The topic of conversation for this
Constitution Monday concerns the way that America should move forward from this
point in time. America is standing at the crossroad of its future. Democrats, liberals,
and progressives are pushing and pulling to move the United States into
multi-culturalism. Republicans and conservatives are trying to slow this
movement while seeking to “preserve the American way of life.”
Thomas D. Klingenstein coined the phrase “preserve the American way of life” and said that it is more
than “a bumper sticker or a talking point.” It is “the essential starting point
for a strategy.”
Rush Limbaugh liked the idea so much that he suggested it as the theme for President Donald
Trump’s 2020 presidential campaign. Limbaugh’s reasoning is that “Make America
Great Again” is was good for his first term but not a second time, and “Keep
America Great” does not make sense with our current circumstances.
The purpose of this essay is to summarize
Klingenstein’s ideas about what the American way of life is and how we can
preserve it. He first explained that “Strategy follows from purpose.” This
means that we must clearly understand our purpose; otherwise, our strategy “will
be muddled” in changing circumstances.
Klingenstein used an example of a man who
wanted to climb a mountain and found a trail that he was confident led to his
destination. He could follow the trail with his head down, but he might run
into problems “if the trail is washed away, blocked, or disguised.” His only choice
would be to “find an alternative route – but this requires keeping his head up
and his destination in sight.”
The author emphasized that President Trump
understand this principle. His mission – his mountain top – is “Make America Great
Again.” He keeps his eye on his goal and understands that he must used a route
that is different than that traditionally used by Republicans. He said that
Republicans often describe their mission as “freedom” or “constitutional
government.” Freedom does not give guidance as to how to preserve it in
different circumstances – such as we have seen with COVID-19.
We need a concept both more focused and
more comprehensive than just freedom. We need a mission. If Republicans
formulated their mission as preserving the American way of life, I think it
might be clearer to them that minimizing deaths form the virus and the health
of the economy, important as they may be, are not the only considerations.
Klingenstein then focused on constitutional
government or limited government and said that this “is not a
mission: it is a means to a mission. The Constitution does indeed provide
limits and we should, of course, stay within them – but within them there
exists a great deal of latitude.” He continued by saying that limited
government does not “provide enough guidance as to what the government
should be doing at any particular time.”
The mission I propose
is shorthand for “securing the conditions necessary to pursue a worthy life.” “A
worthy life” is what the founders meant by “happiness” in the Declaration of Independence.
The most essential “conditions” are the beliefs and values that must be held by
society at large in order that each American can pursue a worthy life. These
beliefs and values support the American way of life; hence the short form
version of the mission: To “preserve the American way of life.” …
What is the American way of
life that Republicans should want to preserve? …. They want to preserve, and in
some respects recover, what Americans thought was the right way of life until a
generation or two ago.
We then believed that we were
the shining city on the hill, marked out to show the rest of the world that
people can govern themselves….
We believed that we had done
great things in the past and were capable of doing more. This success, despite
numerous missteps, made us a confident people….
We believed ourselves to be
the least class-conscious, most individualist, most religious people in the
world. We believed that success in life depends on one’s own talents and
character and so we glorified the self-made man. We valued work, no matter how
humble, and self-reliance. Dependency was thought to be shameful. This was all
part of the “American Dream.”
Although we understood
ourselves as individualistic, we believed that happiness (a worthy life)
requires doing good in this world. And so volunteerism and sacrifice for the
common good was highly valued and publicly honored. This meant more than voting
and obeying the law: it meant serving in the military and participating in
civic organizations, local government and political parties, and teaching one’s
children what it meant to be a responsible citizen. For most people, happiness
was found in family, church and community.
Many Americans still hold
this understanding of the American way of life. It is this, I believe, that
Republicans would like to preserve.
After describing the American way of
life, Klingenstein
said that we must recognize that this way of life is being destroyed those who
are pushing multiculturalism. Having this purpose would help us to repel the regime
of multiculturalism.
… As I am using
the term, multiculturalism sees society not as a community of rights-bearing
individuals with a shared understanding of a national good, but as a collection
of cultural identity groups, ranked in order of victimhood (though all
oppressed by white males), and aggregated within highly permeable national
boundaries. Multiculturalism replaces American citizens with so-called “global
citizens.”
Identity politics
is the politics of multiculturalism. Political correctness is its enforcement
arm. Multiculturalism involves a way of life that cannot exist peacefully with
the American way of life any more than could Communism or the antebellum South.
Klingenstein described the conflict
between multiculturalism and the American way of life as “a regime-level
context.” The two systems cannot exist at the same time, and the “Differences
in ends cannot be negotiated.” Trying to use both
systems would divide our country because “A nation cannot go in opposite
directions at the same time.”
According to Klingenstein,
multiculturalism operates in a socialism environment with “social justice.” It
infiltrates the education system where it indoctrinates the rising generation
in its precepts in numerous ways, such as changing the nation’s history. This
is one reason why statues of early leaders in our nation are being pulled down,
names of cities and states changed, etc. It teaches our children and
grandchildren that America is evil and must change.
Multiculturalism seeks
to destroy not only our history but education more broadly, as well as the
other institutions that teach the beliefs and values necessary for preserving
the American way of life. The most important of these institutions is family,
because it is here “that the foundation of morality is laid” as John Adams put
it. In other words, family is the foundation of the American way of life.
For Adams, as for most Americans
until rather recently, a strong family generally requires a mother and father.
The mother has primary responsibility for taking care of the children, the
father primary responsibility for supporting the family financially. Americans
understood what our social scientists have demonstrated conclusively: children
raised in such a family are likely to be more law-abiding, more public-spirited,
better educated, and wealthier than children raised in other arrangements.
Our regime depends on such
citizens. Without them, we cannot have limited, constitutional government. In
other words, it is the family (along with other value-forming institutions)
that makes republican government possible.
The multiculturalists, on the
other hand, seek to destroy the family as it traditionally has been understood.
Their desire for outcome parity requires separating women from motherhood, for
it is caring for children that makes it very difficult for women to compete
with men in the workplace and other spheres outside the home.
The article by Klingenstein is long and has much more information
in it. I suggest that you read it to gain full understanding of why America is
at a crossroads. If Americans try to live peaceably with two different regimes –
the American way of life and multiculturalism, we will be a divided nation
unable to withstand attacks from foreign nations. However, Americans must take
a stand for the kind of country in which they want to live.
Just
as the Civil War was fought between southerners who sought to maintain slavery
and northerners who sought to end slavery, America today is facing a great
cultural war. We must understand that multiculturalism will destroy the
American way of life. We must become knowledgeable about the many invasions
being made into our way of life and decide which battles we can fight. I choose
to battle by standing up for the family and by refusing to bow down to political
correctness. Our mission is to “preserve the American way of life.”
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