Mott the Hoople
Sweet Jane
In just a few days President elect Obama will be inaugurated as President of the United States of America. Regardless of what his detractors may feel, this will be the most significant historical event of our nations history since Neil Armstrong landed on the moon.
People of my generation did not expect that an African American could or would become a US President in our life time. Many thought it not possible ever and that makes me think about The Promise of America. The promise that makes our nation so unique. The promise that we cherish and is our greatest strength. The tie that binds us all together as one.
That promise is that anyone can be anything they want to be to be. That anyone by his or her own talents, hard work, energy and character can make what they want of their life or as is often heard in school rooms "Anyone can grow up to be President."
There have been times where it has seemed that we have not lived up to this promise. The days of Jim Crow would be an example. But Jim Crow did not get consigned to the dust bins of history because of its brutality as brutality has always been part of the human experience. Jim Crow eventually died because it failed to live up to The Promise of America and we Americans, as a just people, could not tolerate this.
The Promise of America is an integral part of the American experience. It is a part of the fabric of our life that makes us who we are as a people. The great people of our history have often reminded us of this promise.
When Neil Armstrong stepped onto the moon and said "That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind." He was speaking about the promise of America.
When Abraham Lincoln reached out to a defeated Confederacy and said "With malice towards none and charity for all." he was speaking of the promise of America.
When Martin Luther King penned from his jail cell in Birmingham that "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." He was writing about the promise of America.
But Thomas Jefferson defined The Promise of American most succinctly when he wrote "We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."
And so in a few days, in a historical moment, we will all experience The American Promise. I urge all of us to reach out to each other on this day. To reach out to those of different views, faiths, polities and culture and to share our common heritage. That for one shining moment on one glorious day we will see The American Promise realized and we will all know why it is good to be an American.
God Bless the USA!
People of my generation did not expect that an African American could or would become a US President in our life time. Many thought it not possible ever and that makes me think about The Promise of America. The promise that makes our nation so unique. The promise that we cherish and is our greatest strength. The tie that binds us all together as one.
That promise is that anyone can be anything they want to be to be. That anyone by his or her own talents, hard work, energy and character can make what they want of their life or as is often heard in school rooms "Anyone can grow up to be President."
There have been times where it has seemed that we have not lived up to this promise. The days of Jim Crow would be an example. But Jim Crow did not get consigned to the dust bins of history because of its brutality as brutality has always been part of the human experience. Jim Crow eventually died because it failed to live up to The Promise of America and we Americans, as a just people, could not tolerate this.
The Promise of America is an integral part of the American experience. It is a part of the fabric of our life that makes us who we are as a people. The great people of our history have often reminded us of this promise.
When Neil Armstrong stepped onto the moon and said "That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind." He was speaking about the promise of America.
When Abraham Lincoln reached out to a defeated Confederacy and said "With malice towards none and charity for all." he was speaking of the promise of America.
When Martin Luther King penned from his jail cell in Birmingham that "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." He was writing about the promise of America.
But Thomas Jefferson defined The Promise of American most succinctly when he wrote "We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."
And so in a few days, in a historical moment, we will all experience The American Promise. I urge all of us to reach out to each other on this day. To reach out to those of different views, faiths, polities and culture and to share our common heritage. That for one shining moment on one glorious day we will see The American Promise realized and we will all know why it is good to be an American.
God Bless the USA!