The Powerline Show
Today's entry in the many books I am featuring in this series is Michael Auslin's National Treasure: How the Declaration of Independence Made America. [https://www.amazon.com/dp/1668214547/?bestFormat=true&k=national%20treasure%20how%20the%20declaration%20of%20independence%20made%20america&ref_=nb_sb_ss_w_scx-ent-bk-ww_k2_1_17_de&crid=30HTGWV5Q7P0D&sprefix=National%20Treasure] Misha, as his friends know him, assures me he didn't actually name the book after the Nic Cage potboiler, but rather thinks the Declaration deserves to be regarded as more than just an important political or merely historical document. And Misha's book is quite different from most of the new books out recently. Although he does incorporate observations on many of the key ideas and concepts in the Declaration, 'National Treasure' is mostly a story about the document itself—its physical handling and travels over the last 250 years. You might think regarding the Declaration as something akin to a sacred relic, and a narrative about its mere custodial issues (which included many threats to its survival in original form, might not be gripping reading, but somehow in Misha's telling it is. Auslin is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution, and has taught history at Yale, as well as being one of the nation's leading experts on Asia. All of his work is worth following, which you do on his Substack, The Patowmack Packet [https://patowmackpacket.substack.com].
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