United States

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The United States, founded in 1776, has a noble history.

The United States population represents the people of the entire globe. It’s genuinely the Melting Pot of the world. That label refers to the vast diversity of its people, who come from all around the world. We all come together to add our unique value and contributions to make the nation better and stronger—at least it started out like that.

America, as we traditionally refer to the US, also has many internal and external critics, as you might expect from a world-leading superpower with its strength and notoriety. The United States has a broad global influence.

Diversity means a myriad of different wants and needs. Most people are content with their life and quality of life needs and wants being met, but some, out of a few billion around the globe, have different wants and needs and view the world differently. Consequently, these people are malcontents—critics of the United States. They perceive they are lacking. That perception comes from comparing themselves to others and what they think is different.

Externally, we are accused of many things globally, including overstepping our authority, not doing enough, and, because of one former president, not doing right by the world community.

That president didn’t converse with the American people, but inferring his party supported everything he did, he did it on his own. He didn’t even gather his political party together and say, “Hey guys, I’m going on a world tour, and I’m going to apologize to the world for what we have done as a nation regarding our foreign policies”. Most of his party approved without discussion.

But that left nearly half the American population unrepresented, in disagreement with what he did, and even embarrassed at what he did and said.

Internally, we have been accused of everything from “systemic racism” to unfair treatment of minority groups and everything in between. All sorts of devices like “unconscious bias”, “micro-aggressions”, “white privilege”, “—phobias”, and more drive their points home.

It would be good if those accusations were based on facts but they are built on false premises. If the premises were correct, what they are trying to say might make sense. But because they are built on false premises and nearly half the nation is being accused of things they are not guilty of, the points the accusers make fall on resentful ears.

The message comes through loud and clear—But the terms not only offend the accused—the accusations begin with a perceived offense toward the accuser. Before the accusations came and offended the accused, perceptions offended the accusers. Nothing good comes from assuming or offense. It divides nations! Not good.

Millions of people flock to the United States every year, hoping for a good life in the land of opportunity. That says something about the US, and the fact that there is so much diversity says something about the US, too. It is a great place that has consistently done good for the world and its citizens because of its founding documents. That alone is a testimony to the principles preserved and cherished in its Constitution.

The US, standing on the guiding principles of the founding documents, has done nothing that needs an apology.

Conquering the land and taking most of it from the indigenous Americans who were here first is considered wrong by today’s standards. We don’t benefit form context of the time, but clearly some documented events happened that were wrong. Salvery was wrong, but as we will see in the section on Slavery in America, it wasn’t done with harmful intent. Other events such as wartime massacres were wrong, but what in war is right? And recognize that the United States is not the only group to have committed wrongs of this kind.

Harm have been done to people. While decisions of individuals acting as representatives of the US that have harmed people are unfortunate, they are the fault of those individuals and not of the founding principles of the US Constitution.

Human beings are imperfect. Consequently, problems surface in the United States like in any other nation. That doesn’t mean we should scrap the whole thing. Many, primarily on the political left, believe this nation’s underpinning philosophies are flawed, meaning we need to scrap the entire thing and use a different model.

Inferring that we should slam the door on freedoms (i.e., rewrite the Constitution to eliminiate freedoms), because individuals abuse them, is to cut off our proverbial nose to spite our face, (we look ridiculous without a perfectly good nose). The answer is to address the individual abuses—not scrap the freedoms.

When you consider the very basic things that go back to the beginning of human history, it is natural to want to be able to do what you want. However, until the United States, all forms of government exercised control over their populations. Wealthy elites controlled them all. Think about that. Who likes being controlled by others? The US Constitution, for the first time in history, formed a government “of the people, by the people, and for the people”. It doesn’t say “of the king, by the tyrant, and for the wealthy elites”, like every previous government used to say without saying it.

By comparison, the United States Constitution was the first document in world history to define a system of governance where the people run the government. It was innovative and technically brilliant. It was also timeless, meaning no matter what advances in human invention, it still applies because it is based on human nature—not locked into time by human invention.

Furthermore, concepts from the Declaration of Independence endorse principles such as: “all [humans] are created equal”, and we all have “unalienable Rights like the right to “Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness”. These principles illustrate our fierce loyalty to freedom and independent governance.

The Constitution also gave us the right to redress grievances. Combined with the right to speak our minds and have a free press, these things speak of individual freedom. These are codified into the foundations of this nation. They are good ideas.

Obviously, putting these ideas into practice differs from having them as a basis for founding this nation.

We realize that when talking about freedom, we bear in mind the stain of slavery in US history. Slavery, in particular, sullied these concepts in our eyes. Slavery diminishes these good ideas.

This is why we want to delve into these topics. In this section we will do just that.

We go into these other reasons below. For now, we want the reader to see that the founding documents have no evil intentions, and conspiracy theories that the Constitution is racist because those who authored it were racist is a false premise.

Suppose that the first premise, that the Founding Fathers held enslaved people, therefore, they were racist, is false. Suppose circumstances compelled them to keep people enslaved before, during, and after the Revolutionary War. That would mean everyone who defied the Constitution was wrong. As a result, the premise that the police and other governmental institutions were not systemically racist. It would mean the penal system was not picking on blacks for racist reasons.

By nature, most people are not racist or discriminatory. But, rather than looking at that fact and continuing the conversation from that point, these accusers set out to find devices that prove their point—doubling down on a false premise! And that’s how such hateful labels come into being. Yes, they are hurtful. Because the accused know they aren’t guilty, resentment rises in their hearts and minds. Yet their accusers do not relent or listen.

This country has become so divided, which is a shame because this nation has done so much for the world and its citizens since its beginning.

Most people believe things they hear without investigating, and some of the controversial things have facts which are either ignored or hidden. Those truths are difficult to locate unless you know where to look or dig deep. When exposed, they change the perspective.

For that reason, we want to provide information to look at and a perspective that needs to have more of a voice. We intend to inform and speak truth, not denigrate, harm, or hinder anyone in any way. Some topics are sensitive, and we ask that you carefully read to the end, be introspective, and think about what we say honestly and fairly. Ask questions. Open dialogue. Your views genuinely interest us!

Are you fair-minded and open to hearing other perspectives? Join us in exploring hidden facts that we believe change thepopular perception of the United States.


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