Towards the end of their lives, former President John Adams asked former President Thomas Jefferson whether he would live his life over again.
The third president answered in the affirmative: “I think with you, that it is a good world on the whole; that it has been framed on a principle of benevolence, and more pleasure than pain dealt out to us.”
Not everyone agrees, of course. Jefferson called these people “gloomy and hypochondriac minds,” who “always count that the worst will happen because it may happen.”
Jefferson has a challenge to those whom we today call “the black-pilled”: “How much pain have cost us the evils that have never happened!” Jefferson confessed to lacking hope sometimes, but not as often as the perpetually gloomy.
Those of us who follow the news often have occasion for gloom — or alarm. But on July Fourth it is appropriate to remember the council of these two leaders of Independence.
In 1826, as Jefferson and Adams approached their inevitable demises, both struggled — and succeeded — in their final goals: to make it to Independence Day.
On the Third, Jefferson inquired, more than once, about whether it was the Fourth yet, wrote Albert Jay Nock at the end of his Jefferson (1926), “and when told at last that it was, he appeared satisfied. He died painlessly at one o’clock in the afternoon, about five hours before his old friend and fellow, John Adams; it was the only time he took precedence of him, having been all his life ‘secondary to him in every situation,’ except this one.”
According to Adams family lore, when Adams died a few hours later, he said, “Jefferson survives.”
Wrong, as a point of fact. But in spirit?
On Independence Day, we should ask ourselves what of the founding survives.
Unlike the actual lives of those who made our Independence, and, to paraphrase Tom Paine, we can start Independence anew. And as John Adams definitely said on his last day, “Independence forever!”
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
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2 replies on “Waiting for the Day”
Independence is independence from rule by some other state. Prior to 2 July 1776, for America that other state was Great Britain, which has since evolved into the present United Kingdom. Observing the present, we may be glad that we are not subjects of the United Kingdom, though possibly it would not be nearly so terrible a state had America not fought free of it.
But Americans have been conditioned to confuse national independence with personal liberty, though these are not in the least the same thing. And, while the Continental Congress justified its pursuit of national independence in term of creating a political order respecting the liberty of the individual, our political order has since strayed grotesquely. Moreover, at this stage, most denizens of our country recoil in horror if not derision whenever serious proposals are made to realize that original vision of personal liberty.
Paul: About 10 years ago I met you at a MacDonalds in Livonia, Mi. It was the day after one of those conservative gatherings sponsored by Sheldon Rose. Scott was there. At MacDonalds I gave you a copy of “Conspiracy in Philadelphia” by Gary North. I still think you ought to read it. Both Declaration and Constitution wise. If you misplaced it it’s free via PDF online. North put all of his books online for us to read for free. CIP changed my life with true, brutal truth.