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Posted by Bill Whittle Mar 9th 2010 at 4:35 pm in Declaration of Independence, Featured Story, HistoryWhen I was at CPAC a few weeks ago, I decided to stay an extra day and do the Washington tour. Now as someone who lives in Los Angeles, it is simply shocking to me how much history is within walking distance of the Washington monument, say.
At the Air and Space Museum, you can see John Glenn’s FRIENDSHIP 7 capsule and a replica of the Apollo 11 Lunar Module (you can tell it’s a replica, and not one of the built but unflown actual LMs, because the Lunar Module is so fragile it cannot support itself on its own legs in the Earth’s gravity field.)
Just a few blocks away is Ford’s Theater, and across the street, the Peterson House where Abraham Lincoln spent his final eight hours of agony. To go from that dingy, cheap little flophouse and then to the marble temple at the far end of the Mall produces a profound reaction in the human heart. But nothing I saw affected me as did the Declaration of Independence. I expected to be filled with reverence and awe. Instead, I was overwhelmed with despair.
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And we who work in Hollywood know that the kind of movies this town has churned out for forty years now must certainly bear a heavy responsibly for not only the fading of those ideals, but for the active attempt to erase them as quickly as possible.
But despair and resignation are, in fact, the goals of those would see these imperishable words fade from our lives. We can renew those words, in a very simple and heartfelt way.
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