How stands John
Winthrop’s “city upon a hill” this Thanksgiving?
How stands the country that was to be “a light unto the
nations”?
To those who look to cable TV for news, the answer must at the
least be ambiguous. For consider the issues that have lately convulsed the
public discourse of the American republic.
Today’s great question seems to be whether our 45th president is
as serious a sexual predator as our 42nd was proven to be, and whether the
confessed sins of Sen. Al Franken are as great as the alleged sins of Judge Roy
Moore.
On both questions, the divide is, as ever, along partisan lines.
And every day for weeks, beginning with Hollywood king Harvey
Weinstein, whose accusers nearly number in three digits, actors, media
personalities and politicians have been falling like nine pins over allegations
and admissions of sexual predation.
What is our civil rights issue, and who are today’s successors
to the Freedom Riders of the ‘60s? Millionaire NFL players “taking a knee”
during the national anthem to dishonor the flag of their country to protest
racist cops.
And what was the great cultural issue of summer and fall?
An ideological clamor to tear down memorials and monuments to
the European discoverers of America, any Founding Father who owned slaves and
any and all Confederate soldiers and statesmen.
Stained-glass windows of Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson
have been removed from the National Cathedral. Plaques to Lee and George
Washington have been taken down from the walls of the Episcopal church in
Alexandria where both men worshipped.
But the city that bears Washington’s name is erecting a new statue
on Pennsylvania Avenue — to honor the four-term mayor who served time on a
cocaine charge: Marion Shepilov Barry.
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Whatever side one may take on these questions, can a country so
preoccupied and polarized on such pursuits be taken seriously as a claimant to
be the “exceptional nation,” a model to which the world should look and aspire?
Contrast the social, cultural and moral morass in which America
is steeped with the disciplined proceedings and clarity of purpose, direction
and goals of our 21st century rival: Xi Jinping’s China.
Our elites assure us that America today is a far better place
than we have ever known, surely better than the old America that existed before
the liberating cultural revolution of the 1960s.
Yet President Trump ran on a pledge to “Make America Great
Again,” implying that while the America he grew up in was great, in the time of
Barack Obama it no longer was. And he won.
Certainly, the issues America dealt with half a century ago seem
more momentous than what consumes us today.
Consider the matters that riveted America in the summer and fall
of 1962, when this columnist began to write editorials for the St. Louis
Globe-Democrat. What was the civil rights issue of that day?
In September of ‘62, Gov. Ross Barnett decided not to allow Air
Force vet James Meredith to become the first black student at Ole Miss.
Attorney General Robert Kennedy sent U.S. Marshals to escort Meredith in.
Hundreds of demonstrators arrived on campus to join student
protests. A riot ensued. Dozens of marshals were injured. A French journalist
was shot to death. The Mississippi Guard was federalized. U.S. troops were sent
in, just as Ike had sent them into Little Rock when Gov. Orville Faubus refused
to desegregate Central High.
U.S. power was being used to enforce a federal court order on a
recalcitrant state government, as it would in 1963 at the University of
Alabama, where Gov. George Wallace stood in the schoolhouse door.
As civil rights clashes go, this was the real deal.
That fall, in a surprise attack, Chinese troops poured through
the passes in the Himalayas, invading India. China declared a truce in November
but kept the territories it had occupied in Jammu and Kashmir.
Then there was the Cuban missile crisis, the most dangerous
crisis of the Cold War.
Since August, the Globe-Democrat had been calling for a blockade
of Cuba, where Soviet ships were regularly unloading weapons. When President
Kennedy declared a “quarantine” after revealing that missiles with nuclear
warheads that could reach Washington were being installed, the Globe urged
unity behind him, as it had in Oxford, Mississippi.
We seemed a more serious and united nation and people then than
we are today, where so much that roils our society and consumes our attention
seems unserious and even trivial.
“And how can man die better than facing fearful odds, for the
ashes of his fathers, and the temples of his Gods?” wrote the British poet
Thomas Macaulay.
Since 1962, this nation has dethroned its God and begun debates
about which of the flawed but great men who created the nation should be
publicly dishonored. Are we really a better country today than we were then,
when all the world looked to America as the land of the future?