ACTIVE Citizenship - What it Is and Why It Matters
Posted: Mon May 30, 2022 1:27 am
Victor Davis Hanson, a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where he focuses on classics and military history is also a third-generation grape farmer in Selma, California. That last part is probably what keeps him so grounded and clear about what is important and what isn't. He's always fascinating to listen to and to read. He currently has a new book out and is in connection with that has done a two-part interview with Jan Jekeilek on EpochTV.
The book is entitled: The Dying American Citizen" which outlines the causes, eventual effects, how to remedy it, and why it is imperative for all of us to involve ourselves in active citizenship. This is that perfect book that is aimed at the bystander believing that someone else should make the fight, the argument, stand up, and expose themselves to the "slings and arrows of outrageous fortune," so that bystanders can enjoy the government who governs at the consent of the governed. This brief article is a synopsis of the book and like the author of this article.
This book is written clearly and very briefly and has so many quotes that are succinct and pertinent, that it's hard not to quote them here, so guess what - that's exactly what I'm going to do over the next couple of weeks. I'm not a fast reader, particularly on something like this, that requires assimilation which I can't do and read at the same time.
So here's my first quote:
The footnote for this reference is here.
The book is entitled: The Dying American Citizen" which outlines the causes, eventual effects, how to remedy it, and why it is imperative for all of us to involve ourselves in active citizenship. This is that perfect book that is aimed at the bystander believing that someone else should make the fight, the argument, stand up, and expose themselves to the "slings and arrows of outrageous fortune," so that bystanders can enjoy the government who governs at the consent of the governed. This brief article is a synopsis of the book and like the author of this article.
This book is written clearly and very briefly and has so many quotes that are succinct and pertinent, that it's hard not to quote them here, so guess what - that's exactly what I'm going to do over the next couple of weeks. I'm not a fast reader, particularly on something like this, that requires assimilation which I can't do and read at the same time.
So here's my first quote:
Citizenship...is not an entitlement, it requires work. Yet too many citizens of republics, ancient and modern, come to believe that they deserve rights without assuming responsibilities -- and they don't worry how or why or from whom they inherited their privileges.
The footnote for this reference is here.