One day in class, a fellow 11th-grader posed a question: Can you love your country if it has harmed millions of people?

The question took me by surprise, and I have thought about it more since.

As the discussion unfolded, many of my classmates argued that it is difficult to celebrate America at all.



They are not alone. According to a June 2025 poll, a record low 58% of U.S. adults say they are either extremely or very proud to be American.

My classmates pointed to slavery, segregation, the Vietnam War, delayed women’s suffrage and the long struggle for LGBTQ rights as reasons America is difficult to celebrate.

Yes, the U.S. has its faults, but patriotism is not about ignoring the flaws of a country and pretending it is perfect. It is about being able to look at the good and bad in a country, seeing the potential for it to improve and wanting to make it better.

When my peers brought up the historical and modern injustices in America, I was compelled to think about one of the Constitution’s most ingenious features: its ability to change. Since ratification, the Constitution has been amended 27 times, reflecting a nation determined to better itself.

The 13th Amendment ended slavery. The 14th Amendment established equal protection under the law. The 15th and 19th amendments expanded voting rights.

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The Constitution was founded to create “a more perfect union.” Although it has not yet reached perfection, it is constantly evolving toward the day when it achieves the values outlined in the Declaration of Independence: “that all men are created equal … endowed … with certain unalienable Rights.”

So when I think about patriotism, I will acknowledge the negatives in America’s past. Still, I will remain patriotic for a nation founded on the principle of protecting its citizens’ rights, a nation that has spent 250 years working to live up to its founding ideals. This is a nation that deserves patriotism because its ideals are worth striving for.

MAX DRAYER

Los Angeles, California

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