Two hundred forty-two years ago we declared our independence from Great
Britain, which the American Colonies rightly accused of tyranny and despotism.
The list of our grievances is recorded in our Declaration
of Independence, which is on permanent display at the National Archives in
Washington, D.C.
While I’m not quite old enough to remember the signing of the Declaration
of Independence, I am old enough to remember the calamitous Nixon presidency
(1969-1974) that caused a Constitutional crisis and greatly damaged our nation.
Nixon’s assault on our democracy
Richard Nixon, as president, faced charges of obstructing justice by covering
up illegal activity of his re-election committee, such as the break-in of the
Democratic National Committee’s Watergate office. He fired attorney general
Richard Kleindienst amid a Senate investigation into the Watergate scandal (special
prosecutor Archibald Cox also was investigating Watergate). Nixon later fired Kleindienst
and his deputy for refusing to oust Cox for what Nixon described a “witch hunt,”
although Justice official Robert Bork ultimately fired the independent prosecutor,
infuriating Congress.
A new special prosecutor was later named, more evidence emerged
implicating the President in obstructing justice and, ultimately, Nixon resigned
rather than face certain impeachment and conviction.
What sets us apart
What has set our great nation apart over nearly two and a half centuries are
our collective will to battle tyranny around the world; set an example of
democratic, representative self-rule; and to be a welcoming beacon for those
who are denied their inalienable rights in their own countries.
Our current president
Today these long-held values are under attack by our current
administration:
Trump has made it his mission to refuse entry to
the U.S. to those seeking political asylum, in the process tearing apart
children from their parents, deporting children whose parents entered the
country illegally, and committing other human atrocities.
Like Nixon, Trump has repeatedly
called the investigation a “witch hunt” despite the indictments and is non-committal
about whether Russia meddled in the election, while every U.S. intelligence
agency has concluded that Russia indeed was complicit.
Trump has fired one FBI
director and one acting director; one acting attorney general and stated on
multiple occasions his regret in appointing Jeff Sessions head of the Justice
Department for recusing himself from the Russia probe (Sessions, who worked on
Trump’s presidential campaign, recused himself because he had met with Russian
officials twice during the campaign, and failed to report those meeting until
after he was sworn in as attorney general).
And like Nixon, Trump has refused,
to date, to turn over crucial material, such as income-tax filings, or to
testify before the special counsel.
On this day when we honor the beginning of our great nation in 1776, let
us as patriots and citizens demand that our elected officials represent the foundational
values for which we stand.
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