America’s Always Been Great — Now Rise to Show It

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Statue of Liberty

Americas always been great — messy, loud, imperfect, but striving. Here’s what I know about America that keeps me up at night: We’ve always been messy. We’ve always been loud. We’ve always been a little too sure of ourselves while simultaneously doubting everything. But we’ve also been something else — something that right now feels like it’s slipping through our fingers like water.

We’ve been great. Not perfect. Never perfect. But great.

And I’m not talking about some mythical past where everyone wore hats and said “gee whiz” and everything was fine. I’m talking about the actual work we did — the times we chose to be better instead of just talking about it. The times we led not by dominating, but by example. The times we extended a hand instead of a fist.

That version of America? It’s not lost. But it’s being tested in ways I’m not sure we’re ready for.

Americas Always Been Great at Its Crossroads

Right now, we’re at a crossroads that feels less like a choice and more like a reckoning. On one side, there’s the America that leads with compassion, works with allies, and understands that “America First” is just a prettier way of saying “everyone else can go to hell.” On the other side, there’s this darker impulse — the one that wants to build walls, hoard wealth, pick winners and losers based on who looks like us or thinks like us or prays like us.

And here’s the uncomfortable truth: both versions have always existed inside us. The difference is which one we choose to feed.

What American Greatness Looked Like in Action

I watch what’s happening to USAID — an agency that literally existed to help the world’s poorest people — and I see it being gutted in favor of tax cuts for people who already have more money than they could spend in ten lifetimes. That’s not policy. That’s a statement about who we think deserves help. And the statement is: not them.

I watch us turn our backs on allies who have stood with us through wars and recessions and actual existential threats, and I wonder what happened to the country that understood we need the world as much as it needs us. Isolationism isn’t strength. It’s fear dressed up in a flag.

I watch the rule of law — the thing that’s supposed to be the great equalizer in a democracy — get twisted into a weapon against enemies and a shield for friends. I watch the separation of church and state, one of our founding principles, get chipped away piece by piece until we’re not sure what kind of country we’re supposed to be anymore.

And I watch people — regular people who just want to live their lives — get sorted into boxes labeled “radical left” and “radical right” when the real problem is just the radicals. Period. The ones on both sides who are so sure they’re right that they’ve forgotten how to listen. The ones who put people down to lift themselves up. The ones who think democracy is something you can win instead of something you participate in.

Here’s what I want to say to anyone reading this: We’re in a crisis. Not just financial — though that’s real. Not just political — though God knows that’s a mess. We’re in a crisis of identity. We’re trying to figure out who we are and who we want to be, and the gap between those two things has never felt wider.

But here’s what else I know: Americans are at our best when we’re tested. Not when we’re comfortable. Not when everything’s easy. When things are hard. When we have to choose between what’s easy and what’s right.

John F. Kennedy said One person CAN make a difference!, and everyone should try. I think about that quote a lot. Not because I’m some hopeless optimist who thinks we can all just hold hands and sing kumbaya. But because I know it’s true. I’ve seen it.

Every teacher who shows up to an underfunded school and teaches anyway — that’s one person making a difference. Every volunteer at a food bank, every person who stands up at a town hall meeting and demands better, every parent who teaches their kid that kindness isn’t weakness and empathy isn’t a flaw — that’s one person making a difference.

America is a country of leaders and innovators because we chose to educate instead of stifle. We created opportunity instead of hoarding it. We pick people up and gave them a shot. That’s the American Dream — not that everyone will succeed, but that everyone should have the chance to try.

That’s what’s on the line right now. Not just our economy or our standing in the world, though those matter. But our fundamental identity as a place where people can be anything they want to be, regardless of where they started or what they look like or who they pray to.

We don’t need to make America great again. We need to make America America again.

The America that leads by example. The America that understands compassion isn’t weakness and empathy isn’t a political position. The America that knows we’re stronger together than we are alone. The America that respects the rule of law — for everyone, not just the people we like.

That America? It’s still here. It’s in every person who refuses to give in to hate. It’s in every community that comes together after disaster. It’s in every act of basic human decency that reminds us we’re all in this together.

But it needs defending. It needs people who will stand up and say: not on my watch. Not in my country.

So here’s my challenge: Get involved. Vote. Volunteer. Speak up. Show up. Do something — anything — to be part of the solution instead of watching from the sidelines while everything falls apart.

Because America was always great. But greatness isn’t a gift. It’s a choice we make every single day.

And right now? We need to choose.

— Andrew Hahn, The Hairy Times

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