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Archive for the 'Independence Day' Tag

The presidents before George Washington

July 2nd, 2009, 1:32 pm by Le Templar

hansonjohnweb1The Tribune’s Fourth of July quiz and the official written test for citizenship ask about the first U.S. president. The answer you are supposed to give is George Washington, because that is usually what we are taught in civics class.

But that answer really isn’t correct. Some people like to the point to the Continental Congress during the Revolutionary War as the orginator of the office of president. But that position belonged to the presiding officer of a body of legislators, rather than to a head of a separate branch of government that carried out laws and commanded the military.

However, the United States won its independence in 1781 but didn’t ratify the Constitution until 1789. In the interim, our country was governed by the Articles of Confederation. Eight men were selected as president under that system of government, starting with John Hanson of Maryland — who has his own little museum in Ohio.

Why don’t we remember and honor these presidents today? Well, they were each elected to one year in office, and had almost no power to do anything. Their lack of leadership, and the general weakness of the federal government, threatened to tear the young union apart. When Congress drafted the Constitution and started to shop it around for support, some people believed our experiment in a democratic republic already had failed and wanted George Washington to become America’s first king.

Washington refused a throne, and only reluctantly accepted the call to serve as president to keep the states from going their seperate ways. That’s why we prefer to think of Washington as the first president.

Catching up on other news…

July 2nd, 2009, 10:21 am by Le Templar
U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano (far left) was part of a White House meeting in February with President Barack Obama in this photo posted at whitehouse.gov by the Obama administration.

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano (far left) was part of a White House meeting in February with President Barack Obama in this photo posted at whitehouse.gov by the Obama administration.

With the state budget crisis on hold until Monday, I can take a moment to mention other tidbits that have happened in the past week or so. Here’s a few items that caught my eye:

  • Janet Napolitano, one-time governor and now U.S. Homeland Security secretary, was named by President Barack Obama to be his lead negotiator with Congress on immigration reform policies. Obama revealed this after a high-level June 25 meeting at the White House intended to jump-start an effort to finally resolve the nation’s broken immigration system. Napolitano received a huge amount of media attention when the swine flu pandemic was first identified. She seemed to be on my television news every day for weeks. Now, she it’s likely she’ll be back in the spotlight this fall on an issue that, until the economy collapsed, had been one of hottest domestic topics especially among talk radio and television and certainly here in Arizona.
  • Have you taken the Tribune’s Fourth of July quiz yet? And you passed, right? Of course you did, that’s why you read this blog! But if you are, say, under 30, you are likely to be in a shrinking minority who actually understand basic American civics. Tribune writer Mandy Zajac used questions from the official test given to all immigrants seeking to become U.S. citizens. The Goldwater Institute used the same test when it recently surveyed 1,350 Arizona public high school students and found nearly 97 percent couldn’t pass the exam! The institute’s Matthew Ladner suggests high schools should require the citizenship test for graduation, or colleges should require it for admission. I’ve got to say, if we expect foreigners in this country to have this knowledge, how we can fail to demand it from everyone else?
  • The Associated Press reported on a Republican candidate for Maine’s governor who appears to have “borrowed” the Obama campaign logo from last year. I’m detecting a pattern here, as we noticed a similar concern in April with John Paul Mitchell, a Republican candidate for Arizona governor.
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