Americans Cherish the ‘One’ in Our ‘Many’

Ken McIntyre /

Widespread ignorance of U.S. history is only the most visible symptom of a troubling decline in popular knowledge of the nation’s core principles.

Some hopeful news, as well as sobering facts, arrived earlier this month in “E Pluribus Unum,” a report issued by the Bradley Project on America’s National Identity. The purpose of the project, brainchild of the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, is to begin “a national conversation … to affirm the belief that what unites us is far greater than what divides us.” The report warns:

Many Americans are more aware of what divides us than of what unites us. We are in danger of becoming not ‘from many, one’ — E Pluribus Unum — but its opposite, ‘from one, many.’

Among results of a HarrisInteractive survey of more than 2,400 American citizens conducted for the study:

Heritage has compiled some of this information for our latest À La Chart, coming a week before America celebrates the Fourth of July.

Americans Cherish the ‘One’ in Our ‘Many’