21 Jan 2026 - 18:41 CST
Rather than begin with the noise of recent headlines, I begin with a more durable concern: the habits we are quietly reinforcing as the year takes shape. Moments of strain do not merely test institutions; they train citizens. Over time, they teach us what shortcuts we are willing to accept, what standards we are prepared to relax, and how much care we believe public life deserves.
Samuel Adams understood that liberty is not primarily threatened by dramatic acts of oppression, but by erosion - by the steady normalization of impatience, confusion, and moral convenience. His writings return again and again to a single warning: that power advances most effectively when citizens lose the discipline required to notice it.
Adams was not a romantic of spontaneity. He distrusted unstructured outrage as much as he distrusted unaccountable authority. His essays, resolutions, and correspondence reflect a man convinced that resistance, to remain just, must be intelligible. Grievances had to be recorded. Claims had to be reasoned. Actions had to be explainable not only to allies, but to the broader public whose consent ultimately mattered.
The Committees of Correspondence were the practical expression of this belief. They were not instruments of agitation for its own sake, but mechanisms of civic coherence. They slowed events long enough for facts to be assembled, principles to be articulated, and communities to understand one another’s concerns. Adams believed that without such connective tissue, even righteous causes would fracture under their own haste.
What gives me pause in the present moment is how readily speed is now mistaken for seriousness. Judgments are rendered before records are complete. Moral certainty often arrives before verification. Silence is treated as betrayal, while deliberation is dismissed as weakness. In such an environment, both authority and opposition are tempted to bypass explanation in favor of escalation.
Adams would have regarded this as dangerous ground. He warned that liberty decays when citizens abandon the labor of thinking together; when correspondence is replaced by reaction, and vigilance gives way to spectacle. Power thrives not only on obedience, but on confusion. Faction thrives on the same fuel.
This is not an argument against action. Adams was tireless in action. It is an argument for method. He believed that rights defended carelessly are often lost precisely because they are defended without regard for credibility. Moral authority, once squandered, is difficult to recover.
The guidance his example offers now is neither quietism nor fury, but discipline. Slow the room. Insist on clarity. Preserve records. Demand reasons. Refuse rumors that require indignation to be persuasive. Treat explanation as a civic duty, not an inconvenience.
A republic cannot be sustained by intensity alone. It endures when citizens cultivate the habits that make disagreement survivable - patience, precision, and a shared commitment to truth that holds even when outcomes are uncertain.
Liberty requires vigilance, but vigilance is not frenzy. It is sustained attention, deliberate communication, and the refusal to trade long-term legitimacy for short-term satisfaction.
Samuel Adams understood that freedom is not secured by how loudly it is invoked, but by how carefully it is practiced. That lesson has not expired. It waits, as it always has, on whether we are willing to do the work it demands.
