February 25, 2024

Kevin Downey, Jr., a writer whom I deeply respect, recently penned an article with the title “Where have All the Cowboys Gone?”  The article convincingly argues that America is currently in a headlong rush towards Marxism.  Downey pointedly asks, “Where are today’s Davy Crockett, Jim Bowie, George Washington, and Harriet Tubman?”  It’s a lament I’ve heard repeatedly from conservatives — that we need a “cowboy” to ride over the horizon and save us from our current mess.

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I’m concerned that too many Americans feel that without the next Ronald Reagan or Donald Trump, our situation is hopeless.  Unfortunately, such a mindset is a fundamental misunderstanding of “We the people.”  It’s our duty to fix our republic — not a mythical hero’s.

Pining for someone to rescue us falls into the leftist trap that we’re all victims — helpless to care for ourselves.  The radicals prefer that we believe that we’re in need of protection by a benevolent hero or at least a heroic system of bureaucrats — which they will happily provide.  But as conservatives, we believe in self-reliance.  We cannot demand freedom, without accepting that no one is responsible for our well-being but ourselves.  Acceptance of our obligation to manage our own affairs is central to the notion of self-governance.  To entrust our welfare to others is to relinquish self-determination.

Eighty-five years ago, the world faced advancing tyranny — not unlike what we are facing today.  The axis of Germany, Italy, and Japan sought to subjugate the globe.  Our 20th-century ancestors overcame this dark period of our history and won WWII.  We refer to them collectively as the “Greatest Generation.”

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When Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, drawing the United States into the war, the members of the Greatest Generation didn’t say, “Someone should do something about that.”  Rather, they went to the recruiting offices, hospitals, and factories by the hundreds of thousands and said, “I’m here to do something about it.”  They didn’t wait for the Lone Ranger, Tony Stark, or Klaus Schwab to save them from becoming part of the Empire of the Rising Sun.  As members of a free and self-governed country, they saw what needed to be done and did it.

Now it’s the 21st century, and our freedom is threatened again — this time by the axis of communism, radicalism, and globalism.  We got here by electing people to maintain our union and then abdicating our duty as citizens — assuming that our job ends at the voting booth.  We left the welfare of our country in the hands of our elected representatives — while we went back to our leisure activities.  But maintaining America was always a bigger responsibility than our elected representatives were capable of.  Therefore, they failed miserably.

Unfortunately, many still think we can vote our way out of our current dilemma — if only a cowboy like George Washington or Abraham Lincoln would show up on the ballot.  But could Washington or Lincoln save us if we give them only sloth, apathy, and failed institutions to work with?

Solutions can’t come from the top down.  No savior can save us from our own reluctance to act.  Fortunately, our problems are solvable.  We know what needs to be done.  Like the Greatest Generation, we just need to accept our duty and do it.

Our schools no longer train our children to be good citizens.  Therefore, the duty falls on us.  We need to personally educate our children about the differences between freedom and tyranny.  Make them understand that equity and personal freedom cannot coexist — and that the latter is far superior to the former.  Show them that social justice leads to socialism — which has unfailingly been a recipe for subjugation, misery, and destitution.

We need to call out political correctness for what it is: a tactic of the radicals to prevent us from engaging in the debates they would lose.  Don’t let name-calling deter us from talking about moral relativism, social justice, abortion, transgenderism, Islamic terrorism, meritocracy, and racial issues.