As folks across Billings get ready to watch the State of the Union version 2026, it’s worth remembering when this presidential address defined what Americans believed they owed one another. They would become the core values of why America stepped up to the war against Fascism and would spill into the Cold War.
In January 1941, Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered a speech that didn’t center on parties or personalities. Instead, he tried to name the basic rights every person should be able to count on, no matter where they lived — from New York City to the Hi‑Line of Montana to the South Side of Billings.
He called them the Four Freedoms:
- Freedom of Speech.
- Freedom of Worship.
- Freedom from Want.
- Freedom from Fear.
They weren’t slogans. They were a vision — a reminder that democracy is supposed to protect the dignity of ordinary people. Roosevelt wasn’t describing the world as it was. He was describing the world he hoped we could build together.
The idea didn’t fully take hold until Norman Rockwell painted what those freedoms looked like in everyday American life. A neighbor standing up at a town meeting. A quiet moment of prayer. A family gathered around a dinner table. Parents tucking their kids into bed during uncertain times. Scenes that could just as easily happen in Billings, Laurel, or Lockwood.
As we listen to another State of the Union, the Four Freedoms still offer a compass. They remind us that the measure of a community — and a country — isn’t just policy. It’s whether people feel heard, respected, safe, and able to build a decent life.
Those values still belong to all of us here in Montana. They’re the standard we can hold ourselves to, no matter who’s speaking from the podium.
