Civics In A Year
The Declaration of Independence is 250 years old, but it refuses to sit quietly on a shelf. We end Civics in a Year by asking one question that cuts through politics and posture: what does the Declaration mean 250 years later, and what does it require from us right now? We start with ASU President Michael Crow, who argues that the United States is still early in a long, messy democratic story. His “second inning” metaphor reframes the semi-quincentennial as a marker, not a finish line, and it pushes us to think in decades, not news cycles. We talk about equality as equal chance, the ongoing fight over resources and access, and why civic education and the right to learn belong at the center of a healthy constitutional democracy. Then Dr. Paul Carrese takes us back into the text itself and challenges us to read beyond the famous opening lines. The closing pledge “our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor” becomes a personal standard for citizenship, not a dramatic flourish. Finally, students from ASU’s Civic Leadership Institute bring the Declaration into the present with unfiltered honesty, debating virtue, natural rights, inequality, consent of the governed, and the fear of tyranny. If you care about American history, civic learning, and what self-government actually demands, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the line from the Declaration that you think we ignore most. Check Out the Civic Literacy Curriculum [https://civics.asu.edu/civic-literacy-curriculum]! School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership [https://scetl.asu.edu/] Center for American Civics [https://civics.asu.edu/]
254 episodios
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