I can boast a lofty quote about it, that is how knowledgeable I'm about ignorance - Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity. Martin Luther King, Jr.;))
"Simple" ignorance doesn't bother me. Personally, I know very little, if anything, about Russian culture---there is no reason I should know or should learn about Russian culture.
If, however, I lived and worked in Russia as an employee of a company that required that to properly function in Russian culture, it would be my obligation to know about it and to learn about it ASAP. If I refused to learn, that my ignorance of Russian culture would be "consequent' ignorance---a lack of due knowledge on my part."
We're all "simply" ignorant at various times in our lives---and rightly and legitimately so---and I have no problem with anyone displaying simple ignorance.
I have very little patience with those who display "consequent" ignorance, however.
There does seem to be some controversy about the wording, who said it first, etc.---but I like the sentiment.
This post was edited by tom jackson at December 3, 2017 8:36 PM MST
I don't want to go too far into this right now, but the insistence on one fixed identity seems overly rigid. Would refugees coming to the United States have to forego their culture?
What does, strictly speaking, "being American" even mean when there have been so many kinds of 'American' (pre- and post-colonization), when the nation can be very divided (politically, economically, socially, culturally), and when the government may be acting in objectionable or even 'non-American' fashion?
What I posted was said 110 years ago. It was probably simpler back then.
We wouldn't need to "aspire" to a fixed identity; but we require the possession of certain knowledge and the taking of an oath for immigrants to gain citizenship status.
If you live in the USA, I would have no problem with requiring a resident to speak English. Such a person would not have to "promulgate his esoteric cogitations," but he should be able to clearly "say what he thinks."
As to forgoing one's culture, if your culture is that important to you, why come here? Maybe we have come to the point in time where there is a legitimate price for the privileges of living in America if we current Americans wish to preserve our democracy indefinitely.
And since our population has grown so much, perhaps we should re-define what the characteristics of an American citizen should be.