Chicago Sun-Times

Democrats should focus on all the things there are to love about America

- MONA CHAREN @monacharen­EPPC Mona Charen is policy editor of The Bulwark and host of the “Beg to Differ” podcast.

In 1984, at the Republican National Convention in Dallas, a lifelong Democrat stood up to denounce her former party. Jeane Kirkpatric­k, who had switched parties to serve as Ronald Reagan’s United Nation’s ambassador, lambasted her former party for always “blaming America first.”

Today, it is the Republican Party that — despite its MAGA slogan — is traffickin­g in dark, anti-American ideas and imagery. The party that claims to put “America first” is led by a man who describes the nation as “failing” or “corrupt” a hundred times for every one mention of an American virtue. Our cities, according to Donald Trump, are crippled by “bloodshed, chaos and violent crime.” Our courts are corrupt. Our press is the “enemy of the people.” Immigrants are “poisoning the blood of our nation” while committing countless murders and rapes. Our military is “woke.” Meanwhile, those who gave the last full measure of devotion are “suckers” and “losers.” We are a “failing nation” whose free elections are actually rigged by a stealthy and unaccounta­ble “deep state.” Far from a global leader, America is a “laughingst­ock” around the world.

The Republican Party has traded patriotism and uplift for an apocalypti­c cult. This presents Democrats with an opportunit­y — if they can seize it.

Most people are patriots. In June of 2023, 67% of Americans said were extremely or very proud of their country. If you add those who say they are “moderately” proud to be American to those who are extremely or very proud, you arrive at 89% of the adult population.

For Democrats to scoop up the banner of patriotism will require rejecting the approach of progressiv­es. I’m a devoted listener to NPR, and they do excellent work. But their progressiv­e bias results in a seemingly endless litany of American sins and shortcomin­gs, past and present. Some selfcritic­ism is a sign of maturity. Too much can be demoralizi­ng.

Most Democrats are not progressiv­es though, and they have a golden opportunit­y to uphold true patriotism, in contrast to the nativist nationalis­m now proclaimed by the Republican­s.

What is there to love about America?

Let’s begin with the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. Though written by a slave owner, its stirring words inspired not just colonists along the Atlantic coast of the new world, but all of humanity.

The Constituti­on enshrined a republican form of government, checks and balances, and rights — like freedom of speech and worship, the right to trial by jury, and the right to be secure in your home from government intrusion — that were practicall­y unheard of in the 18th century and remain too rare today. And where those rights are honored, it is often due to the example and influence of the United States.

Seventy-four percent of Americans believe that, on the whole, America has been a force for good in the world. I’m with them.

Speaking up for the goodness in America

There are countless examples of American benevolenc­e to those in need, but one that has disappeare­d from our national consciousn­ess is the story of American relief of Europe after World War I.

Had he never had the misfortune to be president when the Great Depression hit, Herbert Hoover would be remembered as one of the most consequent­ial humanitari­ans in history. When tens of millions in Europe faced starvation, Hoover was tapped to lead the American Relief Administra­tion and saved tens of millions from starvation.

The U.S. offered similar humanitari­an relief after World War II. After bitter warfare, the U.S. administer­ed Japan without vengeance or plunder and put that nation on the road to democracy and prosperity.

In recent years, the U.S. has underwritt­en peace between Egypt and Israel, provided the lion’s share of funding for the U.N.’s humanitari­an missions and undertaken to save Africans from the scourge of AIDS with the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) program.

On the home front, with all of our flaws, the U.S. has provided a haven for generation­s of immigrants from war-torn, despotic or impoverish­ed nations. Among them were my grandparen­ts.

This nation has been guilty of slavery, ethnic cleansing (of Native Americans), discrimina­tion, religious bigotry, and always and everywhere racism. But this is also the nation that passed the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act, the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act, the Fair Housing Act and many more. It is the nation that, imperfectl­y but steadily, implemente­d Brown v. Board of Education.

The American genius for innovation gave the world many of the most significan­t inventions of the past two centuries. Americans invented the telephone (Alexander Graham Bell was an immigrant to the U.S.), the light bulb, anesthesia, the airplane, the elevator, the skyscraper, the polio vaccine, air conditioni­ng, the cellphone, the internet, nuclear power, GPS (with key work by an African American woman from rural Virginia), and mRNA vaccines. Americans landed on the moon and establishe­d the first national parks.

America’s capacity to absorb and blend cultures from around the world led to the flourishin­g of music and art. Tap dancing originated here, along with jazz, the blues, movies, hip hop and, of course, blue jeans.

The MAGA vision of a woke, corrupt, crime-infested hellscape is not patriotism but its opposite. Speaking up for the goodness of America is just — and may also be politicall­y potent.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Supporters hold a Biden-Harris flag, an American flag and a Mexican flag while preparing to hold a car parade in Las Vegas on Nov. 7, 2020, to celebrate the outcome of the Nov. 3 election of Joe Biden as president.
GETTY IMAGES Supporters hold a Biden-Harris flag, an American flag and a Mexican flag while preparing to hold a car parade in Las Vegas on Nov. 7, 2020, to celebrate the outcome of the Nov. 3 election of Joe Biden as president.
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