{"id":849,"date":"2007-07-05T20:43:31","date_gmt":"2007-07-05T12:43:31","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.darkmirage.com\/2007\/07\/05\/independence-day\/"},"modified":"2009-07-18T11:54:50","modified_gmt":"2009-07-18T03:54:50","slug":"independence-day","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.darkmirage.com\/2007\/07\/05\/independence-day\/","title":{"rendered":"Independence Day"},"content":{"rendered":"
It’s time for another rant that is completely unrelated to the theme of this blog because I just felt like it. Fourth of July just ended a few hours ago for the folks in the Land of the Free. While dropping in and out of consciousness during a particularly boring Maths lecture on integration and volume of a disk of revolution, my mind wandered and — by a random firing of neurons — I ended up thinking about the birthday of what is, or was, arguably the greatest nation in the world.<\/p>\n
Warning<\/strong>: Long Rant Ahead.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Indeed, it wasn’t that long ago when the name America symbolized the triumph of human ideals and the collective might of free-will beings in the heart of a young and impressionable boy living on the other side of this spherical hunk of rock. You know, like in the movie Independence Day<\/a> when President Whitmore said, “today, we (the people of the world) celebrate our Independence Day”?<\/p>\n That used<\/em> to be America.<\/p>\n The inspiring speech<\/a> made by Ronald Reagan, one of the greatest Republicans ever lived, at the Berlin Wall<\/a> had its 20th anniversary marked just a month ago. As he spoke to the people of West Germany and the rest of Western Europe, he spoke to a generation of people who rose out of the postwar ruins and rebuilt their countries with the aid of the Marshall Plan<\/a>, the greatest postwar rebuilding master plan ever formulated and a distant reminder of America’s diplomatic success. When Ronald Reagan, addressing the General Secretary of the Soviet Union, said, “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!”, it resonated in the hearts of millions of Westerners living in freedom and millions more who longed for it.<\/p>\n Where did that America go? The more I hear of Mr. Bush Junior, the more firmly I believe that it must be somewhere really, really far away.<\/p>\n Perhaps America has always been the political shithole that it is today and perhaps I was misled into believing tales of the nation’s past greatness by Hollywood’s many WWII offerings. Perhaps it was due to the fact that at a young and naive age of ten, I was reading all the Tom Clancy novels I could get my hands on. But even if the truth does often turn out to be less inspiring than the sanitized accounts of history, I still believe that America was once closer to its founding ideals than it is today.<\/p>\n The United Nation’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights<\/a> owes a lot of its birth to the American ideals of freedom and equality, ideals that are enshrined in the nation’s consitution<\/a>. This constitution is the basis of the Union and represents the hopes and aspirations of a nation of people who had just tasted the sweet nectar of freedom. This is also the very same constitution that was dismissed by Mr. Bush as “just a piece of paper<\/a>” not too long ago. How did it come this far?<\/p>\n