250 Years of Exceptionalism

On this 250th anniversary of our republic’s birth, countless voices seem united against American exceptionalism both at home and abroad. We are under an anti-American barrage every day from leftist politicians, actors, media personalities, college professors, and coffee shop baristas.

After all, the only way to install a tyrant on these shores who will implement leftist dogma is to convince us to forget just how extraordinary it is to be an American.

Their campaign began by selling the lie that there is nothing special about being an American, that we are just like everyone else. But the fact is, America has been anything but common from the start.

British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher understood that all too well. She once said, “Europe was created by history. America was created by philosophy.”

But it was not just any philosophy. It is one grounded in the simple truth—even if imperfectly applied—that all men are created equal and have the right to govern themselves.

In the early 1840s, a young historian sought out one of the last surviving participants from the Battle of Concord to ask him about that experience.

The aged Levi Preston was asked why he had fought the British. The answers weren’t what the historian expected, for Preston did not speak of the oppressive British rule, the stamp tax, the tea tax, or the writings of philosopher John Locke.

“Well, then,” asked the historian, “why did you fight?”

Preston’s answer still takes my breath away: “Young man, what we meant in going for those redcoats was this: We always had governed ourselves, and we always meant to and they meant that we shouldn’t.”

It was this concept of self-government, so natural to Levi Preston and his contemporaries, that changed the world. It is at the practical root of American exceptionalism. It’s why our nation has thrived, even as other, older and more established nations withered and even died.

It is why tyrants abroad and would-be tyrants here at home run down America, denigrate our history, and seek to draw us away from our founding principles.

America is exceptional because we, the people, govern ourselves. Levi Preston and his generation had the moral courage to do what they knew to be right. They rejected an offer of tyranny so that self-government and liberty could thrive.

We do not elect almighty leaders, but public servants. We cannot tolerate unlimited government or make allowance for the divine right of politicians.

We must govern ourselves, thank you very much.

Modern events show that our republic’s self-government is fragile; it only exists to the extent that We the People continue to jealously guard it and actively participate in it. If self-government is to continue, if liberty is to flourish, if we are to remain independent, we must be informed, engaged, and active as citizens.

We must every day intentionally join Levi Preston in the fight for the right to govern ourselves.