The Fourth of July ticks me
off. Not because I dislike America, but because I like the
truth. Really what I dislike is how some Americans act on the Fourth. I know a
lot of the dumb stuff said around this holiday is tongue in cheek, things like,
“Dear Britain, <bleep> yourselves! Love, America.” I know it’s good to let off
some steam alongside the bombs bursting in air. I get it that when you’re the
superpower and a lot of countries want to play David to your Goliath it feels good to
remember when you were still the underdog. Cool. But if we’re going to play
American independence like we’re a teenage kid getting pissed off at Dad and
punching him in the front lawn before taking off to follow our own hopes and
dreams, let’s notice that literally no son has ever looked more like his dad
than the USA does. If Great Britain was seen as the blustering, arrogant, bullying
empire of the 18th and 19th centuries, then it should
come as no surprise that the U.S. owns that title for the 20th and
21st ones. And if America is “exceptional”, we should realize it’s
largely due to the exceptional political heritage of the nation of England.
This is hard for me to write.
I love my country and I love its story. I’m a history junkie and I love great
epics. I love heroes. I spent my high school years devouring stuff on the
American Civil War because it seemed to me the great modern Iliad: one culture, two peoples, two armies, heroes
and villains, cowards and common folk. I literally was so devoted to the idea
and object of America that when my reversion back to practicing the Catholic
faith took place in 1995 I struggled with giving myself fully to God out of
fear that it might someday put me athwart my homeland. I was a literal “My
country, right or wrong, my country” kind of patriot. And like many Americans I
believed we were exceptional. If not specially blessed by God, then at least we were the proud, brilliant inventors of rights, liberty, and democracy. Little did I
realize that in the 1770s nothing could be more thoroughly English than the
rhetoric of Patrick Henry, the militias of Boston, and the documents that came
out of Philadelphia.
That word “English” needs
some explaining. My constant frustration with the American historical mindset
is that we (and not just Ron Swanson) tend to think that human history began in 1776. Most of us can’t
explain why we speak English but that our Revolution was against “the
British.” Quick historical summary: The Anglo-Saxons settled in the land south of Scotland
and east of Wales and that nation became known as England. When Elizabeth I
died in 1603, her cousin King James of Scotland became the ruler of England
too. The 17th century saw horrible wars within and among all the
nations of the British Isles, which through a long and tortuous road ended with
the Treaty of Union in 1707 making Scotland, England, and Wales, into a single realm, Great
Britain. In 1800 Ireland was added, and they called that realm The United Kingdom.
This is important because while in 1775 the Minutemen were firing on the
red-coated regulars of Great Britain,
the American statesmen were quoting, often verbatim, the arguments of the English Civil War, the political
cataclysm of the mid-1600s. To quote Simon Schama on Boston and the Stamp Act: “The
problem for [British Prime Minister] Grenville, did he but know it, was that he
was making trouble for the best-read smugglers in the world. And what they
read was history—English history, the epic history of English liberty.”
We were taught in school that
the American Revolution was about “No taxation without representation”, but who
invented that rallying cry? Not John Adams, but John Pym and John Hampden, the
heroes of the Long Parliament in 1640. I was taught (and will still hear conservative
broadcast personalities say) that our Amendments for bearing arms and against
quartering soldiers were added because of “the tyrannical things King George did
in Boston.” Well, maybe he did, but the America founding fathers knew those things were
tyrannical because people had suffered them throughout the 1640s and 50s in the
successive tyrannies of King Charles, Parliament, and the New Model Army.
These 17th century English principles stoked the American grievances of the 18th century. Four months before Lexington and Concord, William Pitt the Elder stood before Parliament and declared that the colonies were not rebelling against English law but were rebelling in order to claim their rights within English law: “This resistance to your arbitrary system of taxation might have been foreseen: it was obvious […] above all, from the Whiggish spirit flourishing in that country. The spirit which now resists your taxation in America is the same which formerly opposed loans, benevolences, and ship-money in England: the same spirit which called all England on its legs, and by the Bill of Rights [of 1689] vindicated the English constitution: the same spirit which established the great, fundamental, essential maxim of your liberties, that no subject of England shall be taxed but by his own consent. This glorious spirit of Whiggism animates three millions in America; who prefer poverty with liberty to gilded chains and sordid affluence; and who will die in defence of their rights as men, as freemen.”
These 17th century English principles stoked the American grievances of the 18th century. Four months before Lexington and Concord, William Pitt the Elder stood before Parliament and declared that the colonies were not rebelling against English law but were rebelling in order to claim their rights within English law: “This resistance to your arbitrary system of taxation might have been foreseen: it was obvious […] above all, from the Whiggish spirit flourishing in that country. The spirit which now resists your taxation in America is the same which formerly opposed loans, benevolences, and ship-money in England: the same spirit which called all England on its legs, and by the Bill of Rights [of 1689] vindicated the English constitution: the same spirit which established the great, fundamental, essential maxim of your liberties, that no subject of England shall be taxed but by his own consent. This glorious spirit of Whiggism animates three millions in America; who prefer poverty with liberty to gilded chains and sordid affluence; and who will die in defence of their rights as men, as freemen.”
Catch that? The English Bill
of Rights was in existence a hundred years before the American one. Now, what
about that most glorious of Constitutional Amendments, the First, which assures
freedom of religion, speech, press, and assembly? It is true that the American
fathers expanded it beyond what had been promised in its English predecessor. In America, freedom of speech was granted to all citizens, not just to lawmakers in debate.
Freedom of religion was given—not just to all Protestants but to all men. It is often pointed out that Jefferson, Adams, and Madison got their
ideas from Hobbes and Locke, but what we don’t get told is that what got Hobbes
and Locke reflecting on liberty and governments was the tumultuous half century of
1640-90. In the freedoms of religion and speech, we see the American framers
going further, perhaps because they could see the need to respect consciences
(especially since many were from Puritan families, dismissed from Britain in the
1660s) and perhaps because after two hundred years of wars of religion in
Europe they saw it as the only way to safeguard peace.
What then is the United
States but an end product of England’s attempts to define personal liberty and
self-government? America, what did you hurl in Britain's face but his own promises of
natural rights that you felt he had failed to keep? Certainly America has not
stayed put in the last 239 years, and neither has Britain, but this spirit of
liberty is not our divider, but our common heritage. Another time I would like
to look at how the English emphasis on liberty and the French emphasis on
equality are the two great competing streams running through American thought
in the last two centuries, but for now I just want to say thank you to the United
Kingdom for educating us in liberty and training us how to live in
independence.
P.S. Dad, when we turn a quarter
millennium, can we borrow the car?