Come Home America

I have been sitting down to try to seek, understand, list and express what seem to me to be our core American values. I know I am not alone in feeling real fear and foreboding that our great nation, this great experiment in democracy, liberty and justice is precarious, that it is in danger.

America, we must come home.

We must find common ground. Remember our shared values. Reconnect with some unity of purpose.

Yes, I know. These are cliches. Shibboleths. Everyone says them. “All men are created equal”. “Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”. “To form a more perfect Union”. These words once possessed near religious meaning. The were enough to create a nation. But what do they mean now? Too often empty expressions. Catch slogans. Blah blahs.

I have tried to discover, for myself, what do I believe are our common values. What binds us together as a people, a culture, a nation, an idea. If in fact, anything does. If we articulate what are our values, those ideals and principles we all really share, then maybe we can determine if we are being true to them, and if not, how might we be.

I started by listing for myself as many of what I believed were truly core American values as I could. Then I looked through my somewhat chaotic list of values several times, trying to find common threads, to group them, to make coherent what looked almost random.

I found that, in broad strokes, our American values, for me, fall into seven basic categories and principles.

1) We value a general respect for fairness.
Not that everybody’s lot be equal, but that the system is fair for everyone.
That the rules are developed in a manner which we can see and understand.
That the rules are applied evenly.
That everyone has the opportunity to make of themselves as much as their ability and effort can take them.
That we give each other a fair shake.
That each of us is expected to play by the rules.

2) We value a rule of law which is consistent, impartial, evenly distributed and upheld.

That the law for one person is the same as the law for another.
That justice is separate from politics, that leaders don’t use the judicial arm of the state to enforce their political purposes.
That there is a consistent and agreed upon set of constructs, principles and norms which govern every person fairly and impartially.
That every man and woman has “their day in court”.
That the courts are fair and honest.
That justice is, as they call it, “blind”.

3) We value a reliability, trustworthiness, dependability of our respect for tradition, our adherence to precedent, and to principle.

That our word is our bond, and that we are as ‘good as our word’, both at home and abroad.
That when we give our word, that when we make an agreement we can be expected to keep it.
We respect that value in individuals, calling it by names like integrity, and we value it as a nation.
We expect that our allies can count on us.
We expect that we will keep up our end of a bargain, that we will hold fast, not blindly, but whenever we can, to our end of the bargain to our word, to our principles, to our ideals, our norms and traditions.

4) We value truth, and honesty.
And also intellectual honesty. We don’t like it when politicians, scientists, public servants, the press, or anyone bends, slants or compromises facts, and the truth to fit their own private opinions and agendas.
We may not all agree on what is true, but we value the honest pursuit of truth.
We value a free exchange of ideas in a fair, open and available intellectual public square.

5) We value respect for the dignity and the rights of individuals.
Ideally of all individuals. Of all races, colors, genders, creeds, nationalities, it is in our DNA to do so.
We believe that individuals have intrinsic worth as human beings. Well meaning Americans may differ on whether that dignity and intrinsic worth of an individual automatically guarantees them, say, entrance to the country, for example, or government assistance – and those are fair policy disagreements to have, but as Americans we value individual rights and dignity. That includes those rights enshrined in our Constitution and Bill of Rights, of course, such as the right to peaceable assembly and a free press, but it also means a respect for certain traditional norms and standards. Although some may tolerate it to achieve other goals, I can’t really believe that taunts, slurs, insults, and ridicule are not what Americans wish to emulate in leaders.

6) We value in general a certain decency, a certain dignity, a decorum, standards, civility.
A certain willingness to respectfully listen to one another.
We may for a time decry “political correctness”, but we don’t really value in the long run public servants or leaders who speak like street toughs and ‘hooligans’, who are ill mannered, ill tempered, crude.

7) We value the ideal of progress, opportunity, a chance to succeed.
We cherish that each individual have a chance to have that mythical American Dream.
We value the ideal that each generation leaves the nation better than they found it.
We value the belief that we continue to improve and that the lives our our children will be filled with more opportunities and a better world than we had.
We value the notion that humanity can get better. We may not believe it, but we value it.

Of course there are so more things we value, our lives and our families and our safety, security, shelter, and the like, but those are common to all mankind. And I am sure there are values which I have either left out or expressed differently than others would have them, but the categories of values expressed above capture, I hope, a good deal of what it means to be an American.

And, America, we have to come home. Come home to American values. Come home to ourselves. To who we really are.

Now, I don’t wish to be too coy, or devious, or to make out as if this is part of mystery novel with an unexpected ending. This is at heart the beginning of a political statement, a series of political statements. The thesis of these statements will be that in the coming election the only way to come home and to honor our values as Americans is to vote democratic.

Note please, note well that I am not claiming that this will always be the case. There could well arise in future elections candidates who are conservatives, republicans for whom one could vote and still be upholding in every respect those values we cherish as Americans.

But not this time.

In future writings, and very soon I hope, I intend to show specifically why, based on these above stated values and on the actions of the current president and administration, to come home, to be America again, means to reject Donald Trump.

For the moment, and this is The Moment, I would respectfully beg the reader to consider these values, to ask if these are really fairly called American values, and if so, to ask how well they are being represented in the current administration and the environment they have created.

Then we well talk again soon.

2 thoughts on “Come Home America”

  1. I agree with your premise and its high time this message is heard. Keep it up Rick!

Comments are closed.