Barack Obama published a new essay through InPursuitUSA this week. The core message is simple: hard work and personal responsibility matter, but they can’t carry a country by themselves.
The 44th president opened by invoking Abraham Lincoln, a figure he has returned to many times. Lincoln, Obama writes, understood self-reliance as well as anyone. He came from genuine poverty and built his way to the White House. That part of the American story, the bootstraps part, Obama takes seriously.
But Lincoln also understood something else. There are things no single person, no matter how driven or talented, can accomplish alone. Obama’s point is direct: that’s not a weakness. That’s the truth of how large things get built.
The essay argues that a union isn’t simply a legal arrangement or an accident of geography. It’s a moral commitment. In a democracy, people choose to tie their futures to one another. That choice, made over and over by ordinary people, is what keeps a democracy standing.
Obama put the argument plainly. “Democracies endure not only because of constitutions or armies,” he wrote, “but because free people choose, again and again, to bind their fates together.” Shared sacrifice and shared responsibility, he adds, are how the necessary work actually gets done.
That framing matters. Lincoln is often pulled in two directions in political debate. Some emphasize his belief in hard work and individual grit. Others point to his willingness to use federal power to hold the union together. Obama’s essay doesn’t choose between those two readings. It treats Lincoln as someone who held both ideas at once: self-reliance and collective responsibility as the same commitment, not competing ones.
Lincoln signed the Homestead Act to help ordinary families build independent lives on their own land. He also fought a war to preserve the union. Obama’s point is that Lincoln never saw those as contradictions.
For anyone tracking American politics right now, the broader point is pretty clear. The country is deep in arguments about what individuals should handle and what collective institutions should do. Those arguments have real consequences for real people. Obama isn’t telling anyone to stop working hard. He’s saying hard work alone has never been enough, and Lincoln proved it.
The post drew more than 130,000 likes on Instagram.
The full essay is on InPursuitUSA, a platform focused on civic engagement and democratic participation. Obama has used similar outlets for longer writing sinAbraham Lincolnce leaving office in January 2017.
He has invoked Lincoln before. What’s different here is the pairing: personal responsibility and collective obligation not as opposites, but as partners.
The essay closes with a mountain. Obama’s final image is simple: the hardest climbs are the ones taken by a unified people. Not by individuals moving separately. As one nation and one people.
