Patriotism
As I'm sure most folks know, I am pretty patriotic. I love this country and consider it a blessing and a privilege to be living here. I think it is the greatest nation the world has ever seen. The reason is rooted in its founding by folks, or the descendents of folks, who escaped religious and despotic tyranny in England in search of freedom. They--the Founders--then created a Constitution carefully designed to gurantee that liberty. No other nation has a constitution that compares. It has stood the test of time and protected us from the corruption and tyranny that has afflicted many another sad land.
Most people who have served their country in military service come out patriots. There is something that happens when you are in a position of responsibility for defending your country, in harms way if necessary. You come away with a connection and a lasting appreciation for your country that is difficult to achieve in any other venue.
The American fighting man has no equal in the world. His tenacity, courage and ferocity have surprised many an adversary, including Adolf Hitler and the Japanese who could not believe that their fierce and dedicated soldiers could be bested by "soft" Americans. The realization that the Americans would defeat Japan's defenders was a significant factor in their surrender. Even Saddam Hussein was surprised.
The reason for this military superiority is, I believe, because the American soldier knows and values above all else the great nation he is fighting for. A sort of kinship develops between him and his country. He is fighting for something of which he is a part, including the folks back home, which leads him to perform acts of great bravery and sacrifice.
There is one black stain on our nation that will never be erased. At the end of the Vietnam war, the soldier came home, not to appreciation from his country for his great sacrifice, but viciousness, spitting and accusations of "baby-killer". Jane Fonda was a heroine and he was the villian. This tore asunder the kinship relationship that sustained him through the horror of that war that took the lives of many of his comrades, leaving him with a sense of loss and futility that resulted in many of the adjustment problems experienced by Vietnam veterans. This must never be allowed to happen again!
I think few of us realize and appreciate what we have in his wondrous nation of ours. We are entangled in the issues of everyday life and the ridiculous at times political shenanigans. Allow me to use another's words to try to illustrate what is the basis of patriotism for me and hopefully many others.
I recently came across an editorial--unsigned--from, believe it or not, The New York Times. Of course, it was published in 1940, well before the Sulzbergers and others took the Grey Lady down into the gutter of partisanship. The Times was once the greatest newspaper in the country and perhaps the world. The following is that editorial, written on June 14, 1940 in commemoration of Flag Day, a regrettably neglected holiday.
(On a personal note. I sometimes think I'm a pretty good writer. But periodically I run across something that puts me in my place--a rank amateur. This is one of those. It says what is in my heart much better than I could ever hope to express. May it touch you as it touched me.)
What's a flag? What's the love of country for which it stands? Maybe it begins with love of the land itself. It is the fog rolling in with the tide at Eastport, or through the Golden Gate and among the towers of San Francisco. It is the sun coming up behind the White Mountains, over the Green, throwing a shining glory on Lake Champlain and above the Adirondacks. It is the storied Mississippi rolling swift and muddy past St. Louis, rolling past Cairo, pouring down past the levees of New Orleans. It is lazy noontide in the pines of Carolina, it is a sea of wheat rippling in Western Kansas, it is the San Francisco peaks far north across the glowing nakedness of Arizona, it is the Grand Canyon and a little stream coming down out of a New England ridge, in which are trout.
It is men at work. It is the storm-tossed fishermen coming into Gloucester and Providence and Astoria. It is the farmer riding his great machine in the dust of harvest, the dairyman going to the barn before sunrise, the lineman mending the broken wire, the miner drilling for the blast. It is the servants of fire in the murky splendor to Pittsburgh, between the Allegheny and the Monongahela, the trucks rumbling through the night, the locomotive engineer bringing the train in on time, the pilot in the clouds, the riveter running along the beam a hundred feet in air. It is the clerk in the office, the housewife doing the dishes and sending the children off to school. It is the teacher, doctor and parson tending and helping, body and soul, for small reward.
It is small things remembered, the little corners of the land, the houses, the people that each one loves. We love our country because there was a little tree on a hill, and grass thereron, and a sweet valley below; because the hurdy-gurdy man came along on a sunny morning in a city street; because a beach or a farm or a lane or a house that might not seem much to others were once, for each of us, made magic. It is voices that are remembered only, no longer heard. It is parents, friends, the lazy chat of street and store and office, and the ease of mind that makes life tranquil. It is summer and winter, rain and sun and storm. These are flesh of our flesh, bone of our bone, blood of our blood, a lasting part of what we are, each of us and all of us together.
It is stories told. It is the Pilgrims dying in their first dreadful winter. It is the Minuteman standing his ground at Concord Bridge, and dying there. It is the army in rags, sick, freezing, starving at Valley Forge. It is the wagons and the men on foot going westward over Cumberland Gap, floating down the great rivers, rolling over the great plains. It is the settler hacking fiercely at the primeval forest on his new, his own lands. It is Thoreau at Walden Pond, Lincoln at Cooper Union, and Lee riding home from Appomattox. It is corruption and disgrace, answered always by men who would not let the flag lie in the dust, who have stood up in every generation to fight for the old ideals and the old rights, at risk of ruin or life itself.
It is a great multitude of people on pilgrimage, common and ordinary people, charged with the usual human failings, yet filled with such a hope of a land in which a man can stand straight, without fear, without rancor.
The land and the people and the flag--the land a continent, the people of every race, the flag as symbol of what humanity may aspire to when the wars are over and the barriers are down; to these each generation must be dedicated and consecrated anew, to defend with life itself, if need be, but, above all, in friendliness, in hope, in courage, to live for.
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26 Comments
jhayett - Feb 20, 2012 9:08 PM
It should astound us as well to know that there are people on this planet who, by no choice of their own, have no freedom or human rights.
aneuhauser - Feb 21, 2012 12:07 AM
You might want to reread my post. I added some more thoughts.
Carl Hicks - Feb 21, 2012 6:07 AM
orientation or ideology something I think is becoming lost in todays world
Having served the one thing that stands out is we were first shipmates , the only
thing that mattered was rank,whether you were from Puerto rico serving to earn
citizenship or from decendants of pilgrims,you were equals.
I also consider myself patriotic however my ego is not so inflated as to call myself
a patriot.And I would never consider those whose views differ from mine
unpatriotic,this country was built by allowing multiple views to be heard and
respected another thing that is being lost with the petty ideological argument of
todays politics.
sirlaughsalittle - Feb 21, 2012 11:23 AM
"There are two Americas. One is the America of Lincoln and Adlai Stevenson; the
other is the America of Teddy Roosevelt and the modern superpatriots. One is
generous and humane, the other narrowly egotistical; one is self-critical, the
other self-righteous; one is sensible, the other romantic; one is good-humored,
the other solemn; one is inquiring, the other pontificating; one is moderate, the
other filled with passionate intensity; one is judicious and the other arrogant in
the use of great power."
J. William Fulbright, The Arrogance of Power (1966)
WFB resident - Feb 21, 2012 4:07 PM
I'm a patriot too. But not the romantic, lock-stepping, obedience to authority
type." That kind of is like ; Im pregnant but not the kind that has a bun in the
oven ! lol... "the
other filled with passionate intensity;arrogant in
the use of great power."
J. William Fulbright, The Arrogance of Power (1966).. Sounds like somebody
talking about PDLS's and their leader the o !
aneuhauser - Feb 22, 2012 12:46 AM
A patriot is someone who loves his country. Jingoism is not a part of patriotism. I must admit I have little respect for someone who lives here and does not appreciate this country and what it stands for. Incidentally, J. Willie Fulbright is a pompous blowhard, in my opinion. I never did understand what he was saying.
Carl Hicks - Feb 22, 2012 6:32 AM
ago.
Power is like fire,it warm,scorches or destroys,according as it is
watched,provoked or increased. It is as dangerous as it is useful,it is apt to break
its bounds .
Catos letters essays on liberty 1721
jhayett - Feb 22, 2012 7:04 AM
sirlaughsalittle - Feb 22, 2012 10:48 AM
A true patriot is someone who is not afraid to criticize his country when she veers
wildly off course. One fairly recent example of this are those who courageously
spoke out in opposition to the fiasco/con-job known as the Iraq War.
Unfortunately their voices were drowned out by the drum-beating/fear-
mongering false patriots (see: Bush, Cheney, Rummy, et al).
Joe Wilson is one such patriot. And I don't believe he ever wore a uniform, but he
did serve his country honorably by speaking truth to power.
No doubt he'd be classified as "un-American" as judged by the patriotic standards
espoused by Jim Jong il of living lake country.
WFB resident - Feb 22, 2012 1:13 PM
are just that ! Assuming that you must follow blindly to be patriotic, or believing that
others feel that way is sad as it gets .
bamaphd - Feb 22, 2012 2:54 PM
WFB resident - Feb 22, 2012 4:57 PM
wondering why ? Did Hayett say he served ? Bama did you ?
Jacob Pickard - Feb 22, 2012 5:52 PM
As much as I would like to think that we are the best country in the world and during WW2 and after until the cold war heated up, I think we were.
Americans do not do themselves any favor's by boasting and thinking "Were # 1 and shouting USA", but would be better served to be humbled by our mistakes and right them to the crimes against our own people and to those around the world.
Oh and the piligrims dug up dead indians and ate them to survive the first winters.
jman99 - Feb 22, 2012 6:27 PM
Hayett's turn.
WFB resident - Feb 22, 2012 7:01 PM
reformed trucker - Feb 22, 2012 11:07 PM
You're welcome. :)
sirlaughsalittle - Feb 23, 2012 6:41 AM
Clarence Darrow
To me, it seems a dreadful indignity to have a soul controlled by geography.
George Santayana
Leo Tolstoy [...] defines patriotism as the principle that will justify the training of
wholesale murderers
Emma Goldman
jman99 - Feb 23, 2012 11:05 AM
Obviously it does as you asked the question yourself.
WFB resident - Feb 23, 2012 2:16 PM
something ? I still do not understand why you asked .
bamaphd - Feb 23, 2012 2:53 PM