Dear Friends,
Today, this article from July1, 2001 seems as meaningful as it did then. It is hoped that you will find some inspiration here.
A note of sanity in today's news: American citizens are speaking out, demanding that Congress pass a bill making it illegal to sell any American flags in the United States not made here by Americans. The fact is that today 4.7 million American flags are sold in the United States; 4.3 million come from China! One small step for patriotism!
God bless you and all dear to you with a joyous,safe, and grace-filled Fourth of July.
JULY
FOURTH
July 4th this is our day to breathe
deeply the sweet air of freedom, to wave our flag proudly, to picnic
with families and friends.
For the joy of freedom cannot be contained.
It must be celebrated around backyard barbecues or on cabin cruisers,
as well as in simple shacks hugging Rocky Mountain cliffs.
Yet, when the drums have stopped cheering
the social and political revolution set in motion on that great
day in 1776, and the rockets no longer light the night with joyous
bursts of color, we pause to think of better times.
Many Americans belong to the generation
that stormed the beaches of Normandy, worked in defense plants,
then turned around and accepted the burden of Korea.
We recall there was a time when America
stood for honesty and quality, that ones word was ones
bond. We preferred to purchase appliances made in the United States
because whatever came from Japan was considered junk.
We remember when the majority who didnt
need welfare fled from it as though it were a curse, because, while
putting a jingle in their jeans, it placed a blight upon their pride.
We look back to nights on the town
free of worry about slashed tires or being held up for kicks.
Gradually, the ethics-of-the-moment
philosophy spread across our land, clouding our vision and weakening
our sense of national purpose.
The Vietnam War destroyed our trust
in political and military leaders.
We have seen our schools become training
grounds for anarchy.
Purveyors of dope and pornography rob
our young of their present and future.
Lobbyists in Washington sell our national
interests to the highest bidders at home and abroad.
Most of our steel furnaces are cold
and dark, our workers betrayed and bitter.
We learn from the congressional Research
Service that we are now the worlds number one arms merchant,
and we wonder what type of people we have become.
How difficult it is to make Robert
Louis Stevensons prayer our own: "Give us courage and
gaiety and the quiet mind."
Yet, it is only courage that will give
us the strength to put our hands to the plow and to sow again the
seeds of honor, the dignity of work, and hope for the oppressed.
Gaiety of purpose will give impetus
to our steps, knowing we are on the way to restoring our personal
and national integrity.
It is only with quiet minds that we
can clearly assess the work to be done and the most direct course
to follow.
The tasks before us are immense, but
we can meet them because we have a heritage of a people undaunted
by hardships.
Most of us cannot blast off rockets
of great deeds, but we can join our fellow Americans who are lighting
sparklers of small ones across the nation.
Archibald MacLeishs tribute to
Judge Augustus Hand seems to me applicable to everyone who "does
what one can do."
"We are neither weak nor few
As long as one man does what one can do.
As long as one man in the sun alone
Walks between the silence and the stone
And honors manhood in his flesh, his bone,
We are not yet too weak, nor yet too few."
originally posted here on July 1, 2001
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