We

Published: April 9, 2026

By Jim Lichtman
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Photo: Aaron Burden, Upsplash

As we approach the 250th anniversary of our democratic republic, I remain drawn to the widening divide in our country.

Disagreement is not new. From the founding through civil war, depression, world war, civil rights, and Watergate, Americans have argued passionately about who we are and where we are headed.

The danger before us is not disagreement. It begins when disagreement is no longer grounded in a shared understanding of reality. When one person’s verified fact becomes another person’s convenient fiction, self-government loses its way. Democracy weakens. Trust—slow to build and easy to break—diminishes.

Majority rule is essential to democracy. But majority rule depends on something more fundamental: a shared commitment to truth. To evidence. To lawful outcomes. To accepting results even when they disappoint us.

We do not have to agree on policy.
We do not have to agree on candidates.

But we must agree that courts matter.
That certified elections matter.
That facts are not partisan.
That the peaceful transfer of power matters.

Without that foundation, elections become contests of storytelling rather than expressions of the people’s will. At that point, the issue is no longer ideology. It is integrity. Because integrity is the difference between standing for something and standing with someone.

If we believe in the rule of law, we must accept lawful outcomes, even when they don’t favor our side.

If we value personal responsibility, we cannot excuse dishonesty simply because it advances our preferences.

If character matters, it must matter consistently.

If we defend the Constitution, we must defend it in full, not selectively or conditionally.

It is tempting to place the burden on one leader or one movement. But republics do not diminish because of a single figure. They diminish when citizens—good people, ordinary people—allow loyalty to tribe to outweigh loyalty to truth.

Civic duty begins not with blind allegiance, but with honest evaluation, especially of those we support.

It is the willingness to ask hard questions. To resist comforting falsehoods. To hold our own side to the same standards we demand of others.

Unity does not mean uniformity. It means recognizing that those who disagree with us are not enemies, but fellow citizens. It means remembering that truth is not the property of a party, and integrity is not an ideological position.

Two hundred and fifty years is more than an anniversary. It is a test.

A test of whether we still believe that self-government requires self-discipline.
That freedom requires responsibility.
That truth matters, even when it costs us something.

The Constitution does not begin with “I.”
It begins with “We.”

And that word demands more of us than victory. It demands honesty.


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