Presidents Day – a Meaningless Holiday

By | February 20, 2023 | 0 Comments

Millard Fillmore

Presidents Day? Which presidents? Millard Fillmore? He was an anti-Catholic bigot. He signed the Fugitive Slave Law, which forced slaves who escaped to free states to be returned to their owners. Why should I honor him? Why should I mix the inferior with the outstanding? The result is a mediocre average that evokes neither admiration nor imitation, but merely apathy. And we already have more than enough apathy.

This year, February 20 is Presidents Day. It isn’t Lincoln’s Birthday, which was Feb. 12. It isn’t Washington’s Birthday, which is Feb. 22. It is merely the last day of a three-day weekend. Instead of a day to honor our great leaders of the past, it became merely a day for government workers to have time off to patronize sales – which are staffed by private-sector workers who must put in extra hours.

Years ago, everyone had a day off to remember our great leaders of the past. But now, government workers have a day off to be served by private-sector workers, while no one remembers why. There, in brief, is what went wrong with America.

Young people are not taught to honor our great men − they are taught not to honor them. Lincoln held the Union together and was shot for his efforts. But he expressed − by today’s standards − racist views, so we can’t honor him. Washington was indispensable to the founding of our republic, but he owned slaves − though he freed them at his death − so we can’t honor him, either. No one is perfect, so all role models are removed, leaving our nation, like so many of our young people, fatherless.

America is undergoing a historectomy. No, not a hysterectomy, removal of the uterus, but a historectomy, removal of our history. But the two are related. Without a uterus, an individual can’t have children. Without a history, a nation can’t teach its values to the next generation. In both cases, continuity becomes impossible, and the line dies out.

America is a relatively recent invention. Its population shifts over time with waves of immigration. Unlike most nations, America is an idea. To define America, we cannot refer to an ancient land with a stable population. To define America, we must refer to the ideas and ideals on which it is based.

But are we trying to preserve these ideas and pass them on to the next generation? No, we are doing our best to eradicate these ideas from our collective memory. We are attempting to induce national amnesia. We are performing a historectomy. We are taking the soul of our nation and hitting the Delete key.

When I went to elementary school, we pledged allegiance to the flag every morning. We were taught patriotic songs for national holidays. And we enjoyed Christmas and Easter vacations, not winter and spring breaks. The vast majority of Americans, and all the founders, identified themselves as Christians.

Prayer at opening of Continental Congress, 1774
(Note Washington and other Anglicans kneeling,
and Quaker wearing hat)

In junior high, we had to memorize the Gettysburg Address, the Preamble to the Constitution, and the first and fourth verses of “The Star-Spangled Banner.” If you want to learn how a house is constructed, first study the foundation. But now, memorization is “old fashioned.”

In high school, we had to take American history and civics, not “social studies.” We learned about the great people and great events of our history, and (to a lesser degree) some of the unhappy events. I took ROTC, where my role models were master sergeants who had fought to defend my freedom. But now, ROTC has been kicked out of many high schools and universities.

I went to school, but I loved movies. I saw “Sergeant York,” the true story of how a pacifist farmer recognized that violent evildoers must be opposed by force, then went on to earn the Medal of Honor. I saw “They Died with Their Boots On,” a fictionalized account of Custer, but at least I learned that he played a key role in the Civil War, which is more than most history majors know today.

And there was “The Fighting Sixty-Ninth,” depicting Father Duffy’s role in this New York unit’s World War I exploits. So when I passed his statue in Times Square, I may have been the only one on the tour bus who knew who he was. You see, I was brought up to be an American.

Then there were the John Ford films of the West, where the U.S. Army was depicted in a sympathetic (perhaps overly sympathetic) light. I saw depictions of Abe Lincoln, Alexander Graham Bell, and Thomas Edison. I was being entertained, but I was also being exposed to my country’s past.

Contrast my upbringing with that of today’s kids:

● Today’s kids read books and hear lectures that describe America’s past as questionable at best, and evil or downright genocidal at worst.

● Today’s kids mumble a few words of the first verse of the “Star-Spangled Banner” at sports events. Forget about the fourth verse, the one that mentions (gasp!) God.

● Today’s kids are taught that the founders were deists, not Christians – that is, if religion is mentioned at all.

● Today’s kids are lucky to place the Revolution or the Civil War in the right century, much less the right decade.

● Today’s kids identify Grant as the man on the $50 bill, not the man who led the Union to victory and helped end slavery.

● Today’s kid’s see movies depicting our leaders as scheming warmongers, and our military as sadistic morons (“Spartan,” “Rendition,” “Syriana,” the “Bourne” series).

● Today’s kids see clergy depicted as idiots or criminals, and Christianity shown as a destructive force (“Sin City”, “The Godfather Part III,” “The Da Vinci Code”).

● Today’s kids, and even law students, are taught that the Constitution is a “living document,” which means whatever a judge says it means today. Tomorrow it may mean something else. We will be ruled by the “elite,” who use what they call “the constitution” as camouflage for their own whims.

● Today’s kids are deprived of ROTC instructors or Scoutmasters as role models, so they may turn to a gang or cult. They are no longer exposed to the traditions that I was lucky enough to have passed on to me.

Traditions are important – they help us carry on when it is easier, or safer, to quit. People who have been deprived of their history and traditions are unlikely to survive as a nation in times of danger. To me, this would be a tragedy. But to those who have been erasing our history and traditions, whether we survive as a nation is a matter of indifference.

The current generation of Americans has been taught little of the foundations of their country. And what they were taught was often negative. What they saw in movies only served to strengthen this negative impression. No wonder they view America with ambivalence at best, and with hostility at worst. Are “Taliban” John Walker Lindh and “Al Qaeda” Adam Gadahn aberrations, or just the tip of the iceberg? We’ll see.

People in other nations have also been taught to see us as despicable. Hollywood depicts us that way, and liberal politicians describe us that way. Why are we surprised when others see us that way? Why are we shocked when terrorists act on this belief? We are doing it to ourselves.

If you want to destroy a house, undermine the foundation. If you want to destroy a nation, do the same. If you want to destroy people who are defined by ideas, trash the ideas. If you want to bring down a nation that is sustained by its history, perform a historectomy.

Perhaps, if we again observe Lincoln’s and Washington’s birthdays, we will recall that national holidays are not times for government employees to get a day off and be waited upon by private-sector employees. On the contrary, national holidays are times for everyone to take time out to remember the principles on which our nation was founded.

In case you forgot what these principles are, simply do as Dennis Prager suggests and look at any coin in your pocket: In God We Trust, Liberty, E Pluribus Unum.

Contact: dstol@prodigy.net. You are welcome to publish or post these articles, provided that you cite the author and website.

www.stolinsky.com

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