We the People.
It begins with “We the People”.
Although written long ago in a different age, by a different generation, it is still the document which We the People of the United States of America hold up as the foundation of our country.
The United States Constitution.
Three simple words. We the People.
It embodies everyone who lives in America. We, those people, expect our government, whom We the People elect, to represent us, to make just and fair laws to protect and serve us, to enact legislation that helps us. We expect all three branches of our government to work together with the ultimate goal of helping one group… We the People.
We hope beyond hope that Congress will work together.
We dare to dream that a President can work with both sides of Congress.
We yearn for a Judicial Branch that checks and balances and still maintains the principle that the government is there to serve us.
To serve ALL for the betterment of We the People.
And yet….
Our belief in freedom, in democracy, in a republic form of government, in America, seems to have waned from what we all hold true as our foundation; for who exactly are the people that we call “We”?
We the People are not simply one group, one sex, one race, one belief.
It should not stand for just “We the White People” or “We the Black People” or “We the Latino People” or what have you.
It has never been held up as “We the Male People” or “We the Female People”.
By its very creation it was never meant to be “We the Democrats” or “We the Republicans”.
It has always held true that separation of church and state meant it could not be “We the Christians”, or “We the Muslims”, or “We the Jews” or – insert any other religion.
How could it be then, that the people we call “We” could be anything other than All.
It cannot be “We the Heterosexuals”, or “We the Married”, nor “We the Single”.
‘We’ is inclusive, not exclusive.
It is not “We the Rich” or “We the Poor” or “We the Middle Class”.
It is not “We the Privileged” or “We the Forgotten”.
It never was and never will be “We the Intelligent” nor “We the Less Fortunate” nor “We the Simple Minded”.
It is We the People.
It’s all of us.
It takes us all to make up this great and wonderful country.
We may not agree or think alike; we may not have similar views or faith.
We may come from different lands, from different backgrounds and some of us look, act, and speak differently.
In the end, we are all still here.
We are still the people who make up the WE.
WE are not perfect. WE disagree, WE discuss, and WE challenge each other and engage each other; and while WE may have a long way to go in figuring out this way of living we have created and the complex governance that we constantly hope to improve, let us at least remember that it began because a group of people came together and said WE can do this. Yes, they lived in a different time and in a different culture of living. Just because their “We” didn’t include everyone, doesn’t mean it can’t now.
Together we are stronger than we are apart, and together we can achieve something new……… something better……… something that begins with……
…..We the People.
A Journey Institute Press Imprint
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General Non-Fiction
After her husband was given a job for a year in Italy, Andrea and the rest of their family joined him on the adventure; and what an adventure it was. Often trying to do the simplest of things, her story captures the hilarity of an American in Italy trying to navigate a country that seems as foreign as should be familiar.
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Adina Ciment started a blog 10 years ago in order to work on her writing. But after a breast cancer diagnosis for her and a brain tumor diagnosis for her son, her blog suddenly shifted onto topics she never expected to write about. Wasn’t Expecting This is a collection of her reflections and changing philosophy as she navigated each challenge.