A man in a light blue shirt poses for a portrait next to an imahe of a navy-colored book with a historical image on the cover.
Author Eli Merritt, left, and his new book, “Disunion Among Ourselves.” Images courtesy of Eli Merritt

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The simple version of American history depicts the original 13 American colonies banding together as one, declaring their independence in 1776, fighting and winning an eight-year-long War of Independence against the British, and then triumphantly establishing the United States of America.

But how united was this new nation? Political historian Eli Merritt asserts that despite its harmonious sounding name, the United States was actually more like a shotgun marriage that nearly ended in a quick divorce.

Merritt is the author of a new book, โ€œDisunion Among Ourselves: The Perilous Politics of the American Revolution.โ€ 

โ€œThe American Union was an unwelcome alliance formed by bitterly conflictual colonies and regions,โ€ he wrote. 

The primary purpose of the original American government, he said, was to prevent the colonies from disintegrating into civil war.

Merritt is a professor of political science at Vanderbilt University and writes political commentary for the New York Times, Los Angeles Times and for his Substack, American Commonwealth

Merritt said that Americaโ€™s founders warned of the danger of demagogues.

โ€œThe first step in democratic breakdown is the election of a demagogue to power,โ€ he wrote. “The demagogue is someone who wins votes by dividing the people not uniting the people โ€ฆ through fear mongering, through hate mongering, through bigotry. And sadly, it works. 

โ€œThe demagogue converts into an authoritarian once drinking at the cup of power. โ€ฆ We did see precisely that with Donald Trump.โ€

Merritt argues that the founding story of the U.S. affirms that โ€œwhen a government turns unconstitutional and repressive, you have the right of revolution, which means first, the right of resistance.โ€

Merritt said he believes that Juneteenth is a far more significant day of independence than July 4. 

โ€œThis is the emancipation of 4 million enslaved people,โ€ he said. โ€œIt is clearly the most important event in all U.S. history.โ€