Among the many photos I have taken over the years, I searched unsuccessfully for something with the wide vistas that Kathryn Jean Lopez mentioned in the following contribution to a National Review collection of articles from Sept. 9, 2019 on “What We Love About America”:
“Freedom, in fact, is what I feel like I’m breathing
in as I see the blue of the sky or the road that leads down to Washington
Square Park. Anything seems possible on Fifth Avenue. And one miracle in
particular: some semblance of American unity. At some places on Fifth, the
Stars and Strikes seem to be everywhere. It’s as if America does, in fact,
still mean something we can all agree on. I keep looking and I think about
[Abraham Lincoln’s phrase] ‘the mystic chords of memory.’ Fifth Avenue inspires
gratitude. I don’t want to look at my phone. I want to keep walking. American
culture today can be overwhelming with noise and soil-crushing images. But
here, even with the traffic, things seem quieter.”
Then I came across what you see here: a photo of a Tom
Ford shop display at the Saks Fifth Avenue flagship store in Midtown Manhattan,
which I took a few days before the Fourth of July six years ago.
In one way, it seems a bit crass to transform the
Stars and Stripes—something people have carried and even died for—into such commercial
fodder.
But at least, the instinct this window display appealed to was pride in
America. These days, the most powerful instinct is fear.
Maybe, at this current perilous moment in American
history—when the husband of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has been critically
wounded in their home, when Capitol Hill lawmakers of both parties and Supreme
Court justices are investigating, as never before, security arrangements for
themselves and their families—it would do well for us all to catch our breath,
and remember the “gratitude” and “semblance of American unity” that Ms. Lopez
evoked.
In a tweet from last night about the assault on Paul Pelosi, Ms. Lopez also noted that “Sometimes it’s better to pray for
fellow human beings and that by some miracle the temperature of hate and anger
is turned down.”
Well, I suppose that’s a start. But more than a few of
us are getting tired of hearing “thoughts and prayers” or their equivalent
evoked for victims of violence.
More basically—and painfully—we need an examination of
conscience, and a commitment to the “mystic chords of memory” and “firmness in
the right as God gives us to see the right” that infused President Lincoln with
the political courage to take on those accepting aggression to tear the Union
asunder.
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