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Put
the "Independence" Back in Independence Day—The Forgotten Meaning of
America
Dr.
Michael Berliner
Issue XVI--
July 4, 2003
America's cities and towns will soon fill with parades, fireworks,
and barbecues. They will be celebrating the Fourth of July, the 227th
birthday of America. But one hopes that—on this second post-September 11
Independence Day—the speeches will contain fewer bromides and more
attention to exactly what is being celebrated. The Fourth of July is
Independence Day, but America's leaders and intellectuals have been trying
to move us further and further away from the meaning of Independence Day,
away from the philosophy that created this country.
What we hear from politicians, intellectuals, and the media is
that independence is passé, that we've reached a new age of
"interdependence." We hear demands for mandatory "volunteering" to serve
others, for sacrifice to the nation. We hear demands from trust-busters
that successful companies be punished for being "greedy" and not serving
society. But this is not the message of America. It is the direct opposite
of why America became a beacon of hope for the truly oppressed throughout
the world. They have come here to escape poverty and dictatorship; they
have come here to live their own lives, where they aren't owned by the
state, the community, or the tribe.
"Independence Day" is a critically important title. It signifies
the fundamental meaning of this nation, not just of the holiday. The
American Revolution remains unique in human history: a revolution—and a
nation—founded on a moral principle, the principle of individual rights.
Jefferson at Philadelphia and Washington at Valley Forge pledged their
"lives, fortunes, and sacred honor." For what? Not for mere separation
from England, not—like most rebels—for the "freedom" to set up their own
tyranny. In fact, Britain's tyranny over the colonists was mild compared
to what most current governments do to their citizens.
Jefferson and Washington fought a war for the principle of
independence, meaning the moral right of an individual to live his own
life as he sees fit. Independence was proclaimed in the Declaration of
Independence as the rights to "life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness." What are these rights? The right to life means that every
individual has a right to his own independent life, that one's life
belongs to oneself, not to others to use as they see fit. The right to
liberty means the right to freedom of action, to act on one's own
judgment, the right not to have a gun pointed at one's head and be forced
to do what someone else commands. And the right to the pursuit of
happiness means that an individual may properly pursue his own happiness,
e.g., his own career, friends, hobbies, and not exist as a mere tool to
serve the goals of others. The Founding Fathers did not proclaim a right
to the attainment of happiness, knowing full well that such a policy would
carry with it the obligation of others to make one happy and result in the
enslavement of all to all. The Declaration of Independence was a
declaration against servitude, not just servitude to the Crown but
servitude to anyone. (That some signers still owned slaves does not negate
the fact that they established the philosophy that doomed slavery.)
Political independence is not a primary. It rests on a more
fundamental type of independence: the independence of the human mind. It
is the ability of a human being to think for himself and guide his own
life that makes political independence possible and necessary. The
government as envisaged by the Founding Fathers existed to protect the
freedom to think and to act on one's thinking. If human beings were unable
to reason, to think for themselves, there would be no autonomy or
independence for a government to protect. It is this independence that
defines the American Revolution and the American spirit.
To the Founding Fathers, there was no authority higher than the
individual mind, not King George, not God, not society. Reason, wrote
Ethan Allen, is "the only oracle of man," and Thomas Jefferson advised us
to "fix reason firmly in her seat and call to her tribunal every fact,
every opinion. Question with boldness even the existence of a God." That
is the meaning of independence: trust in your own judgment, in reason; do
not sacrifice your mind to the state, the church, the race, the nation, or
your neighbors.
Independence is the foundation of America. Independence is what
should be celebrated on Independence Day. That is the legacy our Founding
Fathers left us. It is a legacy we should keep, not because it is a
legacy, but because it is right and just. It has made America the freest
and most prosperous country in history.
Michael Berliner is the former executive director
of the Ayn Rand Institute in Irvine, Calif. The Institute (www.aynrand.org/medialink)
promotes the philosophy of Ayn Rand, author of Atlas Shrugged and
The Fountainhead.
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