When I was very young — 6 or 7 is my
memory — my parents thought it would be a fun idea to take me to the
Hollywood Bowl for the fireworks show on July Fourth. I remember the car
ride at sunset, sitting in the back seat with the window down and a
warm breeze blowing across me. And then I remember sitting in a hard
chair very close to the main floor when suddenly the world in front of
me erupted into fiery shards and huge arching shapes.
The
noise was deafening. I began screaming and crying, my hands clapped
tightly over my ears in a vain attempt to block out the sound, which was
more frightening to me than the fireworks, although they scared me,
too. My parents had no choice but to take me out of there. On the drive
home, I was still crying. But by then it was because I felt awful for
ruining my parents’ evening.
My
weeping continued as my mother put me to bed, and she dispatched my
father to come in and talk to me. He was always the one designated for
soothing an upset child. He sat on the edge of my bed and told me I
didn’t need to feel bad, some people are just frightened by loud noises.
A future president's July Fourth bedtime story
Then
he told me that the Fourth of July was a very important occasion, with
or without fireworks, because on this day a very long time ago, America
freed herself from Britain and became the independent country that we
now live in. Actually, he said, the declaration was agreed upon two days
earlier and a man named John Adams believed that July 2, 1776, would from
that point on be a celebratory day, so he wrote to his wife announcing
this. I got so caught up in the story, and wondering whether they had
mailmen back then, I stopped crying.
Fireworks still scare me. Each year, I put in earplugs
and console myself with the meaning of the holiday — the birth of a
nation, a grand experiment in freedom and democracy that, even with a
few missteps, seems to be working out well.
Until now.
Donald Trump, havingfailed to produce a military parade for his inauguration and again on Veterans Day,
has decided to hijack the one holiday that has remained purely
patriotic — not partisan, not crisscrossed with divisions and
bitterness, but simply and earnestly a day to mark our gratitude for the
America we live in.
The America we live in is slipping further and further
from the dreams of the men who penned the Declaration of Independence,
who stood up boldly against tyranny and believed that demagogues had no right to control the destiny of people and nations.
"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." — Declaration of Independence
“Major fireworks display, entertainment and an address by your favorite president, me.” — Donald Trump
America is just another acquisition for Trump
Relationships
only survive if people remember and honor the foundational elements
that created those unions. That’s true for marriages, partnerships and
friendships. It’s also true for countries. If we forget that America
began in defiance of tyranny, that it reached high for the concept of a
free, democratic nation, then we have severed ourselves from what the
Founding Fathers saw as our potential for greatness. This country was
conceived in men’s hearts, not in the narrow wiliness of political
opportunism and greed. To lose sight of that is to make ourselves easy
victims. For people like Trump, a country is just another acquisition.
In 1983, the big scandal around the Fourth of July was that Interior Secretary James Watt wanted to ban the Beach Boys from performing on the National Mall. Both
my mother (First Lady Nancy Reagan) and George H.W. Bush (my dad's vice
president) took strong issue with this, and by October of that
year, Watt was gone.
It seems so quaint now, a
dispute about whether rock-and-roll leads to drugs and chaos, as Watt
claimed. Thirty-six years later, we are watching the man who occupies
the Oval Office defy the Constitution, gaslight the country on a daily
basis, call political opponents names that would get children banished to their rooms, attack the free press, and claim the Fourth of July for his own purposes as if the holiday were invented for him. My fear of fireworks is nothing compared with my fears for America.
Perhaps on the Fourth, amidst the fireworks and picnics and Trump's display of Abrams tanks,
we might want to reflect on the small group of men who, from their
hearts and their deepest convictions, dreamed of a nation that would
never fall prey to a tyrant.
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