Independence Day: Any Reason to Celebrate?, por Bryan Caplan:
Can anyone tell me why American independence was worth fighting for?
Most libertarians interpret the Revolutionary War as a libertarian crusade. But when you ask about specific libertarian policy changes that came about because of the Revolution, it's hard to get a decent answer.
In fact, with 20/20 hindsight, independence had two massive anti-libertarian consequences: It removed the last real check on American aggression against the Indians, and allowed American slavery to avoid earlier - and peaceful - abolition.
If libertarians have little reason to celebrate American independence, who does? Leftists? They ought to take the Indian and slavery issues seriously, too. I guess getting rid of titles of nobility and such was a step toward greater equality, but a step worth shedding blood over?
How about conservatives? They're likely to say "This war created our country - of course it was worth it!" But without the war, conservatives would still have a country to get misty-eyed over - it would just be Britain instead of America. If you're going to love whatever country you're born in, it's hard to see the point of fighting to make a new one.
A respeito do parágrafo final, uma coisa que me ocorre: em tempos no Facebook estava a decorrer uma discussão sobre quem eram os grande portugueses, e claro falava-se de D. Afonso Henriques; mas bastaria a História ter corrido ligeiramente diferente para D. Afonso Henriques ser lembrado, não como o criador do nosso país, mas como alguém que tentou destruir o nosso país.
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