Yes.
I have only come to this reversal recently. We have so many that have done such a spectacular job at dividing us that we need at least a few bonds that we, indeed, should hold together, in common.
Most if not all Western nations have current cultures conceived of millenia-long legacies connected to a specific geography and "tribal" heritage. That simply isn't the case for the U.S. we observe today. We Americans are not Spaniards, Britons, Franks, Germans, Greeks, Romans, Turks, Moors or Persians, yet our culture draws from all of those cultural traditions.
Unlike the people of most other Westernized nations (and other nations in general), we Americans don't come preponderantly from any single culture. Our language isn't even of our own making. The U.S. thus has the bond apropos to it: The Constitution, an ethical philosophy (something being "trashed" at the moment), and
the political philosophies on which it is based. Those philosophies are described and discussed comprehensively in
a handful of texts, all of which, IMO, should be required reading for every American, but that I fear fewer than half the population has mastered them all cover-to-cover.
- Republic
- Politics
- Leviathan
- Second Treatise of Government
- Social Contract
Ours is a country that, unlike, I think, all others on the planet, is one deliberately created as a bastion and safe harbor for capitalism, probity, liberty, and ideological, theological and cultural diversity. We won our independence with the aid of Germans and French. We preserved it with the French's help. What is American cuisine, music, dance, art, etc. other than a amalgam of elements taken from other cultures and adapted to our tastes? If we discard those values, no language can replace them.
Until recently, we were making slow but continuous progress subsuming into the aegis of Americanism. That we could and did gave us a set of advantages, perspectives and imperatives unlike any other nation. The best and worst of what is America comes from all over, and our nation gains from having all of it; we learn from the worst and build upon the best.
A mendicant is lousy as an investment advisor, yet he's got invaluable input about what not to do with one's money.
-- Dad