New York Post

It’s the Birthday Of American Exceptiona­lism

- Gary Schmitt is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute (aei.org). Gary Schmitt

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.

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