear-eyed patriotism. I’m tremendously proud of the United States of America, even as I recognize our shortcomings and strive for that more perfect Union.
I’m a natural-born optimist who also happened to grow up on and around military bases, with a career Marine for a father.
As a kid, I lived on Treasure Island, California, the small man-made island in the middle of the San Francisco Bay that holds up the Bay Bridge and that once served as a naval base.
I remember roaming the streets of the Golden Gate City admiring all of the red-white-and-blue fire hydrants (the red-white-and-blue everything) celebrating our nation’s bicentennial in 1976, and watching the Blue Angels, the Navy and Marine Corps “Ambassadors of Goodwill,” soar through the sky to the delight of the crowds gathered along the shorelines.
I tend to think the best of our nation, this great “American Experiment,” even during some of our most challenging times. And recently, we have certainly seen our share of those.
Given the wrangling in Washington over how to celebrate our 250th birthday, the results from a survey by the Honesty Project released just this week might not surprise you: 62 percent of Americans privately believe that the greatest threat to the country is other Americans.
It’s enough to drive even a patriotic optimist like me in search of answers and inspiration.
If you’re seeking inspiration, too, here are a few suggestions to lift your spirits this Independence Day weekend:
The American Experiment
This week, my family has been watching The American Experiment, a five-part documentary on Netflix that seeks to find some moderate, accurate middle ground.
Through interviews with historians and public figures who reflect a wide range of political perspectives like former vice presidents Kamala Harris and Mike Pence and congressional leaders Nancy Pelosi and Ted Cruz, The American Experiment delves into the lives and globe-altering accomplishments of America’s notably imperfect founding fathers, the nation’s legacy of slavery, and challenges to our modern democratic norms with neither the jaundiced eye of the disaffected nor the jingoistic voice of the hyper-patriotic.
The Power of Us
I found some intriguing possible answers in Jay Bavel and Dominic Packer’s exploration of human beings’ tribal nature, The Power of Us: Harnessing Our Shared Identities to Improve Performance, Increase Cooperation, and Promote Social Harmony. It’s a practical handbook for recognizing and overcoming your own biases, getting out of your echo chambers, being more comfortable with dissent, and tapping into group identity as a force for good in the world.
Renegades: Born in the USA
If all that sounds too wonky for you and it’s inspiration with a beat you’re seeking, then it doesn’t get better than Renegades: Born in the USA, a magnificent book that began as an eight-part podcast of conversations about what it means to be an American between former President Barack Obama and The Boss himself, Bruce Springsteen.
At the beginning of “The American Story” chapter, the two unlikely friends ask, “What does it mean to be an American?”
For most Americans growing up in the fifties, the answers were pretty simple. We were hardworking and freedom loving. Rugged individualists with a can-do spirit. We opened up the frontier and built mighty industries and allowed everybody to get their piece of the American Dream. We were on the right side of history, having defeated Hitler and liberated Europe. We now stood sentinel against a godless, totalitarian communism—to make the world safe for democracy. We watched the same TV shows and listened to the same radio programs. We loved Westerns and baseball, hot dogs and apple pie, fast cars and Fourth of July parades.
That’s the story we told ourselves, anyway. But it wasn’t the whole story. It left a bunch of stuff out, whether it was the continuing discrimination against brown and Black people or all the ways that women were expected to stay in their place, or some of the ugly realities of our foreign policy during the Cold War. Bruce and I came of age as young people were challenging a lot of America’s most cherished myths about itself. The result was a growing bitter divide in the country. A political and culture war that in a lot of ways we’re still fighting today.
Throughout Renegades, as Obama and Springsteen unflinchingly explore issues of race, class, and political division, they also share their deep love for America, with all of our faults and through all of our struggles.
It is a deeply patriotic, even optimistic, story for our times, just when we need it most.
Thomas Jefferson’s Last Letter
Lastly, each year on July 4, I take some time to share and reflect on the last letter Thomas Jefferson wrote.
It was a response to Roger Weightman, the mayor of Washington, D.C., who had invited Jefferson, then 83 years old, along with the other two surviving signers of the Declaration of Independence, John Adams, who was 90, and Charles Carroll, 88, back to the nation’s capital to celebrate America’s 50th anniversary in 1826.
Jefferson’s health was failing fast, and it was not possible for him to travel from Monticello. Instead, he sent his regrets, along with these stirring thoughts on the founding of the nation, the importance of reason, and the rights of all people to be free:
May it be to the world what I believe it will be, (to some parts sooner, to others later, but finally to all), the Signal of arousing men to burst the chains, under which monkish ignorance and superstition had persuaded them to bind themselves, and to assume the blessings and security of self-government. That form which we have substituted restores the free right to the unbounded exercise of reason and freedom of opinion.
All eyes are opened, or opening to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born, with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately, by the grace of God. These are grounds of hope for others.
For ourselves, let the annual return of this day forever refresh our recollections of these rights, and an undiminished devotion to them.
Jefferson and Adams died within a few hours of each other shortly after noon on that very July 4, 1826, symbolically ending the era of the Founders.
Although today we may rightly question how Jefferson, a slaveholder himself, could hold up the youthful America as a beacon of freedom to the world, his words nevertheless are a soaring reminder of the principles, the hope, the aspirations our country was founded upon.
From the instant the ink dried on the Declaration to this very day, our collective 250th birthday, our progress as a democratic nation has run in fits and starts. Americans in every age have experienced moments of pride and unity, as well as shame and discord.
But whatever challenges may present themselves, or setbacks may befall us, those principles, those hopes, those aspirations inevitably put us back on the path toward our Purpose again.
However you may be feeling about our progress as a nation—and opinions do range widely—may “the annual return of this day” today refresh in you your recollection and devotion to “the unbounded exercise of reason and freedom of opinion” Jefferson held so dear.
And may you and your family and loved ones celebrate a safe, happy, and free Independence Day.
