he biggest crisis facing the United States today is not the external challenge of the CCP and Islamic fundamentalism, but the weakening and even the collapse of the internal Puritan order and civic virtues. The following three aspects are interrelated and affect the whole body: First, at the demographic level, the influx of immigrants and illegal immigrants from non-Christian cultures and traditions (this is the difference between the immigration wave of the twentieth century and the previous one. fundamental differences in immigration flows), they have greatly diluted and even altered the demographic composition of the United States, which is dominated by Anglo-Saxon and European immigrants. Secondly, at the level of belief and value identification, the natural and tacit "premise" of Protestantism was abandoned, "absolute pluralism" replaced the pluralism under monism (puritanism), and cosmopolitanism and universalism prevailed , so even the "American identity" has been in great confusion.
Again, once the "American identity" is shaken, the U.S. Constitution is no longer rock-solid. The leftists stand on an abstract "supreme photo background removing justice" standpoint and wantonly undermine the U.S. Constitution and the U.S. constitutional government. From rewriting American history on campus to taking to the streets to smash, smash, and loot, civic virtues are abandoned in the process. Gao Quanxi, a Chinese scholar, talked about his feelings during his visit to the United States: "I have contacted or heard people talk about Chinese immigrants to the United States and immigrants from other countries.
Crime, or involving corruption, or poor personal conduct, or extreme religious beliefs, they are more consuming American culture than learning and identifying with American culture.” He further pointed out that no matter whether these people hold green cards or citizenship, they are still "others" of American culture and the republic, "gentiles" in the moral sense, and even potential "enemies." American liberal democracy and welfare arrangements may be able to accommodate them, which is determined by American culture and values. However, although the United States is large, its resource space is also limited, and its politics and morality cannot actually be boundless. The United States is not a "melting pot" of equality and pluralism (the United