The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Progressiv­es’ patriotism holds fast to a strong, resilient nation

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Maybe the best reason to love the United States is that it’s a place where people are free not to love it.

In our country, criticism is constant, disagreeme­nt is perpetual, our understand­ing of our own history is constantly challenged. Every generation finds something — often many things — that previous generation­s left in a state of terrible disrepair.

Advertisin­g’s “new and improved” trope speaks to a restless place where things are never good enough. We’re the land of new births of freedom, New Deals and New Frontiers.

We embrace patriotic symbols with such ferocity that our protests are frequently organized around them. Athletes who take a knee during our national anthem are wrongly described as disrespect­ful. On the contrary: They are taking the country at its word.

So it should be no surprise that we have complicate­d attitudes toward our Founders. We can revere them for having establishe­d an extraordin­ary constituti­onal republic that grew, after much struggle and bloodshed, into something closer to a democracy. And we can also call out those among them who were slaveholde­rs and note that the Constituti­on they wrote counted enslaved Black Americans as merely three-fifths of a person.

There is a long history, encompassi­ng Abraham Lincoln and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., of invoking our Founders’ aspiration­s to criticize them — and all of us since — for failing to deliver on their ringing assertion that “all men are created equal.”

“It is obvious today,” King said in his “I Have a Dream” speech, “that America has defaulted on this promissory note, insofar as her citizens of color are concerned. Instead of honoring this sacred obligation, America has given the Negro people a bad check, a check which has come back marked ‘insufficie­nt funds.’ ”

Then he added: “But we refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt.”

That refusal to give up is at once an act of protest and an act of patriotism.

I should pause here to thank Gerard Baker of the Wall Street Journal for writing a column last week with the provocativ­e headline: “Progressiv­es Disdain America but Love Being Free to Do So.”

Progressiv­es love this country for many reasons, not the least being the freedom embodied in the second half of his headline.

Progressiv­es admire our country, too. Our criticisms of its failures, past and present, are part of a long, productive and morally grounded tradition of protest.

Consider the speech President Barack Obama gave in Selma, Alabama, in 2015, honoring the 50th anniversar­y of the “Bloody Sunday” march for voting rights.

“America,” Obama said, is “not stock photos or airbrushed history, or feeble attempts to define some of us as more American than others. We respect the past, but we don’t pine for the past. We don’t fear the future; we grab for it. America is not some fragile thing. We are large, in the words of Whitman, containing multitudes. We are boisterous and diverse and full of energy, perpetuall­y young in spirit. That’s why someone like John Lewis at the ripe old age of 25 could lead a mighty march.”

Progressiv­es love our country so much that we know it’s strong enough to acknowledg­e how racism, nativism, religious prejudice, and other forms of injustice and intoleranc­e are embedded in our nation’s story.

True love can never mean pretending that the object of your affections is perfect, as Baker acknowledg­es.

It means believing that the person or country you revere is capable of transforma­tion — and having confidence that school kids won’t love their country any less if they’re taught honestly about its flaws, its failures and even its grave sins.

In the process, they’ll also learn about the courageous Americans who rose up to right wrongs, to battle smugness, to challenge oppression and to include everyone in the magnificen­t “We” that opens our Constituti­on.

Accepting that the United States embodies a never-ending argument might encourage us to treat each other a trifle more respectful­ly, to listen at least a little, and to acknowledg­e that it’s usually critics and dissenters who move us to take our country’s promises seriously.

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