Posted on 12/07/2011 8:25:33 AM PST by Kaslin
Seventy years ago today, America was brutally attacked at Pearl Harbor by an enemy that used planes as suicide bombs. A lesser nation would have been devastated. But America was no lesser nation. America was an exceptional nation. And so President Roosevelt vowed on December 8, 1941 that the American people in their righteous might would rise up and win through to absolute victory.
Americas Greatest Generation, in their righteous might, turned that day of devastation into the first day of the American Century. A century in which the righteous power of America would become the greatest power in world history.
A world led by an exceptional America is the only world, and the only America, that most people reading these words have ever known.
But today, just seventy years after it began, the American Century may be coming to a premature end.
Economies go up and down. Presidents come and go. But two things have endured since the American Century began. 1) since 1945, America has been a leading economic superpower and, since 1989, the worlds only superpower and 2) the majority of Americans have consistently believed in our righteous might as an exceptional nation.
In Ronald Reagans telling, American exceptionalism meant that America was not just big and powerful, but that America was also special, a shining City upon a hill, chosen by divine providence to be an exceptional nation with an exceptional mission in the world; to be a light of hope unto others. But, when Reagan said you and I have a rendezvous with destiny, he also warned that we will preserve for our children this, the last best hope of man on Earth, or we will sentence them to take the last step into a thousand years of darkness.
That thousand years of darkness may be upon us soon.
IMF projections now show that the economic Age of America will end and the U.S. economy will be overtaken by that of China as early as 2016.
But the greatest challenge to this generation of Americans is not economic. It is philosophical.
This year, for the first time since records have been kept, most Americans surveyed by Pew Research no longer believe that America is exceptional.
I asked Charles Krauthammer why. He said, if you listen to [President] Obamas speeches, youd think were exceptional in how many sins and crimes weve committed through the agesthats what makes us exceptional. President Obama famously underlined this point by dismissing American exceptionalism as being no different than the Brits believ[ing] in British exceptionalism and the Greeks believ[ing] in Greek exceptionalism. He then traveled to Japan and bowed down to their emperor. And, when asked to define victory over those who used planes as weapons to attack this generation of Americans, President Obama said Im always worried about using the word victory because it invokes this notion of Emperor Hirohito coming down and signing a surrender to MacArthur. Managed decline, relativism, and weakness have replaced exceptionalism in the Oval Office.
Democratic President Roosevelt wasnt worried about using the word victory. He vowed that the American people in their righteous might would rise up and win through to absolute victory, and, in doing so, begin the American Century.
Now, at what may be the end of the American Century, we have a choice to make. We can either re-embrace American exceptionalism, or take the last step into a thousand years of darkness.
As Ronald Reagan said in 1974, we cannot escape our destiny nor should we try to do so. The leadership of the free world was thrust upon us two centuries ago in that little hall in Philadelphia We are indeed, and we are today, the last best hope of man on earth.
That last best hope is running out. The time for this generation of Americans to embrace our righteous mightour American exceptionalismis now. In the coming weeks, I look forward to exploring the theme of American exceptionalism with you through this column and through your much-valued comments.
And 70 years later, America still has enemies.
Starting in the White House.
Kamikaze planes were not introduced until October 1944 as a last-ditch effort to stop the American advance.
I understand that the writer probably meant, "an enemy that was cruel and evil enough to eventually use suicide aircraft." But that's not what he said.
Maybe he was using their evential tactic of suicide planes to describe the fanatically determined nature of our enemy.
/johnny
Kamikaze planes were not introduced until October 1944 as a last-ditch effort to stop the American advance.
I understand that the writer probably meant, "an enemy that was cruel and evil enough to eventually use suicide aircraft." But that's not what he said.
I noticed that too. I'm sure he was trying to draw parallels of Imperial Japan with current-day Islamists.
Still it is interesting that even evil WWII-era Japan did not stoop to the barbarity of suicide bombing until late in the war...
Amen to that!
Please visit the Wallbuilders' web site for a quick selection of quotations from America's founding generation on the Source of the ideas which formed the foundation of our Declaration of Independence and Constitution.
Share this link with those who need a reminder of the unique ideas which underlie our Constitution's framework for limited government.
And if we are talking about suicide attacks, the midget subs that the Japanese used starting at Pearl Harbor.
Obama’s already said the country has to dump individual liberty and replace it with economic fairness for the have-nots. Marxism for all. Shove it right down your throat, folks, like it or not. Does the MSM mention this? Outside of Fox, no.
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