"Thus, only in a hopeful and confident temper, in a proud and constructive spirit, will we rescue the present and safeguard the future of our beloved country"
About this Quote
“Hopeful and confident” is doing more than mood-setting here; it’s a political instruction disguised as uplift. Colby stacks emotional virtues the way a lawyer stacks clauses: hopeful, confident, proud, constructive. Each adjective narrows the range of acceptable public feeling. Anxiety becomes indulgence. Anger becomes sabotage. Skepticism reads as disloyalty. The sentence quietly polices the national psyche while claiming to liberate it.
The rhetoric is classic post-crisis governance: rescue the present, safeguard the future. “Rescue” implies imminent danger and a nation that can be saved, but only by adopting the correct posture. “Safeguard” shifts from emergency to planning, linking today’s discipline to tomorrow’s security. The promise is that optimism isn’t just comforting; it’s productive, even patriotic.
Colby’s era helps explain the pitch. As a public servant who moved in the orbit of early 20th-century American statecraft, he’s speaking to a country redefining itself amid war, labor unrest, and ideological churn. In that climate, “constructive” is a loaded word: it signals cooperation with institutions, not agitation against them. “Proud” carries similar double duty, flattering citizens while nudging them toward national unity and away from faction.
The subtext is a bargain: adopt the sanctioned temperament and you get membership in “our beloved country” as a shared project. Refuse it and you’re not merely pessimistic; you’re a risk to the future. That’s why the line works: it turns emotional tone into civic duty, and civic duty into a form of social control.
The rhetoric is classic post-crisis governance: rescue the present, safeguard the future. “Rescue” implies imminent danger and a nation that can be saved, but only by adopting the correct posture. “Safeguard” shifts from emergency to planning, linking today’s discipline to tomorrow’s security. The promise is that optimism isn’t just comforting; it’s productive, even patriotic.
Colby’s era helps explain the pitch. As a public servant who moved in the orbit of early 20th-century American statecraft, he’s speaking to a country redefining itself amid war, labor unrest, and ideological churn. In that climate, “constructive” is a loaded word: it signals cooperation with institutions, not agitation against them. “Proud” carries similar double duty, flattering citizens while nudging them toward national unity and away from faction.
The subtext is a bargain: adopt the sanctioned temperament and you get membership in “our beloved country” as a shared project. Refuse it and you’re not merely pessimistic; you’re a risk to the future. That’s why the line works: it turns emotional tone into civic duty, and civic duty into a form of social control.
Quote Details
| Topic | Hope |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
More Quotes by Bainbridge
Add to List









