08 July 2008

On Liberty: Part 3- Liberty and America

Having examined liberty as it relates to governments in general, I delve now into particulars.

I believe that liberty can be secured in many different forms of government (including monarchy, oligarchy, theocracy, and democracy) and economic systems (capitalism, socialism, and yes, even communism). However, long experience--and wise Founders-- have demonstrated that democratic, capitalistic governments best foster the principles of liberty in our modern world. (More about capitalism later.) This is not to say that other forms of government or economics cannot function in liberty, just that they have not in recent memory. Nor should this be taken as a chest-thumping declaration that our own current brand of democratic capitalism is beyond reproach; there are certainly improvements to be made in both form and practice.

That being said, I firmly believe that, think what you will about our country, the American experiment has resulted in more liberty for the whole of mankind than any other political development in all of history. Since that bold declaration of individual empowerment-- the idea that government derives its power from the consent of the governed-- freedom has been on the march; the world as a whole enjoys more liberty now than at any point in all of history.

I love America, with its beautiful diversity of land and people. But even more, I love what America stands for, what it represents-- an idea. From a the tall, copper woman in New York harbor to the last line of the our national anthem, America is a symbol of liberty. I love the image of a rag-tag group of upstarts standing up to an empire (Star Wars, anyone?) covering two-thirds of the globe and declaring, "Don't tread on me!" and "Give me liberty or give me death!" America, maybe more as an idea than an actual landmass, is truly "the last best hope of earth." (Lincoln said that prior to the Emancipation Proclamation. "In giving freedom to the slave, we assure freedom to the free -- honorable alike in what we give, and what we preserve.")

To quell any accusations of blind nationalism, I fully recognize that we all too often fail to live up to our great heritage. I also would like to say that too much is made of America being "the greatest country in the world." For me, this is reminiscent of C.S. Lewis' admonition, "Pride gets no pleasure out of having something, only out of having more of it than the next man." America has no monopoly on greatness. That which makes America great-- its dedication to liberty-- can, has, and hopefully will continue to make other nations great. We should strive towards that end, rather than revel in comparative liberty.

Furthermore, if America is to remain great, we must cling to liberty as our life blood. Without liberty, we are lost, as a nation, and as individuals.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Due to a lack of understanding of the founding principles of this country, the public is much too cavilier about the need to preserve liberties. They willingly give up liberties without a second thought, not understanding that the erosion of liberty is done bit-by-little-bit.

the narrator said...

I'm looking forward to your take on capitalism. Until then, "America the greatest, best country God has ever given man on the face of the Earth."

One more thing. Nationalism worries me whenever it curtails the freedoms of others. Too often I think Americans allow our country to harm others to benefit our state, simply because we are here and the other is there.

rob said...

Steven Colbert is the greatest american to have ever lived, hands down. Amen. Go Giants.

be said...

Cool post, and good comments. I think this is a pretty healthy view of America: not that we're automatically the best, but that the principles upon which we were founded are great. Those principles in action anywhere are also great, and to the degree that we abandon those principles here we cease to be great.

Russ said...

Everyone (but Rob), I agree. Loyd, a nation dedicated to liberty cannot in good conscience disregard it elsewhere. The good reverend had it right when he said, "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." The practical application of this is difficult, however. This is probably opening a can of worms but, a very controversial president once said, "Yet liberty is the future of every nation... because liberty is the right and hope of all humanity."

B, thanks for the excellent summary. I couldn't (and didn't) say it any better myself.