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The Bill of Obligations : The Ten Habits of Good Citizens[¾çÀå]

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    ¡°Richard Haass has turned his keen mind and large heart to the most important of questions: The meaning of citizenship. If American democracy is to endure, it will require all of us to embrace what Haass calls our common obligations. This is a vital work for a decisive time.¡± ¡ªJon Meacham, author of And There Was Light: Abraham Lincoln and the American Struggle

    ¡°Democracy is more than procedures and laws. It is an ethical ideal that requires much of us if it is to succeed. Richard Haass powerfully describes what he calls the Bill of Obligations, commitments and values needed for these challenging times. We may not see eye-to-eye on all the issues, but here I agree: we need a clear and thoughtful statement of our obligations to each other and to the country if this grand and fragile experiment in democracy is to survive. The Bill of Obligations does just that!¡±¡ªEddie Glaude, James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor, Princeton University

    ¡°Americans argue a lot about their rights, but, as Richard Haass reminds us, democracy only works if we also recognize our responsibilities. His newest book reminds us of what those are, providing an indispensable guide to good citizenship in an era of division and rancor.¡± ¡ªAnne Applebaum, author of Twilight of Democracy: The Seductive Lure of Authoritarianism

    ¡°In this essential book, Richard Haass calls upon us all to commit anew to the obligations of American citizenship upon which our increasingly faltering American democracy was founded. He rightly observes that the future of this country, if not the world, depends on our answering this clarion call to put patriotic, civic obligation front and center in the national political conversation. This book¡¯s message is desperately needed if we are to bring an end to the poisonous politics eating away at the fabric of our society and begin to mend our tattered nation.¡± ¡ªJ. Michael Luttig, former United States Court of Appeals judge

    ¡°The reasoned arguments [Richard Haass] presents make his eloquent book well worth the read.¡± ¡ªBooklist

    ¸ñÂ÷

    Chapter Page
    Preface xi
    Part 1 The Crisis of Our Rights-Based Democracy
    Rights and Their Limits 3
    Democratic Deterioration 17
    Part 2 The Bill of Obligations
    Obligation I Be Informed 39
    Obligation II Get Involved 51
    Obligation III Stay Open to Compromise 61
    Obligation IV Remain Civil 73
    Obligation V Reject Violence 85
    Obligation VI Value Norms 95
    Obligation VII Promote the Common Good 107
    Obligation VIII Respect Government Service 121
    Obligation IX Support the Teaching of Civics 131
    Obligation X Put Country First 145
    Conclusion 155
    Acknowledgments 163
    Where to go for More 167
    Notes 177
    Index 211

    º»¹®Áß¿¡¼­

    PREFACE

    I have spent my career studying, practicing, writing about, and speaking on American foreign policy, and a question I frequently hear is ¡°Richard, what keeps you up at night?¡± Often, evenbefore I get to answer, the person posing the question suggests potential answers. Is it China? Russia? North Korea? Iran? Terrorism? Climate change? Cyberattacks? Another pandemic?

    In recent years I started responding in a way that surprised me and many in the room. The most urgent and significant threat to American security and stability stems not from abroad but from within, from political divisions that for only the second time in U.S. history have raised questions about the future of American democracy and even the United States itself. These divisions also make it near impossible for the United States to address many of its economic, social, and political problems or to realize its potential. Many Americans (for a range of reasons) share my concern; according to a recent poll, a plurality (21 percent) believe that ¡°threats to democracy¡± is the most important issue facing the country, surpassing cost of living, the economy, immigration,and climate change.

    The deterioration of our democracy also has adverse consequences for our country¡¯s ability to contend with Russian aggression, a much more capable and assertive China, and a host of other regional and global challenges. Deep political divisions make it difficult¡ªor even impossible¡ªto design and implement a steady foreign policy at a time when what happens in the world deeply affects what happens at home. Similarly, a country at war with itself cannot set an example that people elsewhere will want to emulate. If democracy fails here, democracy will be endangered everywhere. The storming of the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, along with other attempts to overturn a free and fair election, made clear America¡¯s internal divisions had reached a qualitatively different and dangerous level. There is overwhelming evidence that members of Congress as well as the then president of the United States and his close associates were not only aware of what was being planned but were intimately involved. And even though Inauguration Day took place two weeks later, even though American democracy proved resilient, the outcome might have been different had it not been for the courage and character of a few state officials, Capitol police, and the serving vice president. It was a close£¿run thing¡ªmuch too close for comfort.

    What is more, the threat to American democracy is not limited to those who stormed the Capitol or the elected officials who cheered them on. An equally serious threat stems from the slow but steady erosion of popular support for democracy¡¯s underpinnings.

    Before going on, I should perhaps say a few things about my£¿self and what motivated me to write this book. I am not particularly partisan. I have worked for one Democratic senator, one Democratic president, and three Republican presidents. I began my political odyssey as a liberal Democrat, someone opposed to the war in Vietnam. My ideas began to change when I did my graduate work at Oxford in the 1970s, during which time I studied more history, read Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn¡¯s powerful denunciations of the Soviet system, and watched up close the illiberalism of the British Labour Party and the rise of a principled Margaret Thatcher. For most of my adult life I was a registered Republican, although in the summer of 2020 I reluctantly concluded I was no longer comfortable in that party and changed to no party affiliation. But even when I was a Republican I would at times vote for Democrats. Party was never as important to me as individual candidates and issues. As I write this, I serve as the president of the Council on Foreign Relations, an institution dedicated to being a nonpartisan resource for Americans across the political spectrum on questions of U.S. foreign policy and the country¡¯s relationship with the world.

    In short, what led to this book is not my political preferences.

    I am motivated by what keeps me up at night: our democracy is imperiled, and its demise would be an incalculable loss to this country¡¯s citizens and to the world. My belief is that it can be
    saved only if Americans across the political spectrum come to accept that citizenship involves more than their asserting¡ªor the government¡¯s protecting¡ªwhat they understand to be their
    rights.

    I have come around to the view that our very concept of citizenship needs to be revised, or better yet expanded, if American democracy is to survive. As two leading political scientists wrote in a classic study, ¡°The development of a stable and effective democratic government depends upon more than the structures of government and politics: it depends upon the orientations that people have to the political process¡ªupon the political culture.¡± Yes, respect for individual rights remains basic to the functioning of this or any democracy, but rights alone do not a successful democracy make. A democracy that concerns itself only with protecting and advancing individual rights will find itself in jeopardy, as rights will come into conflict with one another. When they inevitably do, it is essential that there is a path for citizens to compromise or a willingness to coexist peacefully and work with those with whom they disagree.

    Beyond rights, obligations are the other cornerstone of a successful democracy¡ªobligations between individual citizens as well as between citizens and their government. Obligations¡ªakin
    to what Danielle Allen calls ¡°habits of citizenship¡±¡ªare things that should happen but that the law cannot require. Without a culture of obligation coexisting alongside a commitment to rights, American democracy could well come undone. We need nothing less than a ¡°Bill of Obligations¡± to guide how we teach, understand, and conduct our politics.

    I write in full awareness that I have long been associated with the establishment¡ªpeople and institutions that have often been vilified and blamed for the failures of democracy. Some of these criticisms are well£¿founded. The purpose of this book is not to defend the past. It is to help build our common future, to remind readers why democracy should be cherished and suggest what could be done to preserve it. What fills these pages is a mixture of reflection and advocacy, written out of aspiration.

    Implicit in all this is the conviction that American democ£¿ racy is most decidedly worth keeping. The American experiment has with one obvious exception managed to sort out its differences without experiencing civil conflict on a large scale. This worthy experiment has been a sanctuary for tens of millions of immigrants fleeing persecution or seeking opportunity, and a safe harbor for political expression and religious freedom. Our nation is also an engine of innovation, creating unprecedented wealth for hundreds of millions of people and increasing average life expectancy by decades for its citizens. Beyond its borders, the United States proved central to defeating fascism in World War II, navigating a Cold War that ended peacefully and on terms largely consistent with American interests and values, and fashioning a world order that for all its flaws ended the colonial era and built international arrangements that have brought greater prosperity, freedom, and health to literally billions of people.

    Yet American democracy has also come up short in meaningful ways. There is an enormous gap between the words of the Declaration of Independence¡ª¡°that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness¡±¡ª and reality, including but not limited to the treatment of Native Americans and the institution of slavery and the status of women. This country has failed to adequately deal with discrimination based on race, gender, religion, or country of origin. Eq

    Ã¥¼Ò°³

    A New York Times Bestseller

    A provocative guide to how we must reenvision citizenship if American democracy is to survive

    The United States faces dangerous threats from Russia, China, North Korea, Iran, terrorists, climate change, and future pandemics. The greatest peril to the country, however, comes not from abroad but from within, from none other than ourselves. The question facing us is whether we are prepared to do what is necessary to save our democracy.

    The Bill of Obligations is a bold call for change. In these pages, New York Times bestselling author Richard Haass argues that the very idea of citizenship must be revised and expanded. The Bill of Rights is at the center of our Constitution, yet our most intractable conflicts often emerge from contrasting views as to what our rights ought to be. As former Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer pointed out, ¡°Many of our cases, the most difficult ones, are not about right versus wrong. They are about right versus right.¡± The lesson is clear: rights alone cannot provide the basis for a functioning, much less flourishing, democracy.

    But there is a cure: to place obligations on the same footing as rights. The ten obligations that Haass introduces here are essential for healing our divisions and safeguarding the country¡¯s future. These obligations reenvision what it means to be an American citizen. They are not a burden but rather commitments that we make to fellow citizens and to the government to uphold democracy and counter the growing apathy, anger, selfishness, division, disinformation, and violence that threaten us all. Through an expert blend of civics, history, and political analysis, this book illuminates how Americans can rediscover and recover the attitudes and behaviors that have contributed so much to this country¡¯s success over the centuries.

    As Richard Haass argues, ¡°We get the government and the country we deserve. Getting the one we need, however, is up to us.¡± The Bill of Obligations gives citizens across the political spectrum a plan of action to achieve it.

    ÀúÀÚ¼Ò°³

    Haass, Richard [Àú] ½ÅÀ۾˸² SMS½Åû
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