George Washington
1732-1799
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This video is an AI-generated active imagination of what might be said to us today based on the written historical record.
Spoken as one who sees the Republic fray
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Spoken as one who sees the Republic fray
My countrymen,
I had hoped never again to address you.
For when I withdrew from public life, it was with the earnest prayer that the Union would grow stronger with time — not more strained.
Yet I look upon you now with a heaviness I did not feel even in the darkest winter of our revolution.
Then, our peril came from without.
Now, it stirs from within.
I once warned you of faction.
You have embraced it.
I cautioned against the elevation of party spirit above the common good.
You now wear it as a banner and mistake it for patriotism.
A republic is not undone in a day.
It weakens when citizens prefer victory over virtue.
When they applaud excess because it serves their immediate cause.
When they excuse in their allies what they would condemn in their adversaries.
Union was the great achievement of our generation.
It was not inevitable.
It was argued into being.
Compromised into being.
Sacrificed into being.
It required restraint — especially from those entrusted with power.
Restraint is not weakness.
It is the discipline of liberty.
I fear that discipline wanes.
The presidency was never intended as a seat of personal dominion.
It is a temporary stewardship.
The law stands above it.
If you begin to believe that your favored leader must prevail at any cost — even at the expense of constitutional balance — you endanger not your opponents, but yourselves.
The safeguards you erode in triumph will not be restored in regret.
Contempt is a solvent.
It dissolves trust.
It corrodes institutions.
It teaches citizens to view one another not as fellow stewards of a common inheritance, but as enemies to be subdued.
We prevailed against empire because we governed our passions.
If passion now governs you, liberty will not long endure.
I do not speak to condemn.
I speak to remind.
This experiment in self-government depends not upon force of personality, but upon force of character.
Upon patience.
Upon moderation.
Upon the willingness to lose an election without losing allegiance to the law.
If you abandon those habits, no parchment barrier will preserve you.
The Constitution is strong — but it is not self-sustaining.
It relies upon your virtue.
The Republic is not self-executing.
It lives only so long as you choose to live as citizens —
not partisans alone.
You may preserve the forms of liberty
while draining its spirit.
You may keep the Constitution
while abandoning constitutional character.
And if that day comes —
if faction consumes fellowship,
if power is prized above principle,
if victory is sought without virtue —
then the danger will not be that America is conquered.
It will be that America forgets what it was meant to be.
And when a people forget their own design,
no enemy need defeat them.
They will have undone themselves.
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