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America’s mindset this Independence Day

Have you been enjoying the 243rd birthday of our country Wait a minute. Do I hear some grousing out there? Is that grumbling I hear about the state of the nation? Complaints that everything is not perfect in the USA?

Get a grip, people. No nation can be faultless in its operation. We are, after all, a group of flawed human beings trying to govern ourselves as best we can.

On this Fourth of July holiday weekend, I write about why so many Americans seem to feel so disconnected from the nation in which we live. We seem to be at a mentally and emotionally dismal place in our history.

For nearly 20 years, Gallup has asked American citizens whether they are “extremely proud” of their country. In the latest poll, just 45 percent said yes. That is the lowest number Gallup ever recorded. The survey also found that a majority of Americans are least proud of our political system.

The breakdown of national pride along political lines is telling. The Gallup poll found that 76 percent of Republicans are “extremely proud” of the United States, yet only 22 percent of Democrats are “extremely proud.” Gallup places the blame squarely at the front door of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, concluding, “Absent a significant national event that might rally all Americans around the flag, given Democrats’ entrenched views of the president, these historically low readings on American pride are likely to continue until (President) Trump is no longer in office.”

I’m not sure politics — and the current deep divide over the man who occupies the White House — is really at the crux of our national dissatisfaction. So many Americans refer to themselves as victims these days. They describe the racial or gender bias, the socioeconomic discrimination they endure. They speak of cultural repression, even fascism. On a recent panel, one of the Latina participants said to me, “People ask me about my accent and where I’m from. That’s a micro-aggression.” I countered with the admission that I often ask people where they are from merely as a conversation starter. She was distressed at my boldness. I maintain any conversation that brings two people together is a good thing.

The United States is still the country that people around the globe want to come to. The problem isn’t what’s wrong with this country; there is something deeply wrong with us. Too many Americans have become beset by despair. The death rate from drug overdoses has been climbing since 2000. The suicide rate has gone up dramatically over the last two decades. The frequency of deadly mass shootings significantly increased last year. When did we lose the can-do American spirit that built this country? When did we become a nation of hypersensitivity that focuses on the complaints of a few at the expense of the masses?

I don’t know the answer to these questions, but I’m thinking one dynamic leader could help pull us back from the precipice, convince us to collectively pull ourselves up by our bootstraps. Sadly, there isn’t one on the horizon.

In thinking about all this, I was reminded of the recently departed Chrysler CEO Lee Iacocco’s bestselling book “Where Have All the Leaders Gone?”

“Am I the only guy in this country who’s fed up with what’s happening? Where the hell is our outrage?” he asked in his 2007 book. “Instead of getting mad, everyone sits around and nods their heads when the politicians say, ‘Stay the course.’ Stay the course? You’ve got to be kidding. This is America, not the damned Titanic!” Iacocco urged Americans to “Throw the bums out!” Voters did not heed his rallying cry, and here we sit in a political schism of our own making.

Life in America is not completely fair. Good, evil and inequality will always exist. But here is the important thing to remember: We are lucky enough to live in a country where we are free to yell from the rooftops and openly work to change things. I say let’s concentrate on the really important things that are best for the country as a whole. Respect should be given to every individual, but respect is only valuable when it is earned and not demanded. Not everyone thinks alike, and that needs to be respected, too.

We Americans may be flawed, but we routinely come to the aid of faraway communities beset by natural disasters and those paralyzed by the latest mass shooting. We volunteer our time. We donate money and goods. We pray. We still leave covered casserole dishes for those who have lost loved ones.

No, not everything is perfect. But I am weary of all the complaining. At our core we are a good and decent nation. How about from now until our next national birthday we reclaim our optimism and focus on all that is right in the United States?

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Diane Dimond is a nationally syndicated columnist.

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