Boston Herald

America is far more than ‘just OK’

- By MARC A. THIESSEN Marc A. Thiessen is a syndicated columnist.

WASHINGTON — Maybe President Trump was right that we needed a “Salute to America” last week, because apparently some Americans have lost sight of the greatness of our country. Case in point: To mark Independen­ce Day, The New York Times posted a video op-ed challengin­g what it called the “mythology” of American greatness. “America may once have been the greatest,” the Times video declares, “but today, America, we’re just OK.”

The video is like a caricature of how conservati­ves think the left sees America — except it isn’t a caricature; it’s real. It’s a straw man come to life. As evidence we’re just OK, the video cites statistics showing that other developed countries, such as Luxembourg, Sweden and Norway, have lower poverty rates or better education and health care outcomes than America. And as for our “kick-ass democracy,” the Times says, it’s not that big a deal because “a lot of countries have freedoms.”

Put aside for a moment all the misleading data the video uses to show America is not so great. The fact is, all the freedom and progress those other countries enjoy today would not be possible without the United States.

The reason that “a lot of countries have freedoms” today is because our Founding Fathers pioneered the principle of popular sovereignt­y, where government­s answer to the people instead of the other way around. At the time of our founding, the rest of the world was ruled by monarchs. Our founders establishe­d the first country in human history that was built on an idea — the idea of human liberty.

For most of our history, American democracy was a global outlier. In 1938, on the eve of World War II, there were just 17 democracie­s. It was not until 1998 — just two decades ago — that there were more democracie­s than autocracie­s.

That dramatic explosion of freedom didn’t just happen. It was the direct result of the rise of the United States as a global superpower. The U.S.-powered victory over Nazi tyranny in World War II and our triumph over Soviet tyranny in the Cold War defeated the hateful ideologies of fascism and communism, and unleashed a wave of freedom that has spread across the world. Today, 4.1 billion people live in democracie­s. (Of those who do not, four out of five live in China.)

The unpreceden­ted expansion of liberty has produced unpreceden­ted prosperity. Last September, the Brookings Institutio­n reported that “for the first time since agricultur­ebased civilizati­on began 10,000 years ago, the majority of humankind … some 3.8 billion people, live in households with enough discretion­ary expenditur­e to be considered ‘middle class’ or ‘rich.'”

None of that would be possible without the Pax Americana guaranteed by U.S. military. Americans liberated a continent, rebuilt much of it from the rubble of war with the Marshall Plan, and then stood watch on freedom’s frontier and prevented a Soviet tank invasion across the Fulda Gap. And today, the only thing that stops North Korea from invading South Korea or China from invading Taiwan is American military might.

Today, for all its flaws, America remains the freest, most innovative, most prosperous country in the history of the world. We invented the lightbulb and the iPhone. We put a man on the moon and a rover on Mars. We are a nation of unparallel­ed military power and unlimited opportunit­y. There’s a reason we have a crisis on our southern border; millions want to come here so that they can share in the abundance of American prosperity.

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