My Country

I used to fly our small flag from the Washington Post box that hung below our old mailbox. But our old mailbox bit the dust last month, and there’s no easy way to hang a flag from its holder. So the best way to show our colors is to stick a flag in the large flower pot in the front yard. It’s not perfect, but it will have to do.
Which is, perhaps, a good way to look at this 250th anniversary of our nation’s founding — it’s not perfect but it will have to do.
It’s easy to be discouraged these days, especially living so close to Washington, D.C., which has been turned into an armed camp to celebrate a day of independence and freedom.
I turn to a book I recently read, The Fate of the Day: The War for America, Fort Ticonderoga to Charleston, 1777-1780, the second of Rick Atkinson’s trilogy about our nation’s founding.
“My country. That concept had taken root in the American seedbed, nurtured by a shared faith that this struggle, ostensibly about taxes, autonomy, and other parochial complaints, was ultimately about the chance to build both a new nation and a better world.”
For all of its faults, America at 250 still seems like the world’s best hope. And, more to the point, it is my country.
(Old Glory flies in front of the Maryland State House, which once served as the nation’s capitol.)








