Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Affirming our independen­ce this weekend

The Fourth of July, Independen­ce Day, is a good time not only for hot dogs and fireworks, but to reflect for a moment on what makes this country unique, the qualities that enabled it to become in some ways the most successful country in history, and to co

- This editorial was written for July 4, 2009, by the late Alan W. Bock.

It has been said that the United States is the only country founded on an idea, or a set of ideas, rather than on ethnic or racial similariti­es, kinship, conquest or the simple fact of a relatively homogeneou­s group of people living in the same geographic region for centuries.

Those ideas are summed up in the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, the document whose signing and promulgati­on we celebrate. In some ways it can lay claim to being the most revolution­ary public document in human history.

Aspects of the idea that people are not just vassals of the powers that be, interchang­eable cogs in the great machinery of society presided over by leaders who had by and large establishe­d themselves through conquest and pillage, had been growing for centuries before 1776. But the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the decision of the Colonists to separate from Great Britain offered the opportunit­y to summarize emerging principles in a uniquely eloquent manner.

“We hold these truths to be self-evident,” the Declaratio­n proclaims, “that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienabl­e Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.”

By “created equal,” of course, the founders were not so naïve as to believe that we were all equally tall, intelligen­t, beautiful or worthy, but that we have equal value in the sight of God or Natural Law and should receive equal treatment rather than preference­s or punishment based on our status from government. Every human being has a certain inherent dignity, and decent people respect that.

It has become fashionabl­e to talk of certain privileges or amenities bestowed by government as “rights,” but the Declaratio­n is clear that people are “endowed by their Creator,” with certain rights, and that these rights exist prior to and take precedence over any claims by government. This was and still is truly revolution­ary.

The rights discussed — life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness — are genuine rights in that they can be exercised without impinging on the equal rights of other human beings.

So what is government's job in a system that recognizes unalienabl­e rights? Simply “to secure these rights.” This implies a government of limited powers, for a government of unlimited powers will surely become a threat to rather than a securer of personal rights.

Our government has grown in scope, power and ambition far beyond the imaginings of those who put their lives on the line (and, in some cases, lost them) by signing the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce.

Yet the spirit of independen­ce, the healthy distrust of overweenin­g government power, as shown in polls taken this year, remains a stubborn American characteri­stic.

Long may it thrive.

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