St. Louis Post Dispatch: Defining Patriotism on Independence Day

Arizona’s GQP-friendly newspapers rarely do editorial opinions, and when they do, it is usually some lame-ass GQP apologentsia. For example, see The Arizona Republic fka The Arizona Republican after the MAGA/QAnon violent seditious insurrection in the nation’s Capitol on January 6. Impeachment or removal sounds good, but that’s not what America needs most now. A truly pathetic editorial board.

The St. Louis Post Dispatch, which has done several editorials calling on one of the leaders of the January 6 insurrection, Sen. Josh Hawley, to resign from office or to be investigated by law enforcement for his role, editorializes for Independence Day, Too much of the political right has given up on electoral democracy.

On America’s birthday, the word “patriotism” gets waved around like a rhetorical flag, but what does it really mean? Some Americans express love of country by paying homage to the nation’s military might, others to its traditions of freedom and compassion, still others to the enduring genius of America’s founding documents.

It’s much easier to define what patriotism isn’t. On this Independence Day, Americans of all political stripes should be able to agree that elections must be accessible and fair, that the legitimacy of those elections must be respected regardless of outcome — and that violence is never an acceptable response from citizens who don’t like a particular election result.

Yet those fundamental principles, which are as good a definition of patriotism as any, are currently being challenged by large swaths of Americans and their political leaders. A majority of Republicans still claim to believe the corrosive lie that Joe Biden is an illegitimate president. One poll indicates close to 4 in 10 Republicans consider violence to be an acceptable tool to address perceived failures by the nation’s leaders. Patriots of conscience, regardless of party, should forcefully reject this inherently un-American mindset.

Founders’ Intentions

For all their faults (particularly on matters of race), America’s founders were able to look past the authoritarian systems of monarchy and empire in their time, and envision a form of government in which the people ruled themselves, via their elected representatives. Inherent in that radical idea was the expectation that citizens whose preferred candidates failed to win elections would accept the judgment of the constitutional process. Democracy may well be, as Winston Churchill put it, the worst form of government except for all the others, but it is the only legitimate form of government, warts and all.

The warts of America’s particular form of democracy were evident when the last two Republican presidents (George W. Bush and Donald Trump) each initially won the office despite having received fewer votes nationally than his opponent. Democrats were especially frustrated that Trump won while losing by almost 3 million ballots in 2016. It has spurred appropriate discussion about reforming the Electoral College, within the processes laid out in the Constitution, to better reflect the will of the people.

But no serious American of any party argued that Trump wasn’t the legitimate president as chosen by the system currently in place. That restraining respect for the constitutional process could stand as another definition of patriotism.

However, political polarization today is so deep and toxic that many have become convinced that any electoral win by the other side is intrinsically illegitimate and should be opposed by any tactics necessary, including tactics outside the Constitution. Examples of this dangerous (and thoroughly unpatriotic) instinct can no doubt be found on both the left and the right — but only on the right has it become a defining characteristic of the movement, embraced at every level of Republican politics.

Jan. 6 was among the darkest moments in the nation’s history, not merely because of a rogue president’s unheard-of refusal to accept his electoral defeat, nor his incitement of his followers to assault the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to overturn that defeat. The more lasting danger is the contempt for electoral democracy that the episode has exposed on America’s political right.

Undermining Democracy

It was exposed by the 147 Republican members of Congress (led by Missouri’s own Sen. Josh Hawley) who, having just witnessed firsthand the violence that Trump’s big vote-fraud lie had visited upon the seat of government, further promoted that lie, voting to overturn a valid election based on nothing but their supporters’ disdain for the outcome. It was exposed in most congressional Republicans’ failure to hold Trump accountable for what was arguably the most impeachable thing any sitting president has ever done. It was exposed in the GOP’s refusal to allow a full investigation of the insurrection, for fear it would reflect badly on their party.

For months, this contempt for electoral democracy has been exposed in the more than a dozen Republican-controlled state legislatures that have passed laws designed to make voting more difficult for minorities, urban dwellers, the poor and others they fear will vote for Democrats. And it was exposed again last month, when Senate Republicans didn’t merely oppose an effort to protect voting rights via federal law but refused to even let that effort be debated on the floor.

Plenty of words come to mind to describe these actions by one of America’s two major political parties. “Patriotic” is nowhere among them.

Of course, the purveyors of this poison claim they are themselves acting out of a patriotic urge to protect the sanctity of the vote. This is the biggest lie of all. Countless election officials and dozens of judges of both parties have looked more closely than in any election in modern memory, and have found zero evidence of the widespread voter fraud that Trump falsely claims robbed him of the presidency. There is, therefore, also no validity to the coordinated voter-suppression campaigns sweeping red-state America, predicated on that phony allegation.

It isn’t just public faith in elections being undermined here. In a February poll by the American Enterprise Institute, 39% of Republican respondents agreed that “if elected leaders will not protect America, the people must do it themselves, even if it requires violent actions.”

That’s not a sentiment that anyone who respects a constitutional system of government would support. On this of all days, Americans should remember there is just one legitimate means of change in a democracy: free and fair elections. Protecting that institution is patriotic. Undermining it isn’t — ever.






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7 thoughts on “St. Louis Post Dispatch: Defining Patriotism on Independence Day”

  1. Liza, LBJ gave the best explanation: “If you can convince the lowest white man he’s better than the best colored man, he won’t notice you’re picking his pocket. Hell, give him somebody to look down on, and he’ll empty his pockets for you.”

    And he was right, still is!

  2. “…the right wing wants a feudal society with them (of course) as the nobility.”

    Amen, Wileybud. They want to be in charge. Period. And how does that explain all the white common folk who vote for them and gain nothing? Well, they figure that someone who looks like them is in charge and that’s good enough.

  3. Colbert King at the Washington Post writes, “This Fourth of July, we celebrate a new triumph over the enemies of liberty”, https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/07/04/this-fourth-july-we-celebrate-new-triumph-over-enemies-liberty/

    (excerpt)

    Independence Day 2021 is an apt occasion to celebrate America’s liberation from Trump.

    Today also marks the first Fourth of July to occur after the Trump-inspired Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. To think of the former president’s self-designated “patriots” storming that majestic symbol of U.S. sovereignty and freedom to satisfy his lust for power is to imagine something King George III himself might have ordered.

    After all, it was a vain King George who, as Trump would centuries later, urged his forces to stay firm in their efforts to put down the opposition.

    And it was King George who, like Trump, remained uncompromising in his refusal to accept defeat. The king left American soil scattered with the broken bodies of his Tories. Trump is leaving the country’s court dockets and jails packed with his right-wing rioters.

    King George III and Donald Trump will be remembered on this Independence Day, and for many U.S. birthdays in the future, as an autocrat and would-be autocrat who flung daggers at the heart of our nation and, thanks be to God, missed.

    Both missed their mark because they never really understood what could make disorganized handfuls of working men and boys (in King George’s day) or handfuls of outnumbered Capitol Hill and D.C. police (in Trump’s last days in the White House) leave homes and families to confront forces that threatened liberty.

    George and Trump never fathomed the capacity of people who would stand up for something larger than themselves.

    It is that spirit that sparked 1776. It was that same spirit that spurred courageous efforts to stem the flood of Trump insurrectionists who streamed through broken windows and crushed doors to stop Congress from fulfilling a constitutional duty.

    Thirteen years ago in Independence, Mo., a young U.S. senator from Illinois running for president spoke about the Revolutionary War that started on a spring morning in April 1775. He talked about the risks taken by the “simple band of colonists” when they took up arms against an empire. The chances were taken, he said, on behalf of a larger idea: liberty, and the notion of God-given, inalienable rights.

    Said then-Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) on the eve of Independence Day: “That is the liberty we defend — the liberty of each of us to pursue our own dreams. That is the equality we seek — not an equality of results, but the chance of every single one of us to make it if we try.” He spoke of the ongoing need to build an American community “in which we trust in this sometimes messy democracy of ours.”

    It is a liberty that neither King George nor the wannabe king, Donald Trump, could have ever understood.

    A liberty born of a strange kind of patriotism.

    “In the end” said Obama, “it may be this quality that best describes patriotism in my mind — not just a love of America in the abstract, but a very particular love for, and faith in, the American people. That is why our heart swells with pride at the sight of our flag; why we shed a tear as the lonely notes of Taps sound. For we know that the greatness of this country — its victories in war, its enormous wealth, its scientific and cultural achievements — all result from the energy and imagination of the American people; their toil, drive, struggle, restlessness, humor and quiet heroism.

  4. Patriotic Fourth of July tweets from Republicans in Congress rang hollow for many people on Sunday. “Republicans Who Backed Trump’s Election Lies Called Out For False Patriotism On July 4”, https://www.huffpost.com/entry/gop-hypocrisy-fourth-of-july-tweets_n_60e2a3afe4b08f6f784c7d1e

    Critics called out lawmakers who celebrated Independence Day and freedom but conveniently forgot to mention they had promoted Donald Trump’s 2020 election lies that fueled the deadly U.S. Capitol riot earlier this year, as well as their subsequent votes against a bipartisan investigation into the violence.

    Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley, Kevin McCarthy and others celebrated freedom — and got the reaction you’d expect.

  5. You’re right Lynn, Jefferson passed on first. Five hours later Adams, not knowing, went after saying “Jefferson survives”.

    Liza, the right wing wants a feudal society with them (of course) as the nobility. They would rather rule over a third world hell hole with a strong military than be part of a prosperously thriving democracy.

  6. I’m happy Biden won the election and we’re once again a beacon for the free world.

    Happy July 4!

    Was it Jefferson who died before Adams or the other way around?

  7. Today, the 4th of July, is a good day to think about what is happening to our democracy after 244 years. It’s anybody’s guess if it makes it to 250.

    When Democrats win elections, the right-wing backlash is severe. And this is the worst I’ve seen, worse than when Obama was democratically elected. But that’s because this is post-Trump America.

    The right-wing is constantly testing the resilience of the Republic, and they may actually succeed in destroying it. They certainly understand that taking away the right to vote from Democrats and their supporters is the most effective target. I think it’s time to acknowledge that democracy is not what the right-wing wants, not even close.

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