As the U.S. approaches the 250th anniversary of “Declaration of Independence” only 61 days away, it's past time we consider the most damaging word in American history. It has led to more deaths, environmental destuction, and hate than any other. The word is independence.
A careful reading of the 1776 Declaration reveals something transformative.
The noun “independence” appears nowhere in its text or original title “The unanimous
Declaration of thirteen united States of America”, the world’s most profound document. It rightfully
and justly declared the colonies desire to be “Free and Independent States,” and used
the adjective “independent”, not the noun “independence” a thing. A thing that Albert Einstein later called a “delusion”.
This distinction is the difference between true freedom (the
Declaration’s original intent) and the mass murdering chaos that both the U.S.
Constitution and the U.N. Charter unleashed globally.
An independent state (or states) can possess political
autonomy existing within a web of relationships, responsibilities, and be mutual
dependent on other states (or nations). Unfortunately,
the word “Independence” has evolved in our mind’s imagination as something absolute:
self-sufficiency, exceptionalism, immunity from consequences beyond our borders,
and worth mass killing and dying for, as well as ignoring nature, the basis of
all human health, wealth, and other life on earth.
This could have - should have stopped immediately after the
invention and use of nuclear weapons. Einstein warned about it, yet the UN Charter
was founded on the same delusional concept as the U.S. Constitution. Both ignored
the wisdoms offered in the 1776 Declaration based on “the Laws of Nature and of
Nature’s God” (in common speak, ‘take care of nature and each other’ because
everything is interdependent and vulnerable).
Ironically, we annually celebrate our illusion of independence
every July 4th using explosives and eating nitrate loaded meats that
cause cancer. Then over 250 years of
repetition, celebration, and civic mythology, that single word blunder has hardened
into our minds a global worldview that has shaped our perception of reality and killed hundreds of millions of people.
Because independence exists nowhere
in known universe except as a word on paper, in sound, or as a delusional concept
in our mind.
No human being is independent of oxygen, food systems,
ecosystems, microbes, gravity, family, trade, or civilization itself. No nation
is independent of climate systems, oceans, pandemics, financial networks, or
global stability. Even stars depend upon relationships with gravity and matter.
Interdependence is not a political opinion; it is the architecture of reality.
And yet our governing systems still behave as if independence were achievable. Ironically, both the U.S. constitutional
framework and the United Nations Charter are rooted in sovereign independence
as their organizing principle. We continue attempting to solve planetary-scale
crises — climate disruption, pandemics, cyberwarfare, nuclear risks, migration,
and ecological collapse — with governance structures designed around fragmented and delusional sovereignty.
Then wonder why the systems fail and things are getting worse.
Perhaps the deepest challenge of our species is to accept our irreversible interconnectedness and interdependence. And learn to govern everyone and nature wisely, fairly, and ethically. Thus, the most important word in America’s founding document may be the one that was never actually written into law.
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