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250 Years of Illusion: America's Tarnished Democracy

Sunday Island

|

July 06, 2025

We have been deceived—again and again—into believing that U.S. democracy was born as a noble product of collective will. The story handed down to us is that George Washington, in a moment of virtuous restraint, rejected Colonel Lewis Nicola's suggestion to crown him king, choosing instead the path of liberty and republicanism.

- NILANTHA ILANGAMUWA

250 Years of Illusion: America's Tarnished Democracy

This moment is celebrated as the moral genesis of American democracy. But 250 years on, the illusion fractures under the weight of historical reality.

What has been marketed to the world as democracy is, in fact, a meticulously engineered architecture of power: elitist at home, imperial abroad. The so-called "rules-based order" championed by American diplomats is not a codified universalism—it is an ideological cudgel wielded only when convenient, a system of selective legality designed to mask naked geopolitical aggression.

America's origin myth is steeped not in egalitarianism but in extermination, slavery, and expansionism. The Declaration of Independence, crafted by men who themselves owned human beings, is less a document of freedom than a philosophical smokescreen. The economic engine of the new republic ran on the backs of enslaved Africans—auctioned, whipped, raped, and bred like livestock. The foundational wealth of the United States was extracted not merely through commerce or innovation, but through racialised brutality institutionalised as law.

Simultaneously, Indigenous nations were decimated by policies so ferocious they now fall under the ambit of genocide. The Trail of Tears, initiated under Andrew Jackson, led to the deaths of thousands during forced removals. The Sand Creek Massacre (1864), the Bear River Massacre (1863), and the slaughter at Wounded Knee (1890) are but a few unambiguous testaments to settler-colonial annihilation. These were not chaotic byproducts of war—they were methodical acts of ethnic cleansing, carried out under government authority.

The Indian Boarding Schools, operating well into the 20th century, functioned as laboratories of cultural erasure. Native children were stolen from their families, stripped of language and identity, and subjected to systematic abuse. Many perished. Their bodies remain buried, literally and metaphorically, in the margins of American history books.

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