Rick Best was a 53-year-old Republican who had unsuccessfully run for county commissioner on a conservative platform that stressed his opposition to tax increases and excessive spending. He was a 23-year army veteran who had served tours in both Iraq and Afghanistan. And he was married with three teenage sons and a twelve-year-old daughter.
Taliesin Namkai-Meche was Best’s political opposite, a 23-year-old liberal environmentalist. He graduated from Reed College just last year, and was working for Cadmus Group, a consulting firm that stressed the importance of “green energy,” among other things. He had just bought his first house.
These three men couldn’t have been more different. They didn’t know each other, and, under other circumstances, probably would never have met. Yet, last week, all three of them intervened to protect two teenage girls, one Muslim and the other African-American, from a knife-wielding racist who accosted them on Portland’s light-rail system. Best and Namkai-Meche were killed by the attacker, while Fletcher was badly wounded.
Anyone looking for American exceptionalism need look no farther than the courage of these three men.
On social media and in comment sections, the incivility that has come to characterize so much of our political discourse is on full display. Terms such as “traitor” and “fascist” are tossed around indiscriminately. Entire religions are denigrated. Racial slurs are tolerated or even condoned as a check on political correctness run amok.
These agents of hate are not America. America is the millions of people from across the political spectrum who practice charity, tolerance, and basic decency every day. America is all those who stand up for what is right, even when it is not popular. America is about a Republican, a Democrat, and an autistic poet putting their lives on the line to protect two young minority women simply because it is the right thing to do. You want diversity and tolerance? We just saw it.
Yes, this country is imperfect. An honest look at our history shows that we have often treated African Americans, Latinos, women, gays, and other minorities abhorrently. Yet, no country has peacefully come so far so fast from such an ugly past. It is the character of the American people that has helped transform the political and legal landscape to overcome the old bigotries. Full equality may still be aspirational, but it is part of the American character to have such aspirations.
We hear a lot these days about the need to “make America great again.” But America is already great — and so long as we continue to produce men such as Rick Best, Taliesin Namkai-Meche, and Micah Fletcher, it always will be.
READ MORE:
Portland & Manchester: Reality Doesn’t Care Which Party You’re In
Editor’s Note: This piece has been amended since its initial publication.
— Michael Tanner is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and the author of Going for Broke: Deficits, Debt, and the Entitlement Crisis. You can follow him on his blog, TannerOnPolicy.com.

