As a teenager in 1976, I remember the excitement building up to the bicentennial celebration of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Seemingly every clothing store, whether the elevated department stores of the day or the bargain clothing stores, was filled with red, white, and blue clothing to show our enthusiasm for the Fourth of July that year.
It wasn’t just the clothing. Our notebooks, pens, and pencils at school were all saturated with patriotic colors and themes. There was a Broadway musical, titled appropriately “1776” that toured the country, as city streets and rural communities dressed their sidewalks with flags and banners as the big day approached.
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As a history nerd, every child in Western Pennsylvania seems to have a PhD in the French and Indian War. The buildup and anticipation were hard to ignore; it was everywhere. Madison Avenue had made the case for celebrating the United States, and American retailers, Broadway producers, corporations, teachers, and local governments went along for the ride.
Fifty years later, Fox News Special Report anchor and New York Times bestselling author Bret Baier makes an equally compelling case in his newest book, The Case for America: An Argument on Behalf of Our Nation. Baier argues that the very American qualities of perseverance, ability to endure, and our aspirations toward each other, instead of a tribal instinct to divide, all remain tightly bound 250 years after 56 men, all possessing incredible courage and resolve, signed the Declaration of Independence.
The book is a brisk read. It navigates the reader through the challenges in forming our nation, as well as the divisions, both historical and contemporary, that test our resolve to remain loyal to the ideals from which we were formed.
Baier writes as though he is making a case to a jury, with detailed and specific evidence as testimony. He details the modern-day presidents that he has covered as a journalist. The book offers a view of the country as it is, what it was, and what it aspires to be.
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Baier does not sugarcoat the divisions. Yet he laces it with the optimism that is the heart of American exceptionalism. What shines through is one constant: that the U.S. is intrinsically different and is founded on a set of ideas, not a common heritage. And those ideas of freedom, equality, and liberty are enshrined in the Declaration of Independence. It is at the center of who we are.
It is a concept rooted in the observation of Alexis de Tocqueville, the French diplomat who observed not only the democratic nature of the country but also the desire to come together by joining associations. From sewing clubs to social fraternities to Rotary Clubs to church guilds, Americans love to form groups that bring us together, and Baier uniquely captures that quality that has endured for centuries and shines in making The Case for America.
The book is a must-read ahead of the 250th anniversary. His defense of U.S. history and exceptionalism reads like a courtroom argument for the American dream, making it even more compelling for the reader.
