- The Washington Times - Friday, October 8, 2010

Over 100 years ago, Columbus Day was known as Discovery Day. President Benjamin Harrison’s Discovery Day proclamation in October 1892 asked the people of the country to “cease from toil and devote themselves to such exercises as may best express honor to the discoverer, and their appreciation of the great achievements of the four completed centuries of American life.” The holiday honored the spirit of the occasion more than the man who made it happen. The holiday did not only honor Columbus, it glorified all he made possible and what generations of free Americans had made of it.

The laudatory speeches and commemorative events of those times lack sophistication by contemporary standards, but the country was much younger then, and with youth came enthusiasm. The holiday spoke to the values of freedom and individualism, of risk-taking and reward, which had built an emerging industrial giant from a sparsely inhabited wilderness. These values were so fundamental, such self-evident truths, that it was taken for granted they should be honored, praised and revered. The Sons of the American Revolution even sought to have “Discovery Day” declared the “Fourth of July for the world.”

In later decades, when the holiday became known as Columbus Day, it was linked more closely to the explorer himself, and 20th-century critics focused intently on his purported flaws. The “Admiral of the Ocean Seas” became the father of slavery, the bringer of genocide, and was scorned as an ignoramus who didn’t even know what he discovered.

More than a century after the Discovery Day proclamation, America has lapsed into a fitful old age. The country is jaded, tired and in debt. At every turn, Americans face new limits. We’re told our very freedoms are the root of all evil. Environmentalists declare that humanity is the problem. Socialists demand that excellence be made to fit the lowest common denominator. Government is on an endless quest to increase regulation, control and taxation. Self-appointed experts lecture endlessly about how people should live. They seek to impose their utopian concepts on citizens for their own good, scorning those who resist as bitter, ignorant and unruly. The same radical group that branded Columbus the first slave master is reducing Americans to a state of low servitude.

The New World has been lost to a liberal cabal who can hardly even claim to be Americans. Being an American is not simply an accident of birth, it is something earned by those who seize the spirit of freedom. The very word “American” encapsulates this sense of boundless optimism and opportunity. Americans are on a continual voyage into the unknown, impelled by confidence born of freedom, faith and family. In the days of Columbus, men sought to discover, tame and populate unknown continents. Today, we are on a similar quest for the unseen shores of our lost liberties. Americans will see this new birth of freedom when “We the people” have the nobility of spirit to wrest if from those who would erase the legacy of Columbus and keep us forever in chains.

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