I ended my last blog post with the two questions:
Why do I still love my country?
And
What IS a country anyway?
A country is a set of laws that apply within a geographical boundary. It is a culture, usually containing many sub-cultures. It is a group of people who accept that by law, culture and geography, they are a nation.
So, when we love America, we love those things. We love the land within our nation’s boundaries, from the Alaskan wilderness, to the frantic energy of the big cities, to the ocean of grain ripening under the midwestern sun. We might not love every single law, but we love the Constitution and our heritage of democracy and freedom. We love the bold, independent can-do spirit that is at the heart of our nation’s culture, and we love the sub-cultures that immigrants from all over the world have brought with them, from tacos to Christmas trees to square dancing.
But, above all, we love each other. Above all, a nation is its people.
Think of the young men and women who selflessly serve in our military, and our police forces and fire departments. They are defending us, all the 250 million Americans in our swell hilltop mansions, our little brick cottages in trolley suburbs, our farmhouses and, yes, even our tents under bridges.
Think of your community: your family, your friends, your neighbors, your co-workers, the members of your church. You care of them, feel concerned for their welfare, want them to be treated fairly. You would defend them if they needed defending.
Your country is your larger community. A community defends itself. People in a community treat each other with respect and kindness. They take care of each other.
When you love America, it’s because you love the people who live here with you. People in a community can disagree, but they don’t give up on each other
If you can’t love your fellow Americans just because they disagree with you politically, that’s not patriotic. When you throw around terms like “racist” or “libtard” because someone voted for a candidate you don’t like, or their views are different from yours, that’s not patriotic.
Why DO I still love my country? I have been disheartened by many things that have happened in recent years. Endless wars all over the world. Mass incarceration. Children separated from their parents at our border. Most of all, I am saddened by the atmosphere of partisanship and acrimony. Honestly, right now, I still love America as an act of will and as an act of loyalty to the ideals that I was taught as a child. I won’t give up on my country any more than I would give up on one of my children or one of my friends who was in trouble. I love my country as an act of hope that we will find our way again, as we have in the past. But, first, I think we need to find our way back to each other.
Here’s a challenge for you: If you really consider yourself to be patriotic, refrain from political insults for the whole month of July. Criticize our government all you want; that’s so patriotic that your right to do it is enshrined in the very first amendment to our Constitution. But, don’t throw blame and insults at your fellow Americans on the other side of the political divide. Just for the month of July, as a birthday present to our nation, love your fellow citizens. Shut off whatever voice in your head (or from TV or the internet) is telling you that everyone who disagrees with you is evil, stupid and your enemy.