February 05, 2002
Abolishing America (On Hold): John Adams vs. Diversity
By Paul Craig Roberts
Over the past three decades our Founding Fathers have
fallen on rough times. Disparaged by liberals and
slandered by post-modernists and cultural Marxists,
their
portraits have been removed from
public buildings and their presence stricken from
textbooks. It is possible today for American students to
pass through elementary school, high school, and obtain
a university degree without gaining any appreciation for
the men who founded their country.
The
horrendous events of September 11 taught Americans
that denunciations of their heritage have consequences
that go beyond the babbling of
crackpot academics and
minority “leaders.” Patriotism and our flag made a
comeback. And so did truthful biography.
David McCullough’s masterful
biography of John Adams brings to life the
sufferings and hardships that a few men were willing to
bear in order to create a new nation. Though perhaps not
the most brilliant or most distinguished of our founding
fathers, John Adams was certainly the most determined.
Without his rectitude, integrity and toleration for
stress and long separations from his beloved family, and
the forbearance and support of his wife and children,
the American cause would have failed.
McCullough’s meticulously researched account of John
Adams
reads like an adventure novel. Americans should put
aside their grocery store romantic novels, take a break
from the trash that television delivers, and settle down
with a copy of John Adams to reacquaint themselves with
their country and its principles.
Our country’s basic principles and values are under
full scale assault in public schools and universities,
and by demagogic politicians, liberal judges, media,
entertainment, multiculturalists, post-modernists,
Marxists, millions of unassimilated immigrants, and
minority “leaders” who call everyone but themselves
“racists.” These are far more dangerous enemies than
18th century British redcoats.
The Melting Pot, as Carol Iannone recently
noted, was an unwritten pact between early settlers
and newcomers that neither would insist on their ethnic
identity as the primary identity of an American citizen.
The deceitful immigration “reform” that Senator Ted
Kennedy
fostered on an inattentive country in the mid 1960s
has shattered this pact and broken the
Melting Pot. The expansive universalism in our open
borders immigration policy plays into the hands of
practitioners of divisive “identity politics.” Minority
and immigrant leaders promote their ethnic identity and
seek political power, legal privileges and
taxpayer funded benefits on the basis of ethnic
identity.
Identity politics, as practiced by minorities and
played to by white politicians, undoes the nature of our
society and pushes us into a Balkanized Tower of Babel
where equality of persons is replaced by race-based
rights, race-based consciousness, and the naked exercise
of
race-based political power.
Because of identity politics,
diversity is not a strength. It is, as Carol Iannone
says, “belligerent and full of resentment, forcing us to
erase every historical memory and to drive any sense of
a collective and particularly American peoplehood out of
public life.”
David McCullough knows what he is talking about when
he tells us that in times such as ours when our values
and principles are being stupidly overthrown,
“more and more we need understanding and appreciation
of those principles upon which the republic was founded.
What were those ‘self-evident’ truths that so many
risked all for, fought for, suffered and died for? What
was the source of their courage? Who were those people?
I don’t think we can ever know enough about them.”
One of the most striking facts of our country’s
existence is how long it has survived on the work of a
handful of men who lived two centuries ago. Indeed,
since the mid-nineteenth century, leaders have done
nothing but rob the Constitution that holds us together,
extinguishing its principles and casting aside “we the
people.”
President Lincoln elevated the Union
above the Constitution. In the 1930s
President Franklin Roosevelt
elevated Big Government above the Constitution’s
tattered remains.
Most of the original rights on which our country was
founded are long gone. Their place has been taken by the
right to murder both the unborn and those being born,
the right of the majority to make
tax slaves out of the productive minority and force
them to serve a redistributionist state, and the right
of
“victim groups” to exercise
legal privileges based on group status—a medieval
privilege.
McCullough’s biography of John Adams is a best
seller. Maybe enough Americans will read it, screw up
their courage and put their foot down in defense of the
remnants of the magnificent political entity our
Founding Fathers bequeathed to us.
Paul Craig Roberts is the author
of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice.
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