U.S. Flag

Michael Medved: This Is Why America Is Exceptional

Share:

If a single player wins an ongoing contest with maddening consistency, his frustrated rivals will inevitably accuse him of cheating.

Our new nation’s shockingly rapid rise to world dominance counts as so illogical, so utterly unforeseen, that many mystified observers have determined that the only rational explanation involves a shameful record of American greed, ruthlessness, and immorality.

Given recent themes in our educational system, every schoolchild has heard about national guilt for cruel treatment of Native Americans, brutal exploitation of African slaves and imperialist interference with less fortunate societies around the world.

According to this logic, the United States’ rise to international eminence can be explained by the rapacity of our political, business and military leadership.

The great weakness in this understanding of American success involves its lack of context. Nearly all competing powers in the last 300 years compiled histories regarding indigenous populations, slavery and imperialism that count as far more problematic, and never more honorable, than the imperfect record of the United States.

Yet none of these other societies, however disturbing and vile their abuses of power, managed to replicate America’s triumphs for its own population or in global affairs.

In fact, some of the worst offenders in terms of slavery, exploitation and colonialism endured the opposite trajectory achieved by the United States: for Spain, Portugal, Belgium and the Netherlands, bloody imperialist adventures corresponded with the loss of world power status, not its attainment.

Those who reject the trendy argument that America’s unique good fortune stems from the nation’s uniquely bad behavior tend to turn to “happy accidents” as the most convenient explanation for our disproportionate blessings.

This reasoning cites the abundant resources of the North American continent, favorable patterns of immigration, the absence of contiguous rival powers, the edge provided by access to both the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans and a multitude of other seemingly random factors to explain the dynamism and dominance of the United States.

Without question, America’s advantages owe a great deal to coincidence and circumstance that no human being or group of people managed to arrange.

But a pattern of happy accidents still constitutes a pattern—an indication of something more than chance at work.

To return to the poker analogy: If a player enjoys a particularly profitable night and wins most of the hands, it’s sensible to credit the power of good luck. Yet if the same competitor achieves similar success over a period of years and decades, the other gamblers will come to assume that some other factor has determined the consistent outcome of their games.

Could it be a matter of superior skill on the part of the winning player? When applied to the United States, this notion emphasizes the sheer brilliance and dazzling competence of some of the nation’s most conspicuous leaders.

In other words, it’s not a rigged game—there’s no need to reference divine providence—if you can cite the superior abilities of American leaders as a means to rationalize the freakishly durable winning streak of the United States.

The most common deployment of this argument makes reference to the amazing talents of the Revolutionary generation: a rustic collection of loosely connected colonies somehow produced Jefferson, Hamilton, Madison, Washington, Adams and Franklin, who managed to work together to make miracles happen.

But doesn’t the simultaneous presence of leadership of this quality, arising at the same moment of history, in the same remote corner of the globe, constitute a miracle in its own terms?

Moreover, every one of the Founding Fathers, including those of decidedly unconventional religious faith, believed profoundly that divine providence directed their revolution.

If we accord the Founders so much insight and wisdom that we explain the nation’s rise with reference to their abilities, then why should we reject their unanimous conclusion that a higher power steered their affairs? {eoa}

Michael Medved is a nationally syndicated radio talk show host and bestselling author. His daily three-hour show reaches 300 stations across the country and an audience of more than 4 million.

This article was originally published at DailySignal.com. Used with permission.

Share:

Leave a Reply


More Spiritual Content
Greg Locke Prophecy: The Time of Pouring is Coming
Serpent Spirits, Drop Dead!
Did the CIA Really Find the Ark of the Covenant?
This Is Why Trump’s Appointments Will Not Be Blocked
Is Biblical Prophecy Coming to Life in Israel?
Can the Body of Christ Disagree Agreeably?
Trump Appoints RFK Jr. to Head Health & Human Services
Morning Rundown: Prophetic Word: Mike Tyson and the Spirit of Death
Prophecy: Trump, Biden and China
‘Miracle of miracles’: Kindergarten Teacher Saves 6 Children by Rushing to Shelter Despite Alarm Siren Failure
previous arrow
next arrow
Shadow

Most Popular Posts

Latest Videos
75.8K Subscribers
990 Videos
7.5M Views
Share