American Revolution: Historic ‘shot’
or misfire?
Gordon L. Weil
By
the rude bridge that arched the flood,
Their
flag to April’s breeze unfurled,
Here
once the embattled farmers stood,
And
fired the shot heard round the world.
That’s the first verse of Ralph
Waldo Emerson’s American classic poem.
The final words carry great
meaning, but a recent New Yorker magazine article
asserts that Thomas Jefferson and John Adams got it all wrong. The poem, about the opening battle of the
Revolutionary War in 1775, had almost a reverse impact, according to recent
books that see that war as a British victory.
In their view, the American Revolution
has meant little to the world. Worries
about the end of America as a model for the world, a project of the current
president, are overrated. Nothing much
is lost by the abandonment of that model, the piece implies, because it never
worked.
The Revolution was the first major
expression against colonialism, a form of imperialism. Control by a distant monarch, selected by “the
grace of God,” was ended and replaced by a government responsible to the
people. Wasn’t this shot “heard round
the world?”
We are reminded that Lord Cornwallis,
whose surrender to General Washington ended the war, was transferred to the British
Empire in India, using outright terror to establish control there. India and many other places later fell to British
domination. By quitting the U.S., the
article says, the Brits freed themselves for those colonial adventures, making
them the real winners.
This view is both short-sighted
and narrow minded.
The theory is that the American
Revolution produced no further progress toward ending colonialism in the following
decades. Britain and France piled up
many new colonies. Even the U.S. was a
colonial power when it came to Indians.
This analysis ignored an event as
important as Canadian internal self-government achieved in 1867, not
accidentally right after the American Civil War. Other countries emerged in that century, but
the U.S. gets no credit.
Even worse, this analysis stops
too soon. In the aftermath of the Second
World War, colonialism gave way to tens of new independent states. What began in Massachusetts in 1775 has been
relived in Latin America, Africa and Asia.
The North Vietnamese Declaration of Independence was modeled on the American. The precedent mattered.
Even worse, the belief that nobody
heard the echo of the Concord muskets is almost entirely based on a geographical
analysis. Could the American Revolution be
relevant to uprisings in distant Latin America?
Simon Bolivar, who led rebellions there against the Spanish, knew it was.
It was not so much throwing off colonial
rulers as the vision of the Founders that continues to be felt round the
world. Even if the U.S. does not achieve
its ideals, the fact that it has pursued them reverberates.
American power and wealth have
brought it respect; American ideals have brought it admiration. The respect is sometimes grudging; the admiration
is often practical.
The U.S. has been the chief
initiator of at least four principles:
the recognition of individual liberty based on natural rights, a working
method of organizing popular democracy, federalism, and the establishment of a nationality
based on a shared civic ethic rather than on royal fealty, religious belief or
ethnic origin.
The Bill of Rights remains the
leading expression of the rights of people against the power of
government. Not one other country has adopted
a statement as strong as the First Amendment provisions on the freedom of speech
and religion and the right to assemble.
The separation of powers, meant to
restrain the natural trend toward rule by a single person, is an ingenious and
practical application of the ideas of English philosopher John Locke.
The functions of government are
divided into legislative, executive and judicial, with each able to limit the
others. That concept still grows. As recently as 2009, the U.K. finally created
an independent Supreme Court. Previously,
its top judges sat as voting members of the legislative House of Lords.
The U.S. was formed by 13 colonies
spread over 1,000 miles and counting almost three million people. Sovereignty is shared between the people as
citizens of a nation and as citizens of each state. New states have the same status as the
original states. The American system has
become a model of federalism.
The Constitution unifies the
nation. Public officials pledge to “support
and defend the Constitution” not the U.S. as a country. This is the unifying civil ethic, not a narrow
or forced allegiance. This notion of a
shared commitment as the unifying force has spread in the world.
All this is now in jeopardy. As a political issue, it is expressed as “the
survival of democracy.” At stake is not only
a political system, but the binding strength and durability of American ideals.
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