Hello
again, reader. I know that we have been talking about choices and consequences.
In our discussions lately, however, I thought I would change things up a little
bit today, because there has been a lot of concern going around the Internet
and newspapers and other social media platforms on citizenship, and exactly
what it means to be a good citizen, which I suppose. Sort of goes along with
our previous discussions about absolute power corrupting absolutely choices and
consequences. The following discussion is mostly made up of quotes from
Theodore Roosevelt (think San Juan Hill, although to be fair. He actually went
up kettle Hill). I should warn you now, dear reader, that some of the words and
phrases contained in the discussion may seem a little bit outdated, and so
might some of the context. But I truly believe that the core message of these
quotes from Mr. Teddy Roosevelt, are still of great value to our population
today, particularly given our current political climate, and one must remember
however you feel about Mr. Teddy Roosevelt and his place in history that he was
a product of his time, and for his time. He was a great statesman and
politician and as we discussed previously, every human being should strive to
be a great statesman or state person if you prefer....
Waller
Newell has said that “In some ways, TR and Churchill have more in common with
Homer and Shakespeare than they do with us.” That break has perhaps never been
felt more acutely in recent history than during this bitter, divisive,
circus-like election. Many people feel something has gone terribly wrong, but
have difficulty describing exactly what, and what politics would ideally look
like instead. It seems we have lost not only an understanding of the
philosophical framework of citizenship, but the very language of virtue. We
long for that which we are too morally inarticulate to voice.
Enter
the words of Theodore Roosevelt. Below you’ll find a small treasury of excerpts
from some of the addresses he gave during his lifetime. When you look at
anthologies of all his speeches, you find that the themes he hits in these
selections were the ones he offered, with only slight alterations, over and
over and over again, in every town and city he visited on country-crossing
whistle stop tours. You’ll likely be surprised to find how much they resonate,
and yet how almost foreign this kind of rhetoric sounds. One finds it
impossible to imagine any modern politician speaking this way — using this
lost language of virtue, and charging citizens towards both noble ideals and
practical common sense.
TR’s
words call to us from the dust — challenge us to revive what we haven’t
even fully realized we’re missing, and to take responsibility for that which we
claim to loathe in politics.
During
this election, there has been plenty of head-shaking and tsk-tsking; all that
seems foul is the fault of that “other” party, those “other” people who do not
share one’s values. Or the problem is the poor slate of candidates, all of whom
the average voter finds repugnant to varying degrees. Yet a people invariably
gets exactly the candidates it deserves, and they emerge not from one segment
of the population, but from the cultural milieu to which every single
individual, on every side of the aisle, contributes.
Every
link one does or does not click influences the kind of media that will be
produced in the future. Every willpower-exercising point of etiquette one
chooses to either uphold or skip impacts our culture’s ability to delay
gratification — to choose long-term gains over short-terms satisfactions.
Indeed every time you say “please” and “thank you,” or answer a text while
someone is trying to talk to you, you either strengthen or weaken the future of
democracy. No kidding; if you don’t understand why, then read this article.
TR
understood. He knew that unless the majority of individual citizens educated
themselves thoroughly, acted decently, and lived virtuously — unless the nation
maintained a “high average of citizenship” — the republican experiment
would fail.
As
this election comes to an end, and we look towards what is to come, let us
reflect on his words, and spend less time tsking others, and more time
contemplating how we ourselves might become better, and strengthen the
character of our friends, families, co-workers, and communities. So that in an
election still hence, we might again get exactly the candidates we deserve, and
yet have a very different problem than the one we currently face — the
opportunity to choose between the greater of two goods.
Theodore Roosevelt on Citizenship
AT MILWAUKEE, WI, APRIL 3, 1903
I
appeal for the qualities that tell for good citizenship. They are many. But
after all, they come down chiefly into three categories. In the first place
honesty and decency — I use the words in their widest significance;
not merely the honesty that refrains from theft; but the aggressive honesty
that will not see a wrong without trying to right it.
That
first. But by itself that is not enough. No matter how honest a man may be, if
he is timid, there is but little chance of his being useful to the body
politic. In addition to honesty you must have strength and courage. We live in
a rough world, and good work in it can be done only by those who are not afraid
to step down into the hurly burly to do their part in the dust and smoke of the
arena. The man who is a good man, but who stays at home in his own parlor, is
of small use. It is easy enough to be good, if you lead the cloistered life,
which is absolutely free from temptation to do evil because there is no chance
to do it.
In
addition to honesty and decency you need courage and strength. You need not
only the virtues that teach you to refrain from wrong doing, but the virtues
that teach you positively and aggressively to do right. You have to have those,
too. And if you have got them, still it is not enough. You are valueless
without them; you are valueless as a citizen unless you are both honest and
brave, but if, in addition to that, you are a natural born fool, may the Lord
be with you.
We
need courage and we need honesty, and finally we need the saving grace of
common sense. And we shall get good results from good citizenship exactly in
proportion as the average citizen is developed along the three lines that I
have indicated; for that is the man who will have high ideals, and yet will be
able to realize them in practical fashion. That is the man who will keep his
eyes on the stars, and yet not forget that in this world of ours he must have
his feet on the ground. The man who will strive after a high ideal, but strive
after it in methods that will permit of its realization.
AT NEW YORK, NY, FEBRUARY 26, 1903
Remember
that the greatness of the fathers becomes to the children a shameful thing if
they use it only as an excuse for inaction instead of as a spur to effort for
noble aims.
The
pioneer days are over. We now all of us form parts of a great civilized nation,
with a complex industrial and social life and infinite possibilities both for
good and for evil. The instruments with which, and the surroundings in which,
we work, have changed immeasurably from what they were in the days when the
rough backwoods preachers ministered to the moral and spiritual needs of their
rough backwoods congregations. But if we are to succeed, the spirit in which we
do our work must be the same as the spirit in which they did theirs. These men
drove forward, and fought their way upward, to success, because their sense of
duty was in their hearts, in the very marrow of their bones. It was not with
them something to be considered as a mere adjunct to their theology, standing
separate and apart from their daily life. They had it with them week days as
well as Sundays. They did not divorce the spiritual from the secular. They did
not have one kind of conscience for one side of their lives and another for
another.
If
we are to succeed as a nation we must have the same spirit in us. We must be
absolutely practical, of course, and must face facts as they are. But in
addition to the hard, practical common-sense needed by each of us in life, we
must have a lift toward lofty things or we shall be lost, individually and
collectively, as a nation. Life is not easy, and least of all is it easy for either
the man or the nation that aspires to do great deeds.
If
during this century the men of high and fine moral sense show themselves
weaklings; if they possess only that cloistered virtue which shrinks shuddering
from contact with the raw facts of actual life; if they dare not go down into
the hurly-burly where the men of might contend for the mastery; if they stand
aside from the pressure and conflict; then as surely as the sun rises and sets
all of our great material progress, all the multiplication of the physical
agencies which tend for our comfort and enjoyment, will go for naught and our
civilization will become a brutal sham and mockery. If we are to do as I
believe we shall and will do, if we are to advance in broad humanity, in
kindliness, in the spirit of brotherhood, exactly as we advance in our conquest
over the hidden forces of nature, it must be by developing strength in virtue
and virtue in strength, by breeding and training men who shall be both good and
strong, both gentle and valiant—men who scorn wrongdoing, and who at the same
time have both the courage and the strength to strive mightily for the right.
AT CHICAGO, IL, APRIL 2, 1903
Now,
the aim in production of citizenship must not be merely the production of
harmless citizenship. Of course it is essential that you should not harm your
fellows, but if after you are through with life all that can be truthfully said
of you is that you did not do any harm it must also be truthfully added that
you did no particular good.
Remember,
that the commandment had the two sides, to be harmless as doves and wise as
serpents; to be moral in the highest and broadest sense of the word; to have
the morality that does and fears, the morality that can suffer and the morality
that can achieve results. To have that, and coupled with it to have the energy,
the power to accomplish things which every good citizen must have if his
citizenship is to be of real value to the community.
AT THE LOUISIANA PURCHASE EXPOSITION,
1906
We
have every right to take a just pride in the great deeds of our forefathers;
but we show ourselves unworthy to be their descendants if we make what they did
an excuse for our lying supine instead of an incentive to the effort to show
ourselves by our acts worth of them. In the administration of city, State, and
Nation, in the management of our home life and the conduct of our business and
social relations, we are bound to show certain high and fine qualities of
character under penalty of seeing the whole heart of our civilization eaten out
while the body still lives.
We justly
pride ourselves on our marvelous material prosperity, and such
prosperity must exist in order to establish a foundation
upon which a higher life can be built; but
unless we do in very fact build this higher life thereon, the material
prosperity itself will go for but very little.
The
old days were great because the men who lived in them had mighty qualities; and
we must make the new days great by showing these same qualities. We must insist
upon courage and resolution, upon hardihood, tenacity, and fertility in
resource; we must insist upon the strong, virile virtues; and we must insist no
less upon the virtues of self-restraint, self-mastery, regard for the rights of
others; we must show our abhorrence of cruelty, brutality, and corruption, in
public and in private life alike. If we come short in any of these qualities we
shall measurably fail; and if, as I believe we surely shall, we develop these
qualities in the future to an even greater degree than in the past, then in the
century now beginning we shall make of this Republic the freest and most
orderly, the most just and most mighty nation which has ever come forth from
the womb of time.
There
is no patent device for getting good government, as there is none for winning
in war. Weapons change and tactics change, but the quality of the fighting man
remains unchanged as the qualities that made Caesar’s legions victorious, the
quality that made such superb soldiers out of the men who followed Grant and
Lee. Discipline is necessary and the fool that will not submit will only be
beaten. If you put the best of weapons in the hands of a coward he will be
defeated by the brave man with a club.
After
all has been done in the way of taking advantage of the best weapons it remains
true that against a foe equal in power we can win only by showing the iron
resolution, the hardened will that never bends till the end sought has been
attainted. No device that the wit of man can produce, no form of law or of
organization among ourselves can supply the lack of fundamental virtues the
absence of which has meant the downfall of any nation since the world began. No
smartness, no cleverness, unaccompanied by the sense of moral responsibility
will ever supply the presence of fundamental precepts put forth in the Bible
and put forth in the code of morals of every successful nation in the history
of the world from antiquity to modern times.
Always,
in any government, among any people, there are certain forces for evil that
take many shapes, but which are rooted in the same base and evil
characteristics of the human soul, in the evil of arrogance, of jealousy, envy,
hatred; and to certain people the appeal is made to yield to one set of evil
forces. To some it is made to yield to another set, and the result is equally
bad in each case. The vice of arrogance, of hard and brutal indifference on the
part of those with wealth toward those who have not, is a shameful and dreadful
vice. It is not one whit worse than the rancorous hatred and jealousy of those
who are not well off for those who are. The man, who, either by practice or
precept, seeks to give to any man or withhold from him any advantage in law or
society or in the workings of society or business because of wealth or poverty,
is false to the traditions of this republic.
Your
problems were those of war. At the opening of the Twentieth
century ours are problems of peace. The tremendous industrial
development of this country with its complexities has brought with it
very much of good and some of evil. Let us think carefully before, by
any act of folly, we destroy what has thus so marvelously been built
up. It is easy to pull down but not so easy to rebuild or to
replace, and let us take serious thought from the history
of “the republics of old and avoid the rocks
on which they foundered and the chief rock—the chief
danger in the path of each of the old republics of
antiquity of the middle ages.
FROM “CITIZENSHIP IN A REPUBLIC,” 1910
The
very last thing that an intelligent and self-respecting member of a democratic
community should do is to reward any public man because that public man says he
will get the private citizen something to which this private citizen is not
entitled, or will gratify some emotion or animosity which this private citizen
ought not to possess.
Let
me illustrate this by one anecdote from my own experience. A number of years
ago I was engaged in cattle-ranching on the great plains of the western United
States. There were no fences. The cattle wandered free, the ownership of each being
determined by the brand; the calves were branded with the brand of the cows
they followed. If on the round-up an animal was passed by, the following year
it would appear as an unbranded yearling, and was then called a maverick. By
the custom of the country these mavericks were branded with the brand of the
man on whose range they were found. One day I was riding the range with a newly
hired cowboy, and we came upon a maverick. We roped and threw it; then we built
a little fire, took out a cinch-ring, heated it at the fire; and the cowboy
started to put on the brand. I said to him, “It is So-and-so’s brand,” naming
the man on whose range we happened to be. He answered: “That’s all right, boss;
I know my business.” In another moment I said to him: “Hold on, you are putting
on my brand!” To which he answered: “That’s all right; I always put on the
boss’s brand.” I answered: “Oh, very well. Now you go straight back to the
ranch and get what is owing to you; I don’t need you any longer.” He jumped up
and said: “Why, what’s the matter? I was putting on your brand.” And I
answered: “Yes, my friend, and if you will steal for me you
will steal from me.”
Now,
the same principle which applies in private life applies also in public life.
If a public man tries to get your vote by saying that he will do something
wrong in your interest, you can be absolutely certain that if ever it becomes
worth his while he will do something wrong against your interest.
FROM THEODORE ROOSEVELT: AN
AUTOBIOGRAPHY
The
Speakership contest enlightened me as regards more things than the attitude of
the bosses. I had already had some exasperating experiences with the “silk
stocking” reformer type, as Abraham Lincoln called it, the gentlemen who
were very nice, very refined, who shook their heads over political corruption
and discussed it in drawing rooms and parlors, but who were wholly unable to
grapple with real men in real life. They were apt vociferously to demand
“reform” as if it were some concrete substance, like cake, which could be handed
out at will, in tangible masses, if only the demand were urgent enough.
These
parlor reformers made up for inefficiency in action by zeal in criticizing; and
they delighted in criticizing the men who really were doing the things which
they said ought to be done, but which they lacked the sinewy power to do.
They
often upheld ideals which were not merely impossible but highly undesirable,
and thereby played into the hands of the very politicians to whom they
professed to be most hostile. Moreover, if they believed that their own
interests, individually or as a class, were jeoparded, they were apt to show no
higher standards than did the men they usually denounced.
One
of their shibboleths was that the office should seek the man and not the man
the office. This is entirely true of certain offices at certain times. It is
entirely untrue when the circumstances are different. It would have been
unnecessary and undesirable for Washington to have sought the Presidency. But
if Abraham Lincoln had not sought the Presidency he never would have been
nominated. The objection in such a case as this lies not to seeking the office,
but to seeking it in any but an honorable and proper manner. The effect of the
shibboleth in question is usually merely to put a premium on hypocrisy, and
therefore to favor the creature who is willing to rise by hypocrisy. When I ran
for Speaker, the whole body of machine politicians was against me, and my only
chance lay in arousing the people in the different districts. To do this I had to
visit the districts, put the case fairly before the men whom I saw, and make
them understand that I was really making a fight and would stay in the fight to
the end. Yet there were reformers who shook their heads and deplored my
“activity” in the canvass. Of course the one thing which corrupt machine
politicians most desire is to have decent men frown on the activity, that is,
on the efficiency, of the honest man who genuinely wishes to reform politics.
If
efficiency is left solely to bad men, and if virtue is confined solely to
inefficient men, the result cannot be happy. When I entered politics there
were, as there always had been— and as there always will be — any number of bad
men in politics who were thoroughly efficient, and any number of good men who
would like to have done lofty things in politics but who were thoroughly
inefficient. If I wished to accomplish anything for the country, my business
was to combine decency and efficiency; to be a thoroughly practical man of high
ideals who did his best to reduce those ideals to actual practice. This was my
ideal, and to the best of my ability I strove to live up to it.
AT WASHINGTON, D.C., NOVEMBER 20, 1904
I
wish you well in doing the most important work which is allotted to any of our
people to do. The rules of good citizenship are tolerably simple. The trouble
is not in finding them out, the trouble is in living up to them after they have
been found out. I think we all of us know fairly well what qualities they are
which in their sum make up the type of character we like to see in man or wife,
son or daughter. But I am afraid we do not always see them as well developed as
we would like to.
I
wish to see in the average American citizen the development of the two sets of
qualities, which we can roughly indicate as sweetness and
strength — the qualities on the one hand which make the man able to
hold his own, and those which on the other hand make him jealous of the rights
of others just as much as for his own rights. We must have both sets of qualities.
In
the first place, the man must have the power to hold his own. You probably know
that I do not care very much for the coward or the moral weakling. I want each
of you boys and the girls just as much, and each of you young men and young
women, to have the qualities without which people may be amiable and pleasant
while things go well, but without which they cannot succeed in times of stern
trial. I wish to see in the man manliness, in the woman womanliness. I wish to
see courage, perseverance, the willingness to face work, to face, you men, if
it is necessary, danger, the determination not to shrink back when temporarily
beaten in life, as each one will be now and then, but to come up again and
wrest triumph from defeat. I want to see you men strong men, and brave men, and
in addition I wish to see each man of you feel that his strength and his
courage but make him the worse unless to that strength and courage but make him
the worse unless to that strength and courage are joined the qualities of
tenderness toward those he loves, who are dependent upon him, and right dealing
with all his neighbors.
AT KANSAS CITY, MO, MAY 1, 1903
There
is a certain tendency among many excellent people to
believe that everything can be accomplished by law, that where
there is a bad law it is due to the state and society, and that there
is an immediate need for radical changes.
The
millennium is a good way off yet. Mankind lived some thousands of years ago. We
have made steady progress, but is has been because while we kept our eye on the
stars we kept our feet on the ground. It has been by working up to lofty ideals
in practical ways that law can do something, at times a good deal. The honest
and fearless administration of the law can do much good, but a bad
administration can bring all our efforts to nothing. Often much can be done by
organization among ourselves, but when all has been said and done, when the
best laws have been enacted and well administered and we have done all we can
do to help one another, it still remains fundamentally true, and has been so
since the beginning of the world, that in the long run the chief factor in any
man’s success must be the sum of that man’s qualities and characteristics.
No
law will ever make a coward brave, a fool wise or a weakling strong. All the
law can do is to shape things that no injustice shall be done by one
to another and so that each man shall be given the chance to show the
stuff that is in him.
There
is no device to make good government. There are plenty of countries like
ours, governed under the same laws, and the net outcome is
absolutely different, because back of the laws lies a different set
of men, who determine the success or failure of any
republic, and there is no patent device for getting good
citizenship. We need strong bodies; we need more than that; we
need strong minds, and, more than that, we need character into which many
elements enter, the principal ones being honesty in its widest and deepest
sense, decency and morality. These make a man a good father, a good
husband, a good employer, a good man in his relations
to the state, and something more.
But
it matters nothing how good a man be if he is afraid; you can’t do a thing with
him. The man who sits at home in
the parlor and bemoans his fate will never succeed. We need
more of daring, strength and will. When we say “He is not only a
good man, but a man,” we say a good deal, but we must also
be able to say “He is a real sensible man,” for in every man we
need the saving grace of common sense.
If we fail in developing the qualities in our
average citizenship we shall fail as a nation. And oh, my
fellows, my countrymen, we are going to succeed. As a
nation we are going to make this the greatest the sun has
ever shone upon, because we are going to develop a sense of honesty
and character to a degree hitherto unknown among the nations
of the earth.
One of my favorite quotes of Teddy Roosevelt is "In any moment of decision, the best thing you can do is the right thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing, and the worst thing you can do is nothing." An honorable man or woman should always aim to do their best. But even if we fail, at least the honorable man/woman should be justifiably proud of having done something. Sitting back and doing nothing when we see an injustice hurts everyone.
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