“What Then Is This American?”: America Celebrates 250 Years as a Free People

Below is my column in The Hill on our 250th Anniversary. Most of us will be celebrating with fireworks and cookouts today. Yet, some will celebrate not with fanfare but fury today. Rep. Al Green was asked whether he was proud to be an American on this holiday on the steps of the Capitol. He responded, “I am very proud to tell you that impeachment is an option to remove a reckless, ruthless, lawless president. I’m proud that it exists.” Well, at least he is celebrating something. For the rest of us, we celebrate a unique Republic that has brought prosperity and freedom to generations of Americans. Happy Fourth of July to all of the patriots across our political spectrum. E pluribus unum.

Here is the column:

Across the country today, Americans are celebrating a common article of faith: the belief that a free people can govern themselves under rights given to them not by the government but by their creator.

Two hundred fifty years ago, the Republic was founded as the first major Enlightenment Revolution. The Enlightenment had started roughly 100 years earlier. Many in Europe had long argued for a society based on the writings of figures like John Locke. But it would happen thousands of miles away, among a collection of colonies where a people came together and put those principles to the test. They believed that they were entitled to rights of free speech, free exercise, and property as human beings, not as subjects.

We became the fascination of Europe among writers and intellectuals who could not understand how the world’s first Enlightenment Revolution could be brought about by a people with little connection to each other or the land; with no calcified class structure or fixed institutions.

It led one Frenchman, who wrote under the name John Hector St. John, to ask, “What then is the American, this new man?”

In my book, Rage and the Republic, I ask whether we can answer that question today. Who were we then, and who are we now?

In 1776, two revolutions were developing in America and in France. One would become the world’s oldest and most successful republic The other, in France, would become “the Terror,” in which tens of thousands would die on guillotines and in the streets.

The true miracle of Philadelphia was the creation of a system that could harness the self-destructive powers of a democracy. The framers, and particularly James Madison, would create a constitutional system that forced moderation and compromise through checks and balances.

Many wanted a less restrained democratic system, but the Framers understood that such systems stretching back to ancient Athens had become little more than what Benjamin Rush called a “mobocracy.”

In France, such voices prevailed. They unleashed a blood-letting that would ultimately even devour the Jacobins themselves. They first turned on the wealth and aristocrats, then on the priests and then each other. It would lead French journalist Jacques Mallet du Pan to write that “like Saturn, the Revolution devours its children.”

Those voices are with us today. Many, including Democratic and socialist leaders, are denouncing the Declaration and the Constitution as tools of repression.

This week, various Democrats went public to call for radical revolutionary changes or criticize our founding. New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani used an occasion with newly admitted citizens to trash the country, oligarchs, ICE, and our “arena of supremacy.”

Socialist Mamdani described a virtual hellscape of a country run by “oligarchs who buy elections” as “children go to sleep hungry.” He added, “We see monopolies that dominate every industry, and oligarchs who buy elections. We see masked agents terrorizing our streets, eating food cooked by our undocumented neighbors before spiriting them away in unmarked vans.”

Mamdani mocked the narrative of the republic, telling the new citizens that “the irony is that the story of America has so often been written by those who were told by others with power and influence and wealth that they were anything but exceptional.”

Others joined the celebrations with their own condemnations. Pennsylvania socialist Chris Rabb, the Democratic nominee for Pennsylvania’s 3rd Congressional District, has joined the chorus of critics.

Speaking at “America at 250 — Trump Fascism, Historical Erasure, and the Battle Over Truth” in Philadelphia, the unopposed Rabb lashed out at a country built on “stolen land and stolen labor.” He also mocked the “lofty” “screeds” that “were notoriously catering to a performative aspect of collective genius that purposely erased indigenous and black peoples.” He denounced this country as based on harmful “myths” supporting white supremacy and fascism: “Fascism is not new. These systems of harm are built into the very fabric of this nation.”

Others, such as former MSNBC host Joy Reid, declared that black Americans don’t celebrate the Fourth.

Reid dismissed celebrating what she called “MAGA America” which she described as “sad, pathetic, boring.”

Others, like Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), used the anniversary to praise Cuba as the true model of success (something Mamdani had also done in his inaugural address).

Blue states — Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and Pennsylvania—declined to participate in the 250th anniversary celebrations on the Mall.

In Massachusetts, a historic church ended its long-standing celebration of the Fourth of July to focus on the “on-going process within the congregation to better understand our own whiteness.”

This is the home of John Adams and other patriots. Adams wrote his wife Abigail that this day would be “celebrated by succeeding generations as the great anniversary festival. It ought to be commemorated as the Day of Deliverance by solemn acts of devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires and illuminations from end of this continent to the other from this time forward forever more.”

We are seeing not a constitutional crisis but a crisis of faith. Polls show that fewer than half of Democrats are now proud to be Americans.

For many of us, this day remains, as Adams described it, that day of deliverance. These are revolutionary times, but we remain a revolutionary people who believe that free speech and other rights belong to us as human beings. Our belief in individual rights and the free market built the greatest engine of prosperity and freedom in the history of the world.

Many of these critics cite our flaws, including slavery, in a country based on inalienable rights. But what the framers gave us was a system that allows an imperfect people to form a “more perfect union.”

It was here that citizens could pursue their own manifest destiny. It is here that a black minister could speak on our National Mall about his unrealized dream and galvanize a nation to fight for the civil rights of every American.

It is here that an African American, and the child of a Kenyan, could become president.

It is here that the son of Vietnamese immigrants could rise this year to be Navy Secretary.

It is here that a black child growing up in a home with a dirt floor and no plumbing could become one of the longest-serving justices of the Supreme Court.

It is here that a people could survive economic meltdowns, global wars, and natural disasters, based on the simple belief that we share a common article of faith: “E pluribus unum” — “out of many, one.”

“What, then, is this American?” Look around you.

Jonathan Turley is a law professor and the New York Times best-selling author of “Rage and the Republic: The Unfinished Story of the American Revolution.

166 thoughts on ““What Then Is This American?”: America Celebrates 250 Years as a Free People”

  1. Just saw Young Washingon. Inspiring. Large crowd there for the matinee too. I was pleasantly surprised. And long applause at the end. Just before they rolled the credits, they put the text up:

    On July 4th, 1775, Washington issued commands to the ‘Troops of the United Provinces.’
    One army forged from thirteen colonies, raised to defy the empire he once defended.
    One year later, those colonies declared themselves a new nation independent and free.
    A land they called the United States of America.

    As we see today, haters gonna hate . . . but . . . there ain’t no doubt I love this land . . .

  2. You can’t handle the truth. Are you the official censors of the free speech blog? You’re the morons.

  3. I’m a second class citizen so when I look around I see more of the same. Being a second class citizen in 1st class country ain’t that bad. ☺

  4. WordPress Censored:

    Elided Anti-Slavery Passage, Declaration of Independence

    “He has waged cruel war against human nature itself, violating it’s most sacred rights of life & liberty in the persons of a distant people who never offended him, captivating & carrying them into slavery in another hemisphere, or to incur miserable death in their transportation thither. this piratical warfare, the opprobrium of infidel powers, is the warfare of the CHRISTIAN king of Great Britain. determined to keep open a market where MEN should be bought & sold, he has prostituted his negative for suppressing every legislative attempt to prohibit or to restrain this execrable commerce: and that this assemblage of horrors might want no fact of distinguished die, he is now exciting those very people to rise in arms among us, and to purchase that liberty of which he has deprived them, & murdering the people upon whom he also obtruded them; thus paying off former crimes committed against the liberties of one people, with crimes which he urges them to commit against the lives of another.”

    – Thomas Jefferson, 1776
    _____________________________

    Jefferson’s position herein is that slavery is a cruel, unchristian violation of human rights forced upon the colonies by the British King, who hypocritically blocked anti-slave trade laws and incited slave revolts.

    As is the fundamental desire of all abductees, the long-suffering captives in America deserved nothing less than compensatory compassionate repatriation to their homeland which Abraham Lincoln advocated vigorously.

    To wit,

    “[Racial separation] [is necessary], and [though difficult] must be effected by colonization… The enterprise is a difficult one, but ‘where there is a will there is a way’; and what colonization needs most is a hearty will… Let us be brought to believe it is morally right, and at the same time [not against] our interest, to transfer the African to his native clime, and we shall find a way to do it.”

    – Abraham Lincoln, Springfield, Illinois, June 26, 1857

    1. This finally appeared after “WordPress Censored” was added.

      Free speech, you say?

  5. DISSOLVE THE INDISSOLUBLE

    Thomas Jefferson advocated “to dissolve the political bands” as secession in the Declaration of Independence in 1776.

    The eminently corrupt Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase decided America to be an “indissoluble union, composed of indestructible states,” denying secession in 1869 as an apologist for the wholly unconstitutional Lincoln tyranny, carnage, legacy, and nascent progressive agenda.
    __________________________________________________________________________________________________

    AI Overview

    The opening line of the Declaration of Independence states that it is necessary for one people to “dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another.”
    ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

    AI Overview

    The 5-3 decision established that the U.S. is an “indissoluble union, composed of indestructible states”, declared acts of secession legally void, and affirmed that Texas remained a state during the Civil War. Texas v. White (1869) is a landmark Supreme Court case that ruled states cannot unilaterally secede from the United States.

    1. The singular American failure is the judicial branch, with emphasis on the Supreme Court.

  6. This collective of Marxists, Progressives and extremist Environmentalists are a horde of misanthropes that will soon enough turn on one anther. None recognize a reality that exists outside that which they have formed out of their hate and arrogance. They will not tolerate any deviation from these distortions they have created, and will regard those who disagree as “existential” threats deserving punishment. One can only hope that they expend their much vaunted energy purging one another. It seems to me that there is a drab and grinding meanness that lies at the core of this alleged movement.

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