I’m not a monster, though, and sweetened the pot with the promise of a visit to the Air & Space Museum afterward. Plus, we were traveling by subway, which was enough to get the littlest guys on board: they’re train fans.
I don’t pretend the trip was whine-free. It took over-priced frozen lemonade to head off complaining about the heat. Once we were settled, we got into it. The Memorial Day Parade features veterans from every war: costumed re-enactors in some cases, but for the latter wars, real veterans. The kids were thrilled to see heroes they’ve only read about: the Band of Brothers, Buzz Aldrin, various Medal of Honor winners.
It turned into one of those happy family days you can’t plan, but just “happen.” I think it’s good for the kids (and for me as well) to spend some time in community with their fellow citizens. It attaches you in some way.
I’ve been thinking lately about solidarity, that principle of Catholic Social Teaching which calls us to be committed to justice and the common good, not just our own. What appears to me to be increasing public thuggery: shouting people down, preferring rudeness over argument, the inability to play fair or believe “the other side” could have wholesome motives or just claims disheartens me.
I had occasion recently to consult Tocqueville’s “Democracy in America” for the famous passage on “soft despotism.” Tocqueville, writing in the 19th century, prophesied how representative democracy would gradually end. The besetting vice of any democracy is envy, he thought.
Resentful of those who achieve riches or accomplishment, people in democracies will eventually trade equality of opportunity for equality of condition. Tocqueville thought Americans would gradually come to envy high achievement or wealth and trade the liberty which allows anyone the same shot at happiness (however defined) in favor of a bureaucracy which levels everything for everyone.