Home
Support TAS
Email Updates
Search

Recent Commentaries and Op-Eds
Why on Earth---Are We Living in Wonderland?
Bradley Doucet
(3/6/2010)
Why on Earth... Is Seal Hunting So Unpopular?
Bradley Doucet
(2/6/2010)
Why on Earth… Do New Year’s Resolutions Often Fail?
Bradley Doucet
(1/8/2010)
Why on Earth... Do Canadians Love Waiting for Health Care?
Bradley Doucet
(12/10/2009)
Why on Earth---Do Unions Oppose Education Reform?
Bradley Doucet
(11/10/2009)
Why on Earth---Are Vampires So Hot?
Bradley Doucet
(10/30/2009)
Why on Earth---Would Anyone Trust Michael Moore?
Bradley Doucet
(10/14/2009)
Medicare--The Mammoth in the Living Room
Judy Kopulos
(10/13/2009)
Why on Earth---Do Americans Need Protection from Chinese Tires?
Bradley Doucet
(10/3/2009)
Why on Earth---Is Health Such a Low Priority?
Bradley Doucet
(9/23/2009)
Browse all commentaries

The Objectivism Store
Browse our full catalog!
Shop today!

Email this to a friend
To:    
From: 
Printer Friendly


Manifest Destiny, 2001

by Joy Bushnell

Word Count: 581

Manifest Destiny is the term originally created by John L. O’Sullivan in the 1840’s to describe America's westward expansion to Texas, California and beyond. In addition to the land, it was the feeling of spreading our freedom that was a prime motivation. We were intensely proud of our achievements, proud of the kind of government we had created and the freedom we had attained. So proud, we just couldn't help spreading our joy and happiness to the ends of the earth. Do nations have some purpose or destiny? Is it our obligation, as a great nation, to expand both physically and ideologically to the ends of the earth?

The attack on one of the finest achievements that was born from our ‘can do’ way of life is an awful reminder of how far we have come in 150 years. It would have been incomprehensible to an American of the 1840’s to hear today’s Americans apologizing for their success, feeling guilty for it, and worst of all, believing we should not attack in retaliation because we ‘deserved it’. Would you cut your child's hands off for mastering a difficult piece of music? Or his legs for making the game-winning goal?

If you happen to run across one of the pacifists on leave from the insane asylum, ask those questions.

If the terrorists and the countries that spawn them can make us feel guilty for being right, guilty for being successful, guilty for making the judgment that freedom is good and proving it beyond a shadow of a doubt, we have already lost— and all the shows of patriotism in the world won't make a bit of difference to our future at all.

On the other hand, there are also those in America who cite a laundry list of wrongs going back over 50 years committed by various nations in the Mid-east and propose we ‘nuke the hell out of them’ and take back what is ‘ours’. This shouldn’t be a war of retribution for wrongs America did not act on at the time. It was wrong of us not to act when the events occurred, and we should take the responsibility for our inaction. We are now acting in self-defense against the terrorists who killed thousands of innocent people and we are fighting for the ideals of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. We don’t need a laundry list of past grievances to justify our actions. To imply that is the worst kind of apology of all.

It is time to continue with the Romanticism of 1840’s America—not in the acquisition of lands in the Mid-East as some Americans are screaming for, but by exporting that which is really responsible for our wealth and success—our ideas. We've been a beacon for the world despite our growing pains and our errors. We should be proud of what we have accomplished and we should not fall into the trap of waging merely a war of retribution.

Let's rout the dens of terrorists and continue our outward expansion with the ideals that have made us the nation we are. We have right on our side and we should never forget it. It doesn't hurt that we have the might either – as well as the reason and rationality to use it responsibly, adhering to the ideals that founded this nation. Let's spread our ideas, our dreams, and our positive sense of life to the world, especially in those areas where people only look for death.

Joy Bushnell is a writer for the Objectivist Center. The Objectivist Center is a national not-for-profit think tank promoting the values of reason, individualism, freedom and achievement in American culture.


This editorial comment has been produced and distributed by The Atlas Society. If you would like to reproduce or publish this piece, you may do so provided you include the biographical information found on this page.

For more information, please contact The Atlas Society.

If you are distributing this piece electronically, the following text must be included after the selection:

Copyright, The Atlas Society. For more information, please visit www.atlassociety.org.


Home | Support TAS | Contact TAS | Email Updates | Search | Return to Top
The Atlas Society, 1001 Connecticut Avenue, Suite 830, Washington, D.C. 20036
Phone: (202) AYN-RAND (296-7263) email: tas@atlassociety.org
Copyright 1990-2009, The Atlas Society. All rights reserved.