The American Accident

Roblin Meeks
5 min readJul 4, 2024
My daughter Q, NYC (2008)

America loves to celebrate itself. And we love to celebrate in ways big and loud — favoring the recreation of the sounds of our country’s birth over the ideas, the promises, the writing down of powerful words. We don’t turn on the TV or unfold a chair in the park on July 4th to watch men in powdered wigs argue over some foxed paper.

The only thing America loves more than big and loud things is myth, particularly the myth of America itself. Just as we’re sure to be treated to local news stories of dads nudging hot dogs on grills while kids run through sprinklers that shoot water in gentle fans, we will have media segments on Americans’ thoughts about the country’s founding and its fathers, just regular folks talking about their favorite passages from the Declaration of Independence or whatever. Myths are, of course, just explanations by way of stories — in America’s case, how a group of brilliant and courageous men came together to pull a new country, the best in history, from the Heavens into existence. America is an ideal, and ideals are eternal, pure, even inevitable.

America’s myth has always contained a lot of slack. So many people weren’t in the room for the founding — women, slaves, the infirm, the poor, those who didn’t own land, those who owned the land before the naus and carracks hit shore. As a result, the story of America often leaves those people out, and, at its…

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Roblin Meeks
Roblin Meeks

Written by Roblin Meeks

Essayist, lapsed professional philosopher, associate dean of ice cream. Author of creative nonfiction about work, love, self and other stuff. Welcome, friends.

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