It’s the Birthday Of American Exceptionalism
Here, for the first time in history, was a government whose legitimacy explicitly rested on the claims of human nature and not on common blood ,soil ,language, religion or ancient tradition.
JULY 4 is celebrated as Independence Day — the day the 13 colonies formally declared their independence from Great Britain. In truth, that decision was made on July 2, 1776, in a vote by the Continental Congress. July 4 is the day the Congress issued the Declaration of Independence — a document justifying that break with an eye toward “a decent respect to the opinions of mankind.”
In that respect, the Declaration was as much a foreignpolicy document as a simple statement of the governing principles by which both our break from London and our future government was to be judged: A government’s failure to take account of the fact that “all men are created equal” and a failure to secure men’s individual rights to “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” means that a people, any people, has justifiable grounds for “abolishing” its ties, its allegiance, to that government.
As was obvious to both the Founders who drafted and approved the Declaration, and the monarchies and despotisms that ruled the vast majority of the rest of mankind, the American declaration of these principles was a revolutionary moment not only for a sliver of the North American continent but, potentially, for the rest of the world.
The United States, initially weak relative to the other great powers in the world and, as such, disinclined to involve itself in the their conflicts, set itself inevitably on a course that is aptly captured in the title of Robert Kagan’s history of early American statecraft, “Dangerous Nation.” alism. But this is to confuse and conflate “exceptionalism” with daytoday “nationalism” and to overlook just how revolutionary and transformative the American experiment in liberal selfgovernment was, and has been.
Up to that moment, republican rule was an exception, and an exception that occasionally but rarely dotted the landscape of political rule through the centuries.
Today, through the growth of American power to support those universal principles — and, lest we forget, through our own bloody test of a civil war to ensure their survival — the
Here, for the first time in history, was a government whose legitimacy explicitly rested on the claims of human nature and not on common blood, soil, language, religion or ancient tradition.
This is the true root of American exceptionalism and why it is more apt that we celebrate Independence Day on July 4 rather than July 2. It is the creed, the principles, of the Declaration that define the United States — not our successful break from British rule.
President Obama was surely right when he said that other nations, such as the Greeks, no doubt “believe in Greek exceptionalism” just as Americans believe in American exception world truly has been transformed, with exponential growth in liberal, democratic regimes.
July 4 is a day to celebrate America’s birth. But Americans can proudly, and justly so, celebrate that July 4 is also the day the Americans gave birth to a set of ideas that not only transformed their own polity but that of the world at large.
So fire off a few bottlerockets, light as many sparklers as you like, and know that the United States of America is, indeed, exceptional as no other nation in the history of the world has been.