Saturday, April 27, 2024

Put Washington’s Birthday Back on the Calendar

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Washington, D.C. – America is a great nation, as former House Speaker Newt Gingrich used to say, filled with good people who sometimes do amazing things. Lately, it doesn't feel that way.

The most recent Real Clear polling average finds nearly two-thirds of all Americans – 65.7% – think the country is on the wrong track. Real wages are down for 22 straight months, inflation has people worried about the security of their personal , and we are, to recall the words of Jimmy Carter, suffering through a period of malaise.

Not all of this is the president's fault. He did promise during his inaugural address to bring us all together and has not only failed but has helped through his harsh rhetoric to further divide us, but the problems run much deeper. We have lost confidence in our exceptionalism, thanks in no small part to the perversions of the American story now being taught to our children.

It's a trend that must be reversed. We cannot continue as a nation if the critics of the American founding are allowed to win the argument that certain of our faults are, if you will, baked into the cake. Therefore, the cake must be destroyed, and we must begin again.

Nonsense. The American ideal of equality before the law may have taken too long to become meaningful to us all, but democracy is a process, a lesson taught to us by , whose birthday we are soon to observe.

At one time, Washington's Birthday was a major occasion and an opportunity to focus on why America is the exceptional place it has come to be. Remember, despite what the critics say, people from around the world are fighting to get in. No one, aside from the occasional celebrity who usually fails to follow through on a promise to leave, is trying to get out.

Washington's story is inspirational. Now, because we refer to his birthday as Presidents' Day his significance has been allowed eroded over time. Yet can any figure now on the national stage even come close to Washington's achievements? He was, as the eulogist said at his passing, “first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen.” Leader of the fight to secure America's independence. President of the constitutional convention. Pioneer agronomist and planter. Successful farmer. Accomplished horseman and dancer. Lover. A leader who nonetheless opened his home at Mt. Vernon to anyone who came calling.

What Washington told us about the need to limit the powers of government remains relevant today. His wise leadership guaranteed the survival of our republic in its earliest days so that it could become the greatest, freest, most prosperous, most generous society ever to exist. Despite his failure to fully embrace the Jeffersonian promise of equality for all, he must not be consigned to the pantheon of the mediocre.

That is the objective of the cultural commentators and pseudo-academics who now insist on emphasizing his ownership of slaves over his accomplishments. Talk of his greatness has been made unfashionable.

This is unfortunate. Washington the man was once a venerated American institution, purposefully set apart from men who followed him into the presidency. Even those who do not subscribe to the so-called “Great Man” theory of must acknowledge his centrality to the creation and survival of a nation founded on the idea of liberty that ended up changing the world for the better.

All this should have been foreseen when the nation chose, for the most mundane of reasons, to end the celebration of Washington's Birthday as a day to consider the man, his flaws – which were mercifully few – and his greatness. He deserves a special place of honor, his birthday a National Day of Celebration and Remembrance. We cannot move forward toward a greater, brighter future if we cannot bring the nation and its people together. Washington can be our rallying point. It is time for to restore Washington's Birthday to the national calendar and move it back to February 22, where it belongs.

The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of American Liberty News.

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Peter Roff
Peter Roff
Peter Roff is a longtime political columnist currently affiliated with several Washington, D.C.-based public policy organizations. You can reach him by email at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @TheRoffDraft.

6 COMMENTS

  1. I agree. President’s Day is not the same as celebrating George Washington’s birthday. Washington could have been a permanent president – in essence, a king or a dictator, if he chose to. Instead, he wisely retired & handed his reign over to the people to elect someone else.

  2. Agree my sister was born on Washingtons Birthday she was really upset when they changed his BDay do I change mine she asked it was wrong very wrong and Kennedy should have a day to even though the democratics killed him because they couldn’t buy him he was already rich lol

  3. Uh – How’s about going back to where BOTH Washington’s AND Lincoln’s birthdays were national holidays? And get rid of president’s Day, which does NOT mean a thing?!?!?!

  4. An example of illogical reasoning: We were told that it had to be “Presidents Day” instead of “Washington’s Birthday” because we should honor *all* the presidents (good, bad, or mediocre), not just the one who set the pattern for the office after leading the United States to independence… But “Civil Rights Day” (which honored *all* those who had fought for civil rights) had to become “Martin Luther King Day”–basically honoring just one individual, however notable.

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