Chattanooga Times Free Press

ANOTHER KEY DATE IN U.S. HISTORY?

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With Donald Trump, everything is often the biggest ever or the grandest ever. His political movement, he often proclaims, is the greatest in American history. And Nov. 5, when he hopes to regain the presidency, “will be the most important day in our nation’s history.” Really?

Bigger than July 4, 1776? Or the day Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on? Or the day the Berlin Wall fell, marking the end of the Cold War and portending the collapse of the Soviet Union?

Trump’s elevation of an election day whose outcome we yet don’t know prompted me to think of what the most important days in U.S. history really are. The three above are candidates. Here are a few more:

› April 30, 1789, the day George Washington was inaugurate­d as our first president. Beginnings are important in setting tones and establishi­ng norms. The presence of Washington and his deep faith in democracy set the tone for what the United States would become.

› July 3, 1863, the decisive day in the Civil War battle of Gettysburg, which helped ensure the republic would survive the threat to its existence posed by Southern secession, the most serious threat of its first century.

› Dec. 7, 1941, the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. One of the darkest days in American history became the catalyst for one of its greatest triumphs. The surprise attack galvanized the United States into entering World War II against both Japan and, days later, against Germany, guaranteei­ng the ultimate defeat of the imperial Japanese empire and Adolf Hitler’s murderous Nazi regime.

› May 17, 1954, the day the Supreme Court banned public school segregatio­n. The ruling that separate schools are not equal — and subsequent civil rights rulings — were slow in coming. In many cases, public demonstrat­ions led by leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks were required to force legal, congressio­nal or judicial action. But they transforme­d the country’s racial laws and practices.

› March 7, 1965, the Selma, Alabama, civil rights march. The brutal assault by local and state police on the hundreds of demonstrat­ors marching across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in support of voting rights horrified the nation and inspired President Lyndon B. Johnson to seek and pass the landmark federal legislatio­n protecting and expanding the right to vote. Recent efforts to restrict it can’t obscure its importance and long-term impact.

› Sept. 11, 2001, the day internatio­nal terrorists struck New York City and Washington. The worst ever foreignlau­nched assault on the U.S. mainland inspired President George W. Bush to mobilize Americans and allies against the global terrorist movement. But he overreache­d when he expanded the war in Afghanista­n to Iraq, setting off a disastrous two-decade U. S. Middle East military Involvemen­t.

› Jan. 6, 2021, the day domestic terrorists inspired by Trump’s refusal to accept his election defeat launched the greatest threat to the nation’s stability since the Civil War, overrunnin­g the Capitol in an ultimately unsuccessf­ul effort to prevent the certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s election. Just as peaceful transition­s helped establish the United States, Trump’s refusal to accept one threatened its stability.

Will Nov. 5, 2024, join that list — or even surmount it? It could, but possibly not in the way Trump intends. What will give Nov. 5, 2024, its greatest historical importance is if the voters deal Trump and his followers the kind of overdue electoral defeat that will end the threat to democratic government from his threats of retributio­n, enhanced presidenti­al power and internatio­nal isolation.

The Dallas Morning News

 ?? ?? Carl P. Leubsdorf
Carl P. Leubsdorf

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