The New Freedom eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 191 pages of information about The New Freedom.

The New Freedom eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 191 pages of information about The New Freedom.

Now, that kind of debate, that spirit in discussion, gets us nowhere.  Our national affairs are too serious, they lie too close to the well-being of each one of us, to excuse our talking about them except in earnestness and candor and a willingness to speak and listen with open minds.  It is a misfortune that attends the party system that in the heat of a campaign partisan passions are so aroused that we cannot have frank discussion.  Yet I am sure that I observe, and that all citizens must observe, an almost startling change in the temper of the people in this respect.  The campaign just closed was markedly different from others that had preceded it in the degree to which party considerations were forgotten in the seriousness of the things we had to discuss as common citizens of an endangered country.

There is astir in the air of America something that I for one never saw before, never felt before.  I have been going to political meetings all my life, though not all my life playing an immodestly conspicuous part in them; and there is a spirit in our political meetings now that I never saw before.  It hasn’t been very many years, let me say for example, that women attended political meetings.  And women are attending political meetings now not simply because there is a woman question in politics; they are attending them because the modern political meeting is not like the political meeting of five or ten years ago.  That was a mere ratification rally.  That was a mere occasion for “whooping it up” for somebody.  That was merely an occasion upon which one party was denounced unreasonably and the other was lauded unreasonably.  No party has ever deserved quite the abuse that each party has got in turn, and nobody has ever deserved the praise that both parties have got in turn.  The old political meeting was a wholly irrational performance; it was got together for the purpose of saying things that were chiefly not so and that were known by those who heard them not to be so, and were simply to be taken as a tonic in order to produce cheers.

But I am very much mistaken in the temper of my fellow-countrymen if the meetings I have seen in the last two years bear any resemblance to those older meetings.  Men now get together in a political meeting in order to hear things of the deepest consequence discussed.  And you will find almost as many Republicans in a Democratic meeting as you will find Democrats in a Republican meeting; the spirit of frank discussion, of common counsel, is abroad.

Good will it be for the country if the interest in public concerns manifested so widely and so sincerely be not suffered to expire with the election!  Why should political debate go on only when somebody is to be elected?  Why should it be confined to campaign time?

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The New Freedom from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.