Small Business Resources, Business Advice and Forms from AllBusiness.com

Making Patriots

By Berns, Walter
Publication: Kirkus Reviews
Date: Thursday, March 1 2001
An inquiry into the nature and substance of American patriotism.
First, Berns (Freedom, Virtue, and the First Amendment, not reviewed) lays down the groundwork: In the US, the Constitution frames our unalienable rights—our private rights—of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

As soon as we agreed to be governed, however, and to enter into civil society, that self-interest was necessarily tempered. As the first nation in history to enshrine the rights of man, it has fallen as our lot to champion those rights, marking "a unique character of American patriotism: the devotion not only to country but also to its principles." Not blindly obedient like the Spartans, Americans have always envisioned theirs to be a thinking man's country, wherein the citizens are not simply subjects of authority but, rather, lovers of democracy and practitioners of self-restraint. But when the state no longer appears to be safeguarding our private rights, how will our liberty of conscience tell us to act? The Civil War provided one such example, and Vietnam another, and Berns doesn't prove that following the law is always in the best interest of the state—on the contrary, the state can be strengthened by dissent. But he arbitrarily conflates common law and divine law (they could just as easily be disentangled), and he engages in a rather hollow argument in an attempt to show that the founding fathers respected the humanity of African-Americans—after which he writes a trenchant chapter on the relative patriotism of Frederick Douglass.
A thought-provoking essay.

In addition, make sure to read these articles:

  • LIBERAL ORIGINALISM: A PAST FOR THE FUTURE
  • First comes the Declaration of Independence, the illuminated initial letter of our history . . . . Here is the national heart, the national soul, ......
  • Is commercial speech really less valuable than political speech? On replacing values and...
  • INTRODUCTION Although the Supreme Court considers commercial speech less constitutionally valuable than political speech,(1) many First Amendment scholars find this conclusion controversial. Some maintain that ......
  • The rule of law in times of stress
  • A recent poll reported that support for the First Amendment has eroded significantly since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.1 The Department of Justice ......
  • Days Of Jubilee
  • The McKissacks (Miami Sees It Through, not reviewed, etc.) have written a much-needed overview of how slavery came to an end. Slavery in the US ......
  • The Black Hearts Of Men
  • A thoughtful work of history restores African-Americans to a central place in the abolitionist movement. Black thinkers and activists, writes Stauffer (History/Harvard Univ.), led the ......
  • Battle Scars
  • In the sequel to The Flags of War (2004), the alternating voices of Nate and Walt McGregor and the slave Sunday tell their entwined stories ......
  • Night Golf
  • Miller and Lucas (Frederick Douglass, 1996) gracefully light up an obscure comer of sports history with this tale of a young African-American finding his way ......
  • Not For Ourselves Alone
  • A look at the friendship of two extraordinary women, leaders of the first wave of feminism, which produced women's suffrage. Designed as the companion to ......
  • Douglass' Women
  • A vivid evocation of the two women, one black, one white, who loved—and lost—abolitionist Frederick Douglass, in a tale that for all its good feminist ......
  • Frederick Douglass
  • A deeply flawed biography of the abolitionist leader points out the crying need for better sourcing and documentation in children's nonfiction. Burchard, a writer for ......
  • Sex Wars
  • Among the historical figures whose lives Piercy (The Third Child, 2003, etc.) intertwines, the most familiar are Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. The ......
  • Changing the course of history.
  • One of the most dramatic episodes in American history first began to unfold during a candlelit meeting at a modest, two-story frame house in Detroit....
  • Theater Review: 'harriet's Return' Geffen Playhouse, Westwood
  • Through March 7 ......
  • Fall start date for housing site.
  • Phase Two of The Hamilton, an elegant and affordable multifamily development to be constructed in the Bradhurst Urban Renewal Area in Harlem, will break ground ......
  • Photos From "True Pictures".
  • By Gregory Fried. Common Place, Vol.II, No. 2. www.common-place.org/ vol-02/no-02/fried/Accessed February 10, 2002. A white teacher in a mostly white suburban public high school in ......