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It's Time To Cancel Presidents Day - POLITICO

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  john-russell  •  2 years ago  •  12 comments

By:   POLITICO

It's Time To Cancel Presidents Day - POLITICO
By elevating myth over reality, the holiday does a disservice to history.

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It's Time To Cancel Presidents Day


By elevating myth over reality, the holiday does a disservice to history.

An honor cordon is in place during a Presidential Full Honor Wreath-Laying Ceremony at the Lincoln Memorial on Saturday, Feb. 12, 2022, in Washington. | Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP Photo

The fracturing of society in recent years under the strain of Donald Trump's presidency and the racial reckoning spurred by George Floyd's murder has had one positive consequence: A widespread awakening of interest in the American past.

Curiosity about the country's history has been a pathway to something more bracing: Sharp arguments about the meaning of the past, and about the lessons people living today should draw from the lives of people who died long ago.

Long-forgotten lives, like the dozens of people killed in the Tulsa race massacre, are being vaulted into public consciousness. More controversially, people who long enjoyed revered status in the national story are being dethroned as national heroes.

Historical reappraisal has been especially vigorous in a particular arena: the U.S. presidency. Woodrow Wilson, a president whose reputation among many historians placed him in the ranks of "near-great" leaders, has in recent years become toxic because of new attention to his deeply prejudiced racial views.

On the other hand, it is still treacherous to take on presidents of Rushmore-sized stature. Liberal San Francisco voters recently evicted school board members whom they judged too preoccupied with left-wing advocacy, including efforts to rename public schools honoring George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln.

The presidency itself, like so many aspects of American culture, is now in the middle of ideological crossfire between left and right. Is there a way that the center can find its voice in arguments about the presidency?

Yes, there is. A good way to start would be to cancel the day we mark today: "Presidents Day."

One hastens to add: The aim is not to "cancel," in the contemporary sense of the word, any particular president. Lincoln and Washington — the two presidents most closely linked with Presidents Day — face stiff challenges when judged by contemporary standards, but they aren't the targets here. Instead, it is the notion of Presidents Day — an inane name for a dubious concept that is less a show of genuine respect for American history than an insult to it.

The problems with Presidents Day are intertwined with a basic challenge of how Americans think about their history — or, really, how the people of any country think about their national story. There are two conceptions of what it means to learn history — always in tension with each other, and sometimes in flat contradiction.

One conception — the kind of history we start learning in elementary school — is a kind of civic religion. Like real religion, this brand of history relies on homilies. Stories are told to make a point, and the point is typically to highlight virtuous dimensions of national character. The story can feature setbacks and bad guys, but the good guys should win in the end — with a patriotic lesson for the audience to carry away. The characters in this kind of history are marble statutes.

The other conception of history is something quite different — a disciplined effort to reconstruct the past as it actually happened. This enterprise relies on evidence that is always fragmentary and on interpretive arguments that are never settled with finality. This brand of history aims to liberate its audience from national mythologies, and its characters are not marble heroes. They can suffer from bad tempers, diarrhea, self-doubt — the last entirely justified, given that, unlike people who will later study their histories, they have no idea what's about to happen next, or how their decisions will look in hindsight.

So while one style of history studies the past in search of moral clarity, the other is attuned to moral ambiguity. One kind of history aims to create national heroes. The other kind — even when it is not expressly aimed at demolishing heroes — can't help but dismantle the reputations of presidents and other outsize figures, revealing all manner of unheroic traits.

A brand of history that embraces reality over myth, and ambiguity over sharp moral judgments over heroes and villains, ultimately offers far more useful lessons for a democracy.

Lincoln is the best example. For a century and a half he has defied most efforts to dismantle his historical reputation. Yet as his San Francisco critics know it is not hard to find unheroic elements of his record.

Here is the man school children know as the "Great Emancipator" at the famous 1858 Lincoln-Douglas debates: "I will say then that I am not, nor ever have been in favor of bringing about in any way the social and political equality of the white and Black races."

These are words that are repugnant to our ears today. But Lincoln is also the author of words that are nearly as resonant now as they were in 1865. His second inaugural address was the most searching meditation on power, humility and citizenship ever delivered by an American leader. A month before the end of the Civil War, and his own assassination, Lincoln noted how neither North nor South had envisioned a conflict so violent:

"Both read the same Bible and pray to the same God, and each invokes His aid against the other. It may seem strange that any men should dare to ask a just God's assistance in wringing their bread from the sweat of other men's faces, but let us judge not, that we be not judged. The prayers of both could not be answered. That of neither has been answered fully. The Almighty has His own purposes."

The Almighty has His own purposes is the enduring answer — in our own age, or in any age — to fanatics of all varieties, people who feel they are acting on the will of God, or of some other messianic design. The words likely represent the most enduring truth ever uttered by a U.S. president.

Which brings us back to the day: What's the problem with Presidents Day?

The superficial problem is it a confection. In federal law, the holiday is still designated as "Washington's Birthday." It is a fluke of the calendar that the first president's birthday, February 22, falls so close to the birthday of Lincoln's, February 12. This, combined with the wishes of car dealers and mattress sellers, led to people transforming the holiday on the third Monday in February as an all-purpose "Presidents Day." The name suggests we honor Lincoln and Washington no less than Richard Nixon or Warren G. Harding or Donald Trump.

This hints at the more profound problem. A democracy really shouldn't be mythologizing presidents at all. From the left it seems obvious that we don't need a holiday honoring 46 presidents, all of them men. From the right it seems obvious that we don't need to be honoring the aggrandizement of Washington-based politicians.

Yes, by all means let's keep a day off to reflect on lessons of the American past. But let's make this about real history — an invitation to humility and renewed commitment to national purpose — rather than mythological history, an invitation to arrogance and complacency. A better name would be Citizens Day. It seems likely Lincoln himself would agree.

POLITICO


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JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    2 years ago

All in all this is a good article in my opinion. It recognizes and discusses the two competing approaches to history.  Should history be taught as  a patriotic quasi -religious myth that makes the citizenry feel good,  or taught with a stricter standard of actual accuracy?

 
 
 
Drakkonis
Professor Guide
1.1  Drakkonis  replied to  JohnRussell @1    2 years ago

Sorry, John. Can't see it as anything other than the continued effort by extremists to destroy the United States as a country by taking one aspect of our history, pretending it was the foundation for everything and linking it to every aspect of our society today in order to invalidate all of it, presumably to replace it with something more "fair." In reality, I think that if all the people who are pushing CRT and other "progressive" agendas ended up with all the power we'd have a nightmare on our hands. Most likely, something as or more horrible than Mao's Cultural Revolution. 

In my opinion, systemic racism is the goal of the radical Left, not something it is trying to eradicate. 

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
2  Greg Jones    2 years ago

Depends on whose "actual accuracy" you're talking about.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2.1  seeder  JohnRussell  replied to  Greg Jones @2    2 years ago

For example the myth making approach to history consistently underplays slavery in the time of the founding fathers

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
2.1.1  Greg Jones  replied to  JohnRussell @2.1    2 years ago

How does history consistently underplay slavery in the time of the founding fathers?

 
 
 
Ronin2
Professor Quiet
2.1.2  Ronin2  replied to  JohnRussell @2.1    2 years ago

We can counter that with the myth making that slavery only existed in the US; that the US was the principle market for slaves; and that the majority of Southerners owned slaves.

Myth 1: The Majority Of African Captives Came To What Became The United States.

Truth: Only a little more than 300,000 captives, or 4 percent to 6 percent, came to the United States. The majority of enslaved Africans went to Brazil, followed by the Caribbean. A significant number of enslaved Africans arrived in the American colonies by way of the Caribbean, where they were “seasoned” and mentored into slave life. They spent months or years recovering from the harsh realities of the Middle Passage. Once they were forcibly accustomed to slave labor, many were then brought to plantations on American soil.

Myth 2: Slavery Lasted For 400 Years.

Truth: Slavery was not unique to the United States; it is a part of almost every nation’s history, from Greek and Roman civilizations to contemporary forms of human trafficking. The American part of the story lasted fewer than 400 years.

How, then, do we calculate the timeline of slavery in America? Most historians use 1619 as a starting point: 20 Africans referred to as “servants” arrived in Jamestown, Virginia, on a Dutch ship. It’s important to note, however, that they were not the first Africans on American soil. Africans first arrived in America in the late 16th century not as slaves but as explorers together with Spanish and Portuguese explorers.

One of the best-known of these African “conquistadors” was Estevancio , who traveled throughout the Southeast from present-day Florida to Texas. As far as the institution of chattel slavery—the treatment of slaves as property—in the United States, if we use 1619 as the beginning and the 1865 13th Amendment as its end, then it lasted 246 years, not 400.

Myth 3: All Southerners Owned Slaves.

Truth:  Roughly 25 percent of all Southerners owned slaves. The fact that one-quarter of the Southern population were slaveholders is still shocking to many. This truth brings historical insight to modern conversations about inequality and reparations .

It must be difficult to view every last damn thing through the prism of race. Maybe future historians and politicians will look back on the Democrat Party and those that followed their racial divisiveness and hatred; and put the blame squarely where it belongs. 

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2.1.3  seeder  JohnRussell  replied to  Ronin2 @2.1.2    2 years ago

Slavery and racism are intertwined and interlocked in US history and what happened in other places and other times is immaterial. Those instances might be material if it weren't for the fact slavery in the US was based on race. That makes it an American problem.

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
2.1.4  Greg Jones  replied to  Ronin2 @2.1.2    2 years ago

The Democrat Party's role in the slave trade can't be denied. Their systemic racism continues to this day

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2.1.5  seeder  JohnRussell  replied to  Ronin2 @2.1.2    2 years ago

That is a history.com story about George Washington and his wife Martha's determined quest to recapture a single runaway slave. The effort was so extensive an entire book has been written about the episode.

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
2.1.6  Sean Treacy  replied to  JohnRussell @2.1.5    2 years ago
The effort was so extensive an entire book has been written about the episode.

Strange. I though this was all suppressed.  Yet entire books are being about written about a single incident. 

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
2.1.7  Texan1211  replied to  JohnRussell @2.1.3    2 years ago
Those instances might be material if it weren't for the fact slavery in the US was based on race. That makes it an American problem.

The fact you think it is a problem today speaks volumes.

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
3  Sean Treacy    2 years ago

I assumed based on the title it was satire. 

 
 

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