Who We Were. Who We Are…

Published: July 4, 2026

By Jim Lichtman
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Today, America is 250 years old.

This Fourth of July, amid deep national division, it seems worth asking a simple question: Which of our country’s monuments speaks most clearly to the promise of America?

It sits in New York Harbor.

The Statue of Liberty was a gift from France, dedicated in 1886 as a tribute to freedom and democracy. For the millions who came through Ellis Island, she was the first sight of America — not America as it always was: imperfect, unequal, and not always welcoming, but America as it claimed to be: a country built around the revolutionary idea that liberty was not the possession of the few, but the birthright of all.

That idea did not begin with the statue. It ran through the Revolution itself — through the words of Thomas Paine, whose call for independence helped lift people to action; through the Declaration’s insistence that rights do not come from government, that government derives its only legitimate power from the consent of the governed; and through every generation that has had to decide whether those words were merely beautiful language locked in a glass case or a promise to be made real.

Lady Liberty is not some sentimental relic we drag out for patriotic occasions. She is a reminder… a summons.

She summons us away from the pettiness of our politics, from the cruelty that has crept into our public life, and from the temptation to define America by who we exclude rather than by what we promise to uphold.

Her torch does not shine for one party, one region, one religion, one race, or one ideology. It shines for an idea that liberty — if it is to mean anything — must be larger than our fears, our grievances, our anger, and larger than the divisions that keep us from seeing one another as Americans.

She has stood through wars, depressions, assassinations, terrorist attacks, and seasons of national shame. She has never promised that America would always live up to its ideals. She has only insisted that those ideals remain visible, and that we keep striving to live up to them.

She reminds us of who we were, when we dared to declare that all people are created equal.

She challenges us to see who we are, when fear and division test whether we still believe it.

And now she asks us to decide… who we will be,

And whether we are still willing to follow her light.

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