On this Independence Day, let us not just remember those who died that America might have its freedom, but also what they died for. The truest respect for sacrifice is not to hold a parade, to speak of gratitude or to say fond words; no, the truest respect is to value that which the dead fought for and to continue their fight.
America’s founders fought for freedom, we’re told, and there’s a lot of truth to that, though it wasn’t, then, freedom for all. In the context of the 18th century freedom meant some of what it means today: all men equal before the law, no taxation without representation, freedom to worship as you chose, and so on, but it also meant freedom from the aristocracy, and freedom from inherited power. "All men equal before the law" was a strike, not against slavery, but against the nobility. No man should have more rights than another; no man should have power because of who his father was.
America is the land of opportunity, it was said. Some still say this, and perhaps it’s still true. But the deeper truth is dying. Inherited wealth and inherited power are on the rise. For centuries, indeed until somewhere between 10 and 20 years ago, America, amongst all the nations in the entire world, had the most inter-generational mobility. To put it another way, no matter who your father was, or who your mother was, you could make it in America. More than in any other nation, in America you had a fair shot.
Now no one would say you can’t still make it in America. No one would say that opportunity isn’t still available in the land of the free and the home of the brave. But the fact, the sad fact, is that amongst Western nations the US now has the most income inequality and the least inter-generational mobility (along with Britain, the nation which follows American policies most closely). In America it now matters more who your father is, who your mother is, how much money your family has and how many connections it has, than in any other Western nation. The old European nations are now the land of opportunity, the land where who your parents were matters least.
The reasons are simple enough. Inheritance taxes have been weakened and progressive taxation has been slashed. The primary education system, funded by local tax dollars, systemically favors people who live in wealthy neighborhoods, while university tuition has grown far faster than inflation at the same time as student aid has been slashed to the bone. The extremely rich have bought the government and use it to arrogate money to themselves, either through preferential laws—for example, Medicare Part D or the Bush tax cuts; or directly—for example, the 15 trillion spent on the financial crisis, the vast majority of which went in effect to the rich.
Power is passed from father and mother to daughter and son, with Congressional seats being passed on like some sort of inheritance and major network spots likewise going to the children of the influential. Perhaps there are no titles, but when, for example, Luke Russert, a man with no meaningful accomplishments of his own save being the offspring of late NBC news anchor Tim Russert, is hired as a national news commentator at age 22 over others who have worked harder, who have done more, and are vastly better qualified, it’s hard to see his inheritance as all that different from a Baron passing his rights, lands and chattel to his son.
All men are created equal. But, as Orwell noted in Animal Farm, some are more equal.
For example, if you were to kidnap a man and torture him for years on end, you’d be tried in a court of law and sent to jail. But if you were at the highest level of government in the United States and did so in violation of the law, your successor might well say that the US needs to look forward, not backwards.
Nothing strikes at the heart of the revolution, at the heart of the struggle for independence than this, that America has become not a nation of laws, but a nation of men, where some men are more equal than others. To be sure it has always been true that the rich and powerful have been more apt to escape Justice’s blind grasp. Yet at the same time, there can be no question that in the last eight years the greatest lawbreakers, the greatest mass murder in the country was also the highest official in the country. And that he and his accomplices will get away with their crimes, not because we don’t all know they’re crimes, but because the idea of accountability, of equality before the law, for the highest government officials is now dead.
There are certainly those who cry out for justice. But, let’s be frank: they don’t matter, because the people in power—in Congress and the executive branch, and quite probably on the Supreme Court (though we can’t be sure about that)—don’t believe that the laws apply to them in the same way they apply to ordinary people.
All men, in the land of the free, in the land of the brave, are no longer equal before the law.
The rallying cry of the revolution was No Taxation Without Representation, and that too is dead. The Treasury and the Federal Reserve, between them have spent, loaned, guaranteed and issued about 15 trillion dollars. With the exception of about 700 billion or so of that money, they didn’t get Congress’s permission for it, and when Congress asked how they were spending the money, they refused to answer.
That’s taxation without representation, and it has continued as much under the current administration as the previous one. Moreover, faced with the greatest failure of regulation in the post-war period, most notably by the Federal Reserve, the government has proposed to give that self-same Federal Reserve even more power. It is notable that of all the agencies which could be given more power, the Federal Reserve is the most removed from Congressional control, the most opaque, and the least democratic.
One suspects that for the executive branch all of these things aren’t bugs, they’re features.
And so, 233 years since 1776, in the land of the free and the home of the brave, aristocracy is on the rise, opportunity is taking a swan dive, taxation without representation rules the day and for the most powerful men and women, America has become a nation of men, not laws.
"A Republic, if you can keep it" – Ben Franklin
Can you? Have you?
My wish for America, then, this Independence Day, is that you keep your Republic. Or, if perhaps you’ve lost it, that you regain it.
Related posts:
- Stickin’ with the Union: The Republic Window Saga
- To Write a Republic
- Late Night: The Babble Phlegm of the Wingnut Republic; OR, What’s a Half a Million or So, Give or Take?
- Naomi Wolf, OMB Watch Endorse Alan Grayson’s Campaign to Reform the Fed
- 238 Members of Congress Disagree with the President: The Fed Needs More Accountability





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that taxation without representation is something the teabaggers are all upset about. If only they weren’t Faux News wingnuts they’d understand that we’re not against the american dream, we want to restore it.
And Zed!
I don’t think we have it, Ian, but with one hell of an uprising, I do think we could get much of it back.
Don’t forget that political office is handed down, just like so many other badges of status, not just congressional offices, but all kinds of municipal and state office. Years ago, the Ohio State auditor was able to hand off his seat, one of the last times I ever voted for a republican, sonny boy’s opponent.
It time for the torches and pitchforks! I am sad today because as someone who grew up middle class and spent my life in poverty while working my butt off, I am mad. I know now it was about sexism, it was about racism, it was about Reaganism, it was about Ayn Rand who decimated my and my children’s lives with their insanity.
I do not believe in violence but sometimes I wonder why it is that it seems to get the most attention. Especially when there are people standing, literally standing at the door and knocking but there is no answer. I participated in the “Ground Zero” movement and the Sanctuary Movement, both that were treated as kooks when almost 30 years later, we were right and the rest were wrong, wrong, wrong.
I am celebrating the 4th but I cannot help but look back and wonder. ARE we going to be able to regain the thing that so many have died for? I have to say, in the past as a long time activist I am still getting these answers to the call: “I am too busy. I am too old. I am too young. I can’t handle it. I am not interested in politics (even when it affects and decimates my life). I can’t. Nobody will listen anyway. And on and on …
Cat In Seattle
GAWD!
It’s too late for the U.S., let’s start a new country in some of that unclaimed territory to the North.
/s
Ahem.
707! Hi Fern
The 4th is my favorite holiday, hands down. It’s also a touchstone for me.
There is so much that has changed in my still short life (45), so quickly.
The bright shiny objects (technologies, TV, reality shows, yadda yadda) keep a huge portion of the population busy and occupied while the Goldmans and Citis and BofAs and Madoffs plunder yet recover after a slap on the wrist.
We just came off of 8 years of complete sensory deprivation and yet it doesn’t seem like we’re, en masse, kicking into gear.
lol
Once upon a time, ca. 1945-1968, America approached a meritocracy. I always thought that the GI Bill WAS The Great Society — the great leveller.
Take my father, for example. Orphaned at age 12, had to quit school to work in the heart of the Depression in Louisiana. Swept the floors for the local newspaper. The old typesetters taught him to edit and set type. Got his union apprentice card at age 15 and found a better job in Hammond, LA, under Hamilton Jorden Sr, who arranged for him to room & board with the local HS principal. Finished his GED at night. Took one course at a time at jr. college. And earned enough credits to qualify for officers school. Commissioned as a Lt. in the 8th AF, flew two tours (39 missions) of duty as a navigator on B-17s, including Regensburg and Schweinfurt. Left service, finished college and medical school. Set up his medical practice, & raised children who were also educated. He came from nothing and dreamed the American dream.
I weep that this is so close to impossible now. Given the cost of tuition, huge shackles of student loans, no affordable housing (at least till the bottom of the foreclosures), no healthcare, no pensions, no unions, his story is impossible.
Why did they fight?
Was it for big government?
Was it for individual liberty?
We know the answer.
We do not want to face it.
Ian, thank you. This was a pleasure to read, and a whole plate of food for thought.
Oh, and Ian? Nice to see you here again.
Thank you, Ian. I fear Gore Vidal’s assessment that the Republic you describe (and I was schooled to believe in) has slowly perished over the century since America embarked upon Empire in the Phillipines. The national security “emergency” state and powers Truman created in the 40’s – and his successors have all expanded – are the fatal metstatses of that Empire, now seeded throughout our body politic.
We allowed our corrupt megacorps and their servants in public office to overthrow our Republic, and we never fired a shot. Instead, mindless partisans have eagerly assisted “their” party’s latest corporatist President du jour in demolishing our democracy, ravishing our cities and lands, and beggaring our people.
We failed. I am so terribly sorry – but my apology means nothing to the ten year olds Obama’s condemned to slow miserable deaths on a baking Earth.
You sound like a bitter revolutionary.
To which I say, far out, right on.
Amen Ian.
Again you point to the real issues we face, the real enemy within, our complacency over the slipping away of economic and legal equality – real democracy.
Yes women, ethnic minorities, gays, others, have been winning some battles within the system, but we are losing the war– and won’t recognize that loss until too late, when it’s over.
Empire trumps republic.
Recently I find myself thinking about all the worthless D leaders, and all the extremely crazy R leaders, and thinking back to all the nutzoid Roman emperors.
Think it might be an end of empire phenomenon.
U.S.A. R.I.P. 7/4/09
What trumps Empire, anarchy? /s
Almost every day I say to myself something along the lines of well, Obama is playing it smart, instead going right after the Bush criminals, he’s letting momentum build, letting activists keep pushing, letting the evidence of their crimes seep out until prosecutions are demanded by a critical mass.
Almost every day I ask myself if I am fooling myself. Maybe all he will deliver is that hope he speaks about.
heya doc! I think my sparklers just all fizzled.
NAH. No RIP forthcoming. Americans do at least what Iranians did, if not more. (Watching Iranians is the most inspiring thing I’ve seen since we hippies lost it in the 60’s) Gotta admit that I’m freaked about the weapons sales these days, though.
Ian, so glad to see you here again. Wish like hell I’d listened to you a year ago…
Great post, Ian!
The biggest shame is that PrezO who was supposed to be the “hope” for America and perhaps someone who might begin to restore the Republic from the rule of republicans has proved thus far that he’s more about handing a closed, secretive society to his daughters than his predecessor left him.
Ben Franklin was right, it’s our republic, but unfortunately with a combination of deft media manipulation and slick congressional manuvering we are on the verge of handing a kinder, gentler fascist state to our heirs…on a scorched and barren planet no less.
I wonder if the cockroaches will eventually get it right when they are the last life forms left on the planet?
I’ll say this.
When the national anthem is played before every sporting event, I’ve stopped muting the sound….
hell, I couldn’t even bring myself to root for our Olympic teams.
I feel a little better about things, but am growing more and more disappointed as I watch the Audacity of Hope turn into the Machiavellianism that is D.C.
The joint has been a Police State for the last forty years, the rich and powerful make the rules, I have absolutely no privacy anymore, I can expect to be tazered to death just for pissing off a cop at a traffic stop and Habeus Corpus is a quaint memory.
The media are a bunch of whores, as so pitifully pointed out by the WAPO selling access.
That shit pisses me off.
Oh fuck no, they haven’t heard the last of me yet, bastards.
Happy Fourth of July Pups, keep after these idiots.
XO,
Busted.
Well, if W had fixed the election 63% vs 37%, maybe. But in the U.S. the elections are fixed much more cleverly, specifically to avoid street demos. As a result, U.S. sinks into dustbin of history.
Terrific post, Ian. Thank you.
I don’t think most of us have ever had the America our documents promise, especially if we were poor, black, indigenous or otherwise different. Yes, there were boom times when it appeared that those promises might be fulfilled, but we’ve found we were just very necessary to the powerful to achieve their ends. Now, as the world has grown smaller, they need fewer of us, replacing us with those elsewhere in worse circumstances than we. Too, they have captured the financial system and are hollowing it out. They have the weapons and the mercenaries. Torches and pitchforks are useless.
We will continue to speak and fight with what little we have. Violence would be suicidal. Nonviolence requires that your oppressors have a soul which can be reached. Those in power here have thumping gizzards where a heart should be and absolutely no soul.
Last year our town didn’t even have fireworks. They are back this year.
I’m not giving up. Many of us believed in Obama, and have been sorely disappointed. I think that maybe, he is a good guy and wants us to demand accountability, but even if he is a hoax, he did awaken Americans.
Well I guess we just need to be there to count ballots, but I get your drift. If the ballots are tech rather than paper, ain’t nothing we can do.
They say the ROI on the WWII GI Bill….. for every dollar invested there was a return of $8.00…. I think it is way beyond that…
Both my parents were Vets, they both went to college. My father was a wildlife biologist for 25 years….. he taught community college classes, he managed our forests. My mother has a masters in education and spent years teaching. What was the ROI on that?
Both my sister and I went college because they could afford it…… for me it was nursing school and my sister an electrical engineer, went into the USAF research & development….. now she is a school psych and I went back to college for software engineering & business…. What is the ROI on that?
Two out of three of my kids are college educated …. What is the ROI of that?
That is what opportunity is……
One of my points, exactly. We can’t even get “them” to count the votes fairly. Both Ds and Rs think they can jimmy it, so honesty goes right out the window.
Hiya Loo…happy 4th!
It’s still a bit early to write PrezO completely, I agree… but he’s kept so many ex-Bunnypants DoJ appointees who are writing briefs that were probably based on drafts by David “Hyper-fascist” Addington and left in Cheney’s “outbox” on the 19th of January that it makes me sick.
The emphasis on “no accountability” is hardly any way to run a country, if that were the way to do business, why did we bother with Nuremberg after WW Second? The shortage of accountability “moments” is just the latest in disturbing trend of corportatist, military-industrial and congressionally-mandated impotence we face as a young, and troubled republic.
We are fast coming to either a “torches and pitchforks” moment in American politics, or generations of European schoolchildren will study our “Great Experiment” in the same way we used to study the decline of the Roman Empire (I say used to, because the money to teach that class has probably been removed from our high schools and used to build new
gladitorialfootball arenas.Hopefully he has been awakened to the fact that the Republicans are determined to wander in the wilderness and have no other agenda, except to be recalcitrant, hateful little bitches.
Time to get up and tell them to fuck off and deal with the mess they left us under BushCo.
I want accountability, transparency and my Habeus Fucking Corpus back.
Oh,one more thing, Posse Comitatus.
OK, maybe a couple more while I am at it.
Quit fucking spying on me, quit using drones to patrol the borders, tell Israel to STFU and sit still for a minute while we do this and kick Joe Lieberman out on his ass.
A guy can dream, can’t he?
Thank you Ian……
after getting so pissed earlier today with wingnuts spewing on my cancer discussion forum.
BTW…. Teddy Roosevelt left office 100 years ago….. that is something to celebrate….. He protected one out of 5 acres across the country……
Hi Doc Murphy…. doing well and my last brain MRI showed tumor shrinkage, some too small to measure…..
Jo Fish and Busted, I’m hoping that all can be fixed with Obama. We all spent a lot of money and energy, and it’s been a disappointment beyond belief.
When I’m in a good mood, I tell myself that he’s waiting for his second term to take down the horrible Bush cronies. We’ll see.
Some good news!
Hugs Katymine.
A guy can dream, can’t he?
yes he can.
May I borrow yours?
there are more than 25,000 homeless children in Phoenix which is up 18% this year….. wow that is opportunity isn’t
Thanks for the kind words all. Nice to see you all again.
Great story, katymine!
I used to think that all of us kids getting educated was “normal.” Now it’s exceptional, for a lot of Americans.
Oh, and hugs to you. Glad your news is good.
oh, yes, katymine! Repubs and Blue Dogs and lots of others seem to have completely forgotten that the GI Bill and VA housing loans had huge roles in creating the middle class and prosperity of the post-war era.
My folks, too. My dad had finished college before joining the Army Air Corps – worked his way through waiting tables. (all his life he was a generous tipper, for some reason). After the war, he went to law school at UVa.
Mom was an R.N., graduated from Episcopal Hospital, Philadelphia, Nursing School, as was standard in the late ’30’s. She joined the Army Nurse Corps, followed the invasion of Europe in 1944, set up hospitals in Paris, where she happened to be on VE-Day. (Can you imagine?)
After the war, she went to UVa to get a B.S. in nursing.
Instead, she met my dad, decided the heck with the degree, she already knew much more than the instructors, and married instead. They bought a house with a VA loan, he joined a corporation where he worked for the next 35 years, with transfers and new houses, two cars on one salary…etc.
The classic post-war story, all made possible by the GI Bill. Includng, of course, my existence. ; )
Oh, and (((katymine))), congrats on the good medical news!
Niceley done Ian. Rgank you fpr putting the status quo in terms universally understood. Happy 4th
The next big thing trumps empire just as the Dutch were trumped by the British who we trumped after World War I.
If I’m not mistaken, we’re in line to be trumped by China and the people in this country who’ve let it happen will survive financially quite nicely, thank you, thanks to the Democrats and Republicans and glib politicians like Obama.
Robert Graves …. is turning in his grave.