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Category Archives: USA Today

‘Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness’ — These Words Set America on Path to Progress

24 Friday Jul 2020

Posted by Tod Lindberg in USA Today

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Reports by government commissions aren’t generally known for their insight into basic questions about the human condition, nor can they typically be read for pleasure. The report of the State Department’s Commission on Unalienable Rights, in circulation as of last week, is perhaps the exception that proves the rule: a lively and serious inquiry into the basic ideas that animated the founding of the United States and provided impetus to the global pursuit of human rights.

Secretary of State Michael Pompeo chartered his commission well before the tough six months America has just been going through, from pandemic to lockdown to protests, some of them violent. Yet current conditions make its message all the more timely. 

Demonstrators demand justice and rail against past and present injustice. And whether they are aware of it historically or not, they mostly rely on claims introduced into the political world in the American Declaration of Independence. George Floyd had a right not to be slain by a police officer. Government is supposed to protect people’s lives and liberty. They should govern themselves as equals and be free to pursue happiness as they see it, without fear of capricious force under color of law.

Declaring independence, gradually

“Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness,” that is: Before the Declaration, ideas were brewing along the lines of the “unalienable rights” of all human beings, but the political world was the sport of kings and barons, chieftains and the strong. To most of them, the idea that government should be “of the people, by the people and for the people,” as Lincoln described it 87 years later, had never occurred. Yet the idea of these rights was so powerful and so liberating that it became not only a global beacon against oppression, but also the means by which Americans began to free themselves from the constraints of the times in which it arose.

Declaration of Independence, July 4th, 1776 painted by J. Trumbell and engraved by W.L. Ormsby, N.Y. Library of Congress

That’s because in saying “all men are created equal,” Jefferson and the other signers of the Declaration of Independence both meant it and did not mean it. Clearly, they didn’t mean “all men and women are created equal,” a formulation that would come to the fore with the Declaration of Sentiments drafted by Elizabeth Cady Stanton at the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848. Nor did it apply to men, women and children who were slaves, including of some of the very signers. Nor did they mean it with regard to Native Americans being driven from their ancestral lands.

Nor did the all the abolitionists and early women’s rights advocates themselves necessarily believe in universal human equality. Nevertheless, those five words formed the basis of 244 years’ worth — and counting — of demands for equality in the United States and beyond our own national borders.

The work our founders began isn’t over

The Founders did not finish the job of political equality with the Declaration and the Constitution, nor did Lincoln with the Civil War and Emancipation Proclamation, nor did Susan B. Anthony when she illegally cast a ballot in the 1872 presidential election, nor the Supreme Court in 1954 in Brown v. Board of Education by reversing its previous holding and declaring that the “separate but equal” justification for segregation was not equality.

But the Founders did start the project of political equality by risking their necks on independence in the name of those five words. And the others mentioned here, and many more, continued the project against resistance, by relying on a history tracing back continuously and directly to “all men are created equal” as they demanded justice.

This is a story the Commission on Unalienable Rights tells with clarity and erudition. Likewise compelling is its account of the resonance of the principles of the American founding in the United Nation’s 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the little-remembered context in which other countries drew on their own national traditions in pursuit of the universal rights they delineated in UDHR.

The American story is woefully incomplete without an account of the injustice perpetrated here and the suffering it has caused. But it is also woefully incomplete in the absence of an account of how ideas about unalienable rights articulated at the time of the founding became an engine driving the pursuit of justice here and throughout the world.

This article was originally published on July 24th, 2020 in USA Today

How Many Imaginary Female Draftees Can Dance on the Head of a Pin?

12 Friday Feb 2016

Posted by Tod Lindberg in USA Today

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USA Today

The political and military fallout from lifting the ban on women serving in combat roles continues, with the Commandant of the Marine Corps and the Chief of Staff of the Army averring at a congressional hearing that 18-year-old women, like 18-year old men, should now be required to register for the draft. At the GOP debate Saturday, Marco Rubio, Jeb Bush and Chris Christie agreed: fair is fair.

In a 1981 Supreme Court case that upheld requiring men but not women to register for the draft, Justice William Rehnquist noted that the purpose of a draft was to provide troops for combat, from which women were banned, and that therefore Congress was committing no constitutional violation by requiring men but not women to register.

Rehnquist’s ruling for a Court divided 6-3 had the aroma of a truffle laboriously hunted to deliver a result in favor of a traditionalist view of the military as against the modern claims of equal rights. Kick out the ban on women in combat, as the Obama administration has, and the question of the draft does indeed look different, not only to service chiefs but to Republican presidential aspirants.

The problem is that by now, we are at the point of arguing over how many imaginary draftees can dance on the head of a grenade pin. Continue reading →

Ben Carson was right. We could use more heroes

14 Wednesday Oct 2015

Posted by Tod Lindberg in USA Today

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USA Today

GOP presidential aspirant Ben Carson came in for some harsh criticism after speculating that if he’d been at Umpqua Community College, he would have led a charge to stop the shooter. He stood accused of insensitivity for supposedly “second-guessing” the victims and for arrogance in his hypothetical claim to bravery. Fair enough: It’s hard to avoid the conclusion that Carson, just like the rest of us, doesn’t really know what he would do in such a situation, never having faced one just like it.

But we do know what Chris Mintz did that day in Oregon: He reversed course from the direction of safety and headed back toward the gunman, pulling an alarm and showing people how to get away safety, before being shot seven times while trying to prevent the gunman from entering a classroom.

Continue reading →

Heroism is more saving than slaying

10 Thursday Sep 2015

Posted by Tod Lindberg in USA Today

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USA Today

When New York City firefighters rushed into the burning Twin Towers 14 years ago, a day of horror and uncertainty also gave us a glimpse of our country’s greatest asset: the life-saving hero.

From the beginning of recorded history, heroism has most often been associated with prowess on the field of battle. Heroes excelled by slaying their enemies and conquering their neighbors.

Our modern-day warriors have no less fighting spirit than their counterparts from centuries past. But their fight today is not to conquer the world in the manner ofAlexander the Great. Whatever their sense of personal ambition, the reason they fight is to defend their country from harm. They fight for us, not for territory or glory.

Continue reading →

Thatcher began modern political polarization

09 Thursday May 2013

Posted by Tod Lindberg in USA Today

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USA Today

To the many accomplishments for which the late Margaret Thatcher is now rightly being celebrated, let us add one that is usually less remarked but no less remarkable: she inaugurated the era of modern political polarization.

They called her Margaret Torture and “Thatcher the Milk Snatcher.” In the Washington Monthly in May 1988, Polly Toynbee asked, “Is Margaret Thatcher a Woman?” The singer-songwriter Elvis Costelloperhaps summed it up best in Tramp the Dirt Down:“there’s one thing I know/ I’d like to live / Long enough to savor/ That’s when they finally put you in the ground/ I’ll stand on your grave and tramp the dirt down.” It’s not one of his catchier nor more popular offerings, but it’s heartfelt. And it’s printable, unlike the lyrics from many a Brit punk rocker on the subject of Thatcher.

Political hatred, of course, predates Margaret Thatcher. Nixon-hatred had a pedigree in the United States dating back to the 1950s. But then again, Nixon got his comeuppance, resigning the presidency in disgrace as the Watergate cover-up unraveled. Continue reading →

Espy indictment shows prosecutors need time

28 Thursday Aug 1997

Posted by Tod Lindberg in USA Today

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USA Today

The independent counsel investigation into the activities of former Agriculture secretary Mike Espy, which culminated Wednesday in a 39-count indictment, offers insight not only into the corruption of the Clinton Cabinet’s early days, but also into how hard it can be to get to the bottom of these cases.

Continue reading →

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