America stands as shining beacon for rest of world

Published: Sunday, July 5, 2009 12:45 a.m. MDT
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Just about everybody last week missed the real significance of the United States pulling its soldiers from Iraq's cities. It had less to do with celebrations and everything to do with a beacon.

I saw a lot of punditry about the "botched" six-year war, about the killing during those years and about Saddam Hussein's non-existent weapons of mass destruction. I read a few thoughtful essays on the future of Iraq.

But no one seemed to grasp the significance of the world's only superpower invading a country, overthrowing its government, establishing an occupying force ... and then voluntarily loosening its grip, returning that nation to its people after helping them establish a representative government.

Who does that sort of thing?

That's a question worth pondering this Fourth of July weekend. The answer is, a true beacon does.

I suppose most people missed this angle because we've come to expect such things from the United States. This isn't a partisan thing. The nation didn't go into Iraq with the intention of occupying it forever, just as the United States had no interest in occupying conquered territories after World War II. The Soviet Union did, but it acted pretty much the way most powers in the history of the earth had under similar circumstances.

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But if we have come to expect such things, it is because we owe a lot to the men who founded this nation, and the way they treated power.

England's King George III was reported to have said of George Washington that if he voluntarily relinquished power after two terms as president, he would be "the greatest man in the world." Voluntarily giving up power is among the most counter-intuitive things a person can do. And yet Washington not only relinquished it, he attended the inauguration of John Adams and made the highly symbolic decision to let Adams and his vice president, Thomas Jefferson, leave the room first.

He acted as a beacon, and he lit the way for the orderly transfer of power in this nation ever since.

But then, King George III probably never truly read the Declaration of Independence, which declared equality, certain God-given unalienable rights and a government deriving its powers from the people as "self-evident" truths. Nor is it likely he studied the Constitution, which makes a point of limiting government's powers, lets its citizens be armed, allows the freedom to worship, assemble, petition the government and freely criticize anyone in power, among other things.

Recent comments

The U.S. military intervention in Iraq was a several-year-long mass...

War Party apologetics | July 6, 2009 at 12:38 p.m.

I fear the loosening of the grip is only a military one. We now have...

Jud | July 6, 2009 at 10:32 a.m.

I look positively on our situation as a glass about one-fourth FULL,...

@The Deuce | July 6, 2009 at 9:37 a.m.

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