Calvin Coolidge, Address on the 150th Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence (1926)
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A president in 1926 stands in Independence Hall and argues something that still feels like a dare: you can modernize policies, but you can’t “upgrade” the Declaration’s core truths. With Dr. Beienberg, we walk through Calvin Coolidge’s 150th anniversary address on the Declaration of Independence and why it deserves to be read as a serious meditation on American political philosophy, not just a patriotic ceremony.
We unpack Coolidge’s surprising framing of the American Revolution as conservative in the constitutional sense, a resistance to illegal usurpations and a defense of long-claimed liberties. From there, we map his three big ideas from the Declaration: no one is born to rule, rights are inalienable, and government gets its just powers from consent of the governed. Along the way, we connect the argument to the long record of public deliberation that led to independence, making this a great piece for civics, history, and primary-source reading.
Coolidge also draws a sharp line between a moral society and a merely prosperous one. He calls the Declaration a spiritual charter and warns that “pagan materialism” tempts us to measure human worth by productivity, wealth, or utility. Then comes the punch: if you treat equality and rights as outdated, you’re not moving forward, you’re drifting back toward older hierarchies and a kind of modern feudalism. We close by linking these themes to Tocqueville on religion and democracy and asking the hard question many Americans now face: what backstops equality when shared belief thins out?
If this conversation helped you see the Declaration with fresh eyes, subscribe, share the episode with a teacher or a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show.
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