Which is a responsibility of all americans
This essay cannot offer, in its small compass, a detailed program for the popular recovery of devotion to duty. Nobody does more to injure a sense of responsibility than a parent who abandons children to the television set and the peer group, "liberating" them from household chores and study at home. Assigning and enforcing duties within home and family, though it may seem stern at first, is kindness to everybody in the long run.
In the family, as well as in the school, the imagination and the intellect can be introduced to the literature of responsibility - for such does exist, and young people are much taken with this literature if they have not already been absorbed into a juvenile "counter-culture. In such true tales one learns what responsibility requires. And it was not many years ago that girls were reading about the heroines of ancient times and modern - about Hypatia, Joan of Arc, Abigail Adams.
We learn our duties from learning about men and women who did theirs. From studying genuine historical figures and genuine politics and literature of the past, young people can come to apprehend what a citizen can do for his country.
Perhaps the best way to renew responsibility in American society is to assume responsibilities one's self. It may be difficult to find the time, and painful to fight one's way into politics at any level; nevertheless, some honest men and women must do so if the Republic is to endure another two centuries - or perhaps to the end of the twentieth century. The apparatus for doing one's political duty still exists, thanks to our Constitution.
To give aid and comfort to fugitives from Communist lands, say, is such an act as the Signers and the Framers would have approved heartily; and it teaches moral responsibility to one's children.
Consider In all previous cultures, children ordinarily accepted responsibility for the well-being of their parents in old age; and in various societies, the children were so held accountable in law. Why has this form of responsibility decayed in the twentieth century? Can you think of political and social causes for the care of elderly parents being turned over to public agencies?
Can you name seven or eight voluntary associations or organizations, not subsidized or directed by government, that perform important services in your community or in America generally? Explore the benefits from this kind of involvement as opposed to "letting the government do it.
How may schools help to teach the rising generation the high importance of performing duties that may be dangerous? Are you and I personally responsible for our decisions and actions, or are we simply creatures of our environment, "conditioned" to respond in one way or another to events and challenges? Marshal the arguments on either side of this question, and then consider the probable social consequences of believing in freedom of the will, or believing that society, rather than the individual person, is responsible for citizen's actions.
What are you doing to help preserve the great principles on which this nation and your personal freedoms are based? Our Ageless Constitution, W. Our Ageless Constitution. Freedom Of Individual Enterprise. Checks And Balances. The result of their efforts: a free nation. I believe that just as past American citizens had responsibilities, so also do modern Americans; and I believe that if we honor our own responsibilities, we too can change our nation for the better.
I believe that my responsibility to America is to be informed when voting, to work to improve my community, and most importantly, to fight for those who cannot fight for themselves. One of the most basic rights of every American citizen is the right to vote. When you vote, you are not just checking a box; you are establishing your beliefs, negotiating a compromise, making a choice.
Because just as every American has a right to vote, it is every American's responsibility to know what kind of person they are voting for. It is our job as citizens to study each candidate's stances and beliefs, to look at their actions, to measure what they do to what we believe should be done and then to choose the person who best fits our criteria.
Voting is not meant to be a competition between political parties. Voting is meant to be a voice for the American people. By voting, every American gets a say in what they want their country to look like.
Voting keeps the ideals and goals of our forefathers alive, as well as creates new dreams and aspirations for future Americans. For these reasons, and for many more, knowing who you are voting for is one of the most important ways to honor your country. Voting is one way to help America as a whole, but I also believe that it is every American's responsibility to help their country from their own communities. I think that in order to achieve major changes, we must start small.
I believe that every American should be entitled to safety, and unfortunately today not every community in America can give this safety to its inhabitants. I believe that it is our responsibility as citizens to work to make sure safety is maintained for everyone. If we create communities that are safe, then I think we can come together better as a people, and once united, we can truly start to improve our nation as well as the world.
It is the constitutional order that the President is sworn to protect, even if doing so entails risks to the safety and security of the American people.
The new Strategy document attempts to foreclose the possibility of any conflict between constitutional values and public security by asserting that the two always coincide. But the idea that adherence to constitutional values always enhances security is wishful thinking.
The Constitution imposes burdensome limits on government authority and guarantees various rights in order to advance individual freedom, not collective security. On other items, the pattern is similar.
Young adults are less likely to call paying the taxes you owe, following the law, participating in the census, and following government and politics very important. Still, large majorities of young adults say each of these is at least somewhat important to being a good citizen. There is no meaningful age gap in views of the importance of protesting government actions you think are wrong.
Displaying the American flag and knowing the Pledge of Allegiance do not rank particularly highly for young adults on their list of important characteristics for good citizenship. These items do not top the list of older adults either, though those 65 and older are more likely than the youngest adults to say both are important parts of being a good citizen. It organizes the public into nine distinct groups, based on an analysis of their attitudes and values. Even in a polarized era, the survey reveals deep divisions in both partisan coalitions.
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