(cont'd from yesterday's post)
Part of Hector's admiration for America, he says, is because he studied the historical record and compared outcomes among nations:
- no nation made a more dramatic internal break with slavery
- no country did more to secure the oceans and underwrite the prosperity of former enemies and allies alike
- our Constitution uniquely inspires "universal dignity"
He loves the First Amendment (image): "It assumes that human beings will disagree deeply--and refuses to grant the state authority to referee truth." What an important insight: governments consist of flawed people, the only kind there is. People can only be free where they are not forced to speak the government's "truth," where they can speak their consciences.
"To become an American citizen is not to inherit perfection. It is to inherit responsibility--to participate in a fragile, magnificent experiment that only survives if enough people remember why it exists, and what it asks of them. *
"America is not great because it is easy. It is great because it trusts its people with freedom [per Pres. John Kennedy] and demands that they be worthy of it. I can only hope to be."
* For more on this responsibility, read If You Can Keep It by Eric Metaxas
from Substack
No comments:
Post a Comment