It’s time once again for the quadrennial party. You know the one. That over the top orgy of backbiting, name
calling, sore losers, graceless winners, allegations of cheating, actual
cheating, xenophobia, jingoism, backroom deals, payoffs, under the table money
and other assorted bad behavior. Thought
I was going to write about the Summer Olympics didn’t you? Maybe another time. This is about the presidential
elections.
Baby Boomer: A person born during a baby boom, especially one born in the U.S. between 1946 and 1965. I am a boomer; son of a U.S. soldier and his Italian war bride, back from Europe to make their lives in California. I’ve seen generations of change in culture, society, technology and politics; some good some not. I've witnessed wars both cold and hot. This is my America. A collection of stories, events, nostalgia and commentary, sometimes wry, through the eye of an American Boomer.
Showing posts with label Founding Fathers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Founding Fathers. Show all posts
Saturday, February 20, 2016
Thursday, November 6, 2014
Visiting the Founders' Dilemma
“I can only say
that there is not a man living who wishes more sincerely than I do to see a
plan adopted for the abolition of slavery.”
~ George Washington
“21 Aug. 1805…bought
a negro woman Lucretia Jame’s wife, her 2. sons John & Randall and the
child of which she is pregnant, when born, for £180.” ~ Thomas Jefferson’s Memorandum Book
We traveled the Old Dominion from the northeast corner
at Arlington over the state line from DC to the southwest corner at Abingdon, just
a tobacco spit away from the Tennessee border.
Along our route we made house calls on some former presidents. The presidents are long since gone but their
homes, from Washington’s Mount Vernon just south of DC to Jefferson’s Monticello
on the eastern edge of the Blue Ridge, all remain in magnificent
restoration. Four of our nation’s first
five presidents hailed from Virginia, George Washington (1) Thomas Jefferson
(3) James Madison (4) and James Monroe (5) and we visited the homes of all four.
Friday, July 4, 2014
Independence Day Musings
We hold these
truths to be self-evident, 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. ~ The Declaration of
Independence
“The greatness of
America lies not in being more enlightened than any other nation, but rather in
her ability to repair her faults.” ~ Alexis de Tocqueville
July 4th, 2014. After taking my usual sunrise run I was surprised,
and disappointed, to see that my coffee house haunt was open at 6, the usual
time for a weekday. Not so disappointed
that I boycotted coffee for the day but enough so that it gave pause to note
that another holiday was passing with business as usual. Workers were arriving at Home Depot to start
the day and the Big Lots folks were putting out their Independence Day
displays; sadly they aren't independent from work on what should be one of the
most significant holidays in America’s calendar year.
It was 238 years ago that the Declaration of Independence
from the British crown was adopted. It
was, for all intents and purposes already a done deal. Two days prior the 2nd Continental
Congress had approved Richard Henry Lee’s resolution declaring
independence. And this certainly didn't
mark the day that the colonists took up arms. The revolution had been going on since April
of the preceding year and the colonists had been
raising bloody hell (As King George might have said) for some time before
that. The Declaration of Independence
wouldn't even be signed until the following month. But I’m splitting hairs, aren't I?
Labels:
America,
Americana,
Declaration of Independence,
Founding Fathers,
Fourth of July,
History,
Holidays,
patriotism,
Politics
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)