PATRIOTISM
How much has changed since Emma Goldman spoke these words in July 1917, in the midst of WWI:
Who is the real patriot, or rather what is the kind of patriotism that we represent? The kind of patriotism we represent is the kind of ptriotism which loves America with open eyes. Our relation towards America is the same as the relation of a man who loves a woman, who is enchanted by her beauty and yet who cannot be blind to her defects. And so I wish to state here, in my own behalf and in behalf of hundreds of thousands whom you decry and state to be antipatriotic, that we love America. We love her beauty, we love her riches, we love her mountains and her forests, and above all we love the people who have produced her wealth and riches, who have created all her beauty, we love the dreamers and the philosophers and the thinkers who are giving America liberty. But that must not make us blind to the social faults of America. That connot make us deaf to the discords of America. That cannot compel us to be inarticulate to the terrible wrongs commited in the name of patriotism and in the name of the country.
We simply insist, regardless of all protests to the contrary, that this war is not a war for democracy. If it were a war for the purpose of making democracy safe for the world, we could say that democracy must first be safe for America before it can be safe for the world.
Emma Goldman, May 18, 1917
From the Emma Goldman Papers, University of California, Berkeley
Who is the real patriot, or rather what is the kind of patriotism that we represent? The kind of patriotism we represent is the kind of ptriotism which loves America with open eyes. Our relation towards America is the same as the relation of a man who loves a woman, who is enchanted by her beauty and yet who cannot be blind to her defects. And so I wish to state here, in my own behalf and in behalf of hundreds of thousands whom you decry and state to be antipatriotic, that we love America. We love her beauty, we love her riches, we love her mountains and her forests, and above all we love the people who have produced her wealth and riches, who have created all her beauty, we love the dreamers and the philosophers and the thinkers who are giving America liberty. But that must not make us blind to the social faults of America. That connot make us deaf to the discords of America. That cannot compel us to be inarticulate to the terrible wrongs commited in the name of patriotism and in the name of the country.
We simply insist, regardless of all protests to the contrary, that this war is not a war for democracy. If it were a war for the purpose of making democracy safe for the world, we could say that democracy must first be safe for America before it can be safe for the world.
Emma Goldman, May 18, 1917
From the Emma Goldman Papers, University of California, Berkeley
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