Back to story
Perspective Shift

You read this story from where you sit.
Want to read it from somewhere else?

We'll re-present the same story as a thoughtful proponent of the civic-renewal frame would. Not to convince you. To let you actually meet the argument.

Choose a vantage
Retold from the other vantage
Steelman · slot A
The creedal-nation case
A constitutionalist civic educator would argue —
What binds Americans is not blood or soil but three propositions: that we are equal, that our rights come from our Creator rather than the state, and that we govern ourselves. Those ideas were heretical in 1776 and remain fragile now. Caesar Rodney rode 80 miles through a thunderstorm with cancer eating his face to break a tied vote; Mary Kay Goddard signed her full name to a treasonous document when initials would have been safer. The lesson for the semiquincentennial isn't nostalgia — it's that the baton has to be grabbed every generation, or it drops. Lincoln, Seneca Falls, and King all reached back to the same mission statement and demanded it be made real. Our job, and our children's, is the same.

If this read like a fair rendering of the argument — even when you disagree — it's doing its job. Steelmen aren't aimed at persuading you; they're aimed at what the other side actually believes when they're thinking clearly.