Analysis
The Declaration of Independence’s phrase *'all men are created equal'* was aspirational, not descriptive, and the U.S. has repeatedly failed to uphold it—most glaringly with slavery, Native American displacement, and racial segregation. Biden’s framing of *never walking away entirely* is debatable: post-Civil War Reconstruction’s betrayal (1877 Compromise), the eugenics movement, and WWII Japanese internment represent explicit state-sanctioned rejections of equality. However, his broader point—that the *ideal* itself remained a cultural and legal touchstone (e.g., Civil Rights Act, 14th Amendment)—holds merit. The claim oversimplifies history by implying continuous, if imperfect, progress.
Background
The U.S. was founded with contradictions: the Declaration’s egalitarian language coexisted with chattel slavery and the exclusion of women, non-landowners, and racial minorities from full citizenship. Moments like the 3/5 Compromise, *Plessy v. Ferguson* (1896), and the Chinese Exclusion Act (1882) institutionalized inequality, while movements like abolition, suffrage, and civil rights later reasserted the founding principles. Biden’s speech occurred amid racial justice protests (e.g., George Floyd), framing his remark as a call to recommit to those ideals.
Verdict summary
Biden’s claim that the U.S. has never *fully* lived up to its founding ideals is accurate, but the assertion that it has *never* walked away from them ignores historical periods (e.g., Reconstruction’s collapse, Jim Crow, Japanese internment) where systemic abandonment of equality occurred.