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Date: 2024-04-23 Page is: DBtxt001.php txt00020138

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Burgess COMMENTARY

Peter Burgess
Original article: https://www.nationalreview.com/2021/01/thoughts-on-the-1776-commission-and-its-report/#slide-1
My offer still stands Inbox Garrett Bewkes Unsubscribe 9:36 AM (14 minutes ago) to me Image Dear Patriot, I reached out Wednesday to address the serious threats that face our country. In just two days, President Biden has already unleashed his administration’s radical agenda by disbanding the 1776 Commission in an executive order that also reinstates mandated Critical Race Theory training for federal agencies. He is further set to resume funding for global abortion at any moment, a controversial and partisan move he makes while calling for “unity.” Progressives in D.C. (and their allies in the mainstream media!) believe our movement is too fractured and divided to push back. They’re wrong. National Review remains steadfastly committed to America’s fundamental ideals, and we won’t let left-wing ideologues go unanswered. Today, I invite you to stand with us as we take on this new chapter by joining NRPLUS at our best rate: a full 60% off our regular price. 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Image 19 West 44th Street, Ste. 1701, New York, NY, 10036 https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/biden-is-set-to-reinstate-u-s-funding-for-global-abortion/ https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/biden-is-set-to-reinstate-u-s-funding-for-global-abortion/ https://www.nationalreview.com/2021/01/thoughts-on-the-1776-commission-and-its-report/#slide-1 https://www.nationalreview.com/2021/01/thoughts-on-the-1776-commission-and-its-report/#slide-1 U.S. Thoughts on the 1776 Commission and Its Report By VICTOR DAVIS HANSON January 21, 2021 6:30 AM Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Flipboard Email this article Print this article Visitors view the Declaration of Independence at the National Archives in Washington, D.C., in 2013. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters) Why the controversy? Yes, America is imperfect. And also great. The newly formed President’s Advisory 1776 Commission just released its report. The group was chaired by Churchill historian and Hillsdale College president Larry P. Arnn. The vice chair was Carol M. Swain, a retired professor of political science. (Full disclosure: I was a member of the commission.) The unanimously approved conclusions focused on the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the historical challenges to these founding documents, and the need for civic renewal. The 16-member commission was diverse in the widest sense of the word. It included historians, lawyers, academics, scholars, authors, former elected officials, and former public servants. Whether because the report was issued by a Donald Trump-appointed commission, or because the conclusions questioned the controversial and flawed New York Times-sponsored 1619 Project, the Left almost immediately criticized it. Yet in any age other than the divisive present, the report would not be seen as controversial. First, the commission offered a brief survey of the origins of the Declaration of Independence, published in 1776, and the Constitution, signed in 1787. It emphasized how unusual for the age were the Founders’ commitments to political freedom, personal liberty, and the natural equality endowed by our creator — all the true beginning of the American experiment. NOW WATCH: 'Israel Leads the World In Getting Its Citizens COVID-19 Vaccines' The commission reminded us that the Founders were equally worried about autocracy and chaos. So they drafted checks and balances to protect citizens from authoritarianism, known so well from the British Crown, and also from the frenzy of sometimes wild public excess. The report repeatedly focuses on the ideals of the American Founding as well as the centuries-long quest to live up to them. It notes the fragility of such a novel experiment in constitutional republicanism, democratic elections, and self-government — especially during the late-18th-century era of war and factionalism. The report does not whitewash the continuance of many injustices after 1776 and 1787 — in particular chattel slavery concentrated in the South, and voting reserved only for free males. Indeed, the commission explains why and how these wrongs were inconsistent with the letter and spirit of our founding documents. So it was natural that these disconnects would be addressed throughout our history, even fought over, and continually resolved — often over the opposition of powerful interests who sought to reinvent the Declaration and Constitution, transforming them into something that they were not. Two of the most widely referenced Americans in the report are Frederick Douglass and Martin Luther King Jr. Both argued, a century apart, for the moral singularity of the U.S. Constitution. Neither wished to replace the Founders’ visions; both instead demanded that they be fully realized and enforced. The report details prior ideological and political challenges to the Constitution as we approach America’s 250th birthday. Some were abjectly evil, such as the near-century-long insistence that the enslavement of African Americans was legal — an amorality that eventually led to more than 600,000 Americans being killed during a Civil War to banish slavery. Some ideologies, such as fascism and communism, were easily identifiable as inimical to our principles. Both occasionally won adherents in times of economic depression and social strife, before they were defeated and discredited abroad. Perhaps more controversially, the commission identifies other challenges, such as continued racism, progressivism, and contemporary identity politics. The report argues how and why all those who have insisted that race become a basis from which to discriminate against entire groups of people are at odds with the logic of the Declaration. Historically, progressivism assumed that human nature is malleable. With enough money and power, Americans supposedly can be improved so that they will accept more paternalistic government, usually to be run by technocrats. Often, progressives sought to curb the liberties of the individual, under the guise of modernist progress and greater efficiency. The commission was no more sympathetic to the current popularity of identity politics or reparatory racial discrimination. It argues that using race, ethnicity, sexual preference, and gender to define who we are — rather than seeing these traits as incidental when compared with our natural and shared humanity — will lead to a dangerous fragmentation of American society. Finally, the report offers the unifying remedy of renewed civic education. Specifically, it advocates more teaching in our schools of the Declaration, the Constitution, and documents surrounding their creation. It most certainly does not suggest that civic education and American history should ignore or contextualize past national shortcomings. Again, the report argues that our lapses should be envisioned as obstacles to fulfilling the aspirations of our founding. With the change of administrations, the commission may be short-lived, given that it was born in the chaos of the divisive present. President Joe Biden already has sought to terminate the commission through an executive order. But any fair critic can see that the report’s unifying message is that we are a people blessed with a singular government and history, that self-critique and moral improvement are innate to the American Founding and spirit, and that America never had to be perfect to be both good and far better than the alternatives. (Victor Davis Hanson was a member of the 1776 Commission. His views here are his own and are not necessarily those of other commission members. The report can be read here.) '../../DBpdfs/Politics/Trump/The-Presidents-Advisory-1776-Commission-Final-Report-20138.pdf' The-Presidents-Advisory-1776-Commission-Final-Report-20138 ALSO FROM VICTOR DAVIS HANSON
  • Assault on the Capitol Has Let Loose the Electronic Octopus
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© 2021 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 111NEXT GALLERY ADVERTISEMENT CLICK TO DISMISS AD Founding Fathers Declaration of Independence by John Turnbull, 1818. Architect of the Capitol VICTOR DAVIS HANSON is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and the author of THE SECOND WORLD WARS: How the First Global Conflict Was Fought and Won. @vdhanson MORE IN AMERICAN HISTORY
  • The Ridiculous Attacks on the 1776 Report
  • Biden Signs Executive Order Disbanding 1776 Commission
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https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/biden-is-set-to-reinstate-u-s-funding-for-global-abortion/ https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/biden-is-set-to-reinstate-u-s-funding-for-global-abortion/ POLITICS & POLICY Biden Is Set to Reinstate U.S. Funding for Global Abortion By ALEXANDRA DESANCTIS January 21, 2021 9:31 AM President Joe Biden swears in presidential appointees in a virtual ceremony in the State Dining Room of the White House, January 20, 2021. (Tom Brenner/Reuters) According to reports, President Joe Biden shortly will issue an executive order reversing the Mexico City policy, which currently prevents U.S. aid money from funding groups that perform or promote abortion around the globe. During the Democratic presidential primary, Biden’s campaign promised that, if elected, he would follow his Democratic predecessors in undoing the policy, ensuring that U.S. global aid can once again fund abortions. At yesterday’s press briefing after the inauguration, a reporter asked Biden’s press secretary Jen Psaki about the future of the policy. Psaki replied that Biden is “a devout Catholic” and added, “I don’t have anything more for you on that.” But this morning, in prepared remarks to the World Health Organization, Dr. Anthony Fauci announced that Biden “will be revoking the Mexico City Policy in the coming days.” The Mexico City policy was first instated by President Ronald Reagan, and since his administration, the policy has flip-flopped back and forth depending on the political party of the man in the Oval Office. Under each Democratic administration, the policy was revoked, only to be reinstated when a Republican administration took over. Under President Donald Trump, the Mexico City policy was expanded to include not only family planning funds distributed by the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development but also all foreign-health assistance provided by government agencies, including the Office of the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator, and the Defense Department. That new policy, “Protecting Life in Global Health Assistance,” increased the amount of U.S. funding covered from about $600 million to nearly $9 billion. Abortion advocates in the U.S. have long opposed the Mexico City policy; Planned Parenthood, for instance, disparagingly refers to it as the “global gag rule.” But large majorities of Americans tend to oppose U.S. funding for abortion overseas. One Marist poll from 2017 found that 83 percent of respondents, including almost 40 percent of Hillary Clinton voters, said they oppose federal funding of global abortions. Biden’s choice to reverse this policy will certainly satisfy his base — if he understands his base to consist of Planned Parenthood employees. But it does seem to be out of step with most Democrats, 70 percent of whom said in 2017 that they oppose taxpayer-funded abortion around the globe.

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