I've been paying pretty close attention for more years than I'd like to admit, but I'd never heard anything quite like it.
On Tuesday, before a rapturous joint session of Congress, the leader of a foreign nation actually said "thank you" to America.
"Providence entrusted the United States to be the guardian of liberty," said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. "All peoples who cherish freedom owe a profound debt of gratitude to your great nation."
This may seem a bit unusual coming from someone who leans a bit to the political left and has no illusions about his nation's imperfections, but I really enjoyed hearing that.
It's almost always a thankless task to be the world's only superpower and possess its largest economy, and here someone was saying "thank you."
I mean, most of the time, if folks from other nations aren't actually burning our flag, they're calling us imperialists or warmongers or chanting "death to America."
Not that on occasion we haven't actually been imperialists, warmongers and unwelcome meddlers in other countries' affairs. But we do plenty of good stuff, too, and I can't really recall any country's leader just standing up and saying "thank you" before Netanyahu did it.
The Filipinos after Douglas MacArthur returned? The Kuwaitis after we kicked Saddam Hussein out of their country? Europeans _ but probably not the French _ after we helped liberate them from the Nazis and kicked in with the Marshall Plan?
Maybe, but it was obvious Tuesday that Congress really appreciated being thanked.
It's important to note on this Memorial Day Weekend that Democrats as well as Republicans rose to their feet and cheered lustily when Netanyahu praised their country.
For some reason, progressives have permitted conservatives to shanghai the whole concept of U.S. patriotism. The political heirs of Franklin Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy have allowed ourselves to be marginalized when it comes to acknowledging that we love our nation.
The "America, love it or leave it" crowd has always had the wrong kind of patriotism, caring far more about the flag than what it represents, and sacrificing wisdom and nuance for simplistic bumper-sticker slogans.
All this "American Exceptionalism" stuff that Republican presidential candidates are spouting is just exceptional nonsense.
If another country has a better health care system or educates its kids better than we do, it's exceptionally stupid to stubbornly, chauvinistically go on doing things wrong.
It's not the least bit patriotic to insist that our country is perfect and has always been perfect, and if anyone disagrees, he can just go back where he came from.
For instance, there is nothing un-American about acknowledging that we have not always been "the good guys."
A young second lieutenant named Ulysses S. Grant called our war with Mexico "one of the most unjust ever waged by a stronger against a weaker nation. It was an instance of a republic following the bad example of European monarchies, in not considering justice in their desire to acquire additional territory."
The Spanish-American War is also an example of an American land-grab, taking territory from a weaker nation just because we could.
Our CIA has helped overthrow legitimate Central and South American governments along with one or two in the Middle East.
The Alien and Sedition Act, slavery, suspension of habeas corpus, internment of Japanese-Americans, McCarthyism and other scratches upon the nation's escutcheon are nothing to be proud of, but that doesn't mean we cannot take pride in our imperfect country.
We're the most generous nation in the world when it comes to humanitarian aid, and we are the main reason why repressive communist regimes didn't dominate the planet.
But one thing stands out in particular.
If we figure that it was inevitable that some nation was going to discover the atom bomb, the people of Earth caught an enormous break when it turned out to be the United States.
We used atomic weapons to end a war, not for worldwide domination. The first nation with the bomb could have ruled the entire planet. We chose not to, and that _ and not some silly jingoism _ makes us exceptional.
Memorial Day acknowledges the many thousands of American service people who gave their lives fighting for freedom rather than territory.
In the annals of history that's pretty darned exceptional, too.
—¦ Thank you for ensuring that the flame of freedom burns bright throughout the world," said Netanyahu.
Hey, you're welcome.
Sam Pollak is the editor of The Daily Star. He can be reached at spollak@thedailystar.com or at (607) 432-1000, ext. 208.
Sam Pollak
It's OK to love an imperfect USA
- Sam Pollak
-
-
I'm happy with our kids to a certain degree
It was several years ago, and I was in the kitchen, telling my eldest daughter and my then-teenaged son about the person who was taking over as publisher at The Daily Star.
-
I get by with a little help from my 'friends'
They are my precious friends, although I've met only a couple of them. They are always there -- unlike most of my other friends -- whenever I want them ... or need them. I just have to open a book, and there they are.
-
It’s not easy for a politics junkie to get off the stuff
One of the curious things about being a politics junkie is that in any given election year I become even more of a social pariah than usual. I’ll admit that my fervid exclamations about the previous evening’s Republican primary or the latest poll numbers have on occasion been accompanied by grasping the lapels of people I think might be my friends lest they get away.
-
The Encyclopaedia Britannica in print, unmourned by me
I've never been particularly fond of encyclopedias, regarding them in my youth as necessary evils to consult and plagiarize in desperate last-minute efforts to get passing grades on assignments I should have done weeks earlier.
-
Angelo Dundee was always a good man to have in your corner
So, there I am, sitting on a bench in Miami Beach's ancient, famous and dank Fifth Street Gym, happily taking notes while Muhammad Ali is screaming at me.
- Saturday, February 4, 2012
-
Runners-up get no respect in today's America
This will surely come as rather a nasty shock to those who know me today, but I have several impeccable sources who insist without the least fear of contradiction that I was an annoying child.
- Saturday, January 14, 2012
-
To err is human; to make good on corrections, divine
"As long as the world is turning and spinning," said funnyman Mel Brooks, "we're gonna be dizzy and we're gonna make mistakes." Fair enough. Still, some mistakes are a bit worse than others.
- Saturday, December 24, 2011
-
Sammies celebrate the naughty, the nice and the just plain odd
If 'tis the season to be jolly (and I have it on the very best of authority that 'tis), then what better way to obtain said jollies than to be treated to my Seventh Annual Sammy Awards?
- Sunday, December 4, 2011
-
Worrying about religion can be a real shame
I was a young guy, so you know this happened a very long time ago.
- Saturday, November 12, 2011
-
A fountain of wisdom gushes forth
There's this tale about a young rabbi from a small village in Eastern Europe who has decided to continue his career in America. Before he leaves, he seeks out his mentor, a wise, revered older rabbi. "Rabbi," asks the young man, "what is the secret to life?"
- Saturday, October 22, 2011
-
It's a bird! It's a plane! It's a candidate!
With prominent politicians' campaigns seeming to implode with every interview, we welcome to our studios this evening yet another candidate for high public office.
- Saturday, October 1, 2011
-
Texas is making a killing on last-meal savings
Texas has not only made executing prisoners something of an art form, but is getting downright chintzy when it comes to providing the condemned a last meal.
- Sunday, September 11, 2011
-
Twice-told tale resonates after all these years
You know how it is when you're telling folks a fascinating story and all you see are weak little smiles, glassed-over eyes and the slow-yet-impatient nodding of heads?
- Sunday, August 21, 2011
-
I only made 5 bucks a week, but the benefits were incredible
You might be surprised at how often I'm asked about how I got into this newspaper racket.
- Saturday, July 30, 2011
-
Critics caught way off base by decent act
So, I find myself driving in New York City earlier this month and listening to someone getting absolutely excoriated on sports talk radio.
- Saturday, July 9, 2011
-
'Smart' technology doesn't make us any smarter
So I'm on my fancy-schmancy "smart phone" the other day, talking to my older brother, Michael.
- Saturday, June 18, 2011
-
Memories of a stand-alone photographer
Photographs, quite naturally, are extremely important to Daily Star Chief Photographer Julie Lewis ... but so are words, as I found out in short order 13 years ago when I became her editor.
- Saturday, May 28, 2011
- Sunday, May 8, 2011
-
He didn't become 'The President' for all of us until Obama got Osama
Some idle musings while wondering how many months _ yes, only months _ it will be before we see the first TV movie about how the Navy SEALS offed Osama bin Laden ...
- Saturday, April 16, 2011
-
It's a shame that some folks aren't ashamed
The question just begs to be asked.
-
I'm happy with our kids to a certain degree

