The Patriot Post® · The Single Biggest Problem Facing America Today: Part I
By Larry Craig
I’m sure we can all write out own lists of problems in our country, and many of us could even rank them in order of importance. I suspect that what I call our biggest problem won’t even make most lists.
Why?
It’s not the kind of problem that would make the nightly news. You can’t put it on a cell phone video or explain it in a soundbite. You need to look at all of our problems and then step back and survey the whole picture of what is happening in our country.
The biggest single problem facing our country today is answering the question: What is America?
Historically, countries formed from descendants of common ancestors. We have seen a lot of migration in the last few decades, but when Africans move to Italy, we don’t call them Italians. We still call them Africans.
But when people move to the United States from all over the world, they become citizens, and we call them Americans.
That’s because America was built on an idea, or set of ideas, such that ethnic roots are irrelevant. But more and more people in America can’t tell you what those ideas are. We don’t teach them in our schools anymore, and we certainly don’t teach them to the millions of people who move to our country every year.
So if we don’t know what our founding principles are, we will create or imagine other ones, and our country will change into something it is not and was never intended to be. And we won’t even know it. And the things that made us what we are will cease to exist. It will be like we were taken over by a foreign power, a coup, but nobody will even know. It will happen slowly, over generations, each new generation growing up with a new normal, until one day it is gone. And most people won’t even know it.
These ideas are five in number, and they are given in the Declaration of Independence.
The first proposition is that all people are created equal — an idea that sounds vague and not necessarily grounded in reality
In what sense are any two people equal? We are all unique and are different from everyone else in innumerable ways: looks, intelligence, aptitudes, abilities, personalities, etc. But note that it says created equal. It is not talking about physical characteristics.
In the context of our country’s founding, it’s saying that nobody has the divine or natural right to rule over other people. We forget today that at the time nations were ruled by kings. Kings weren’t elected or chosen by the people. It was a position they were born into.
Our Founders said, No, we are all created equal. We don’t have rulers.
Yes, you might say, but they had slavery. Isn’t that one people ruling over another? Indeed it is, and we ended up fighting a very costly civil war to end that. People don’t always live up to their ideals, but the first step is establishing them. We will talk more about this in Part II.
Secondly, the same God who created us equal also endowed us with unalienable rights. These rights are how we define liberty and freedom, by our ability to exercise these rights.
These rights come from God and precede and supersede government. Government didn’t give them, and government can’t take them away.
When the Founders created our country’s new Constitution, they debated whether these rights should be enumerated in it. They were concerned 1) that people would come to think these rights came from the government at some point in the future and not from God, and 2) that these were all the rights that people were endowed with.
Eventually they decided to add them to the Constitution, but by way of amendments. The first 10 amendments to our Constitution are called the Bill of Rights. These rights were things you could do without the government’s permission or regulation.
Thirdly, these rights include life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Fourthly, they said that government exists to secure those rights. Remember this point. The role of government is a key issue today.
And, lastly, when the government does not secure our rights, it is the right of the people to either change the government or replace it.
But what does all this mean, especially today in a politically divided country?
We will look at this in the remaining articles.