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These are grim times for those of us who love America and everything that makes it great. But I'm going to resist that grimness by celebrating the hell out of our 250th anniversary and giving a shout out to as many of its virtues and achievements as I can.
Starting today, the 250th anniversary of "the shot heard round the world"--the first gun fired in the Battles of Lexington and Concord, which turned a series of heated protests into an actual revolution. That revolution freed us from the tyranny of foreign rule.
The battle began when the Royal Governor of Massachusetts sent British soldiers to seize arms and powder stored in Concord and thus deprive the colonists of the means of rebellion. Long story short, it backfired terribly and at the end of the night, the War of Independence was begun.
What makes this worth celebrating is that the revolution was not ordered from above. It was an uprising of local patriots--a war of the people, by the people, and for the people.
There have been rocky times for the Union in the quarter of a millennium since. But in all that time Americans have never had to bend the knee to a monarch, whether foreign or domestic. That's worth celebrating--and preserving.
And while we're talking about tyranny . . .
This is an accomplishment that some presidents, strangely enough, do not seem to value particularly highly. Ronald Reagan accepted a British knighthood, which his wife Nancy had campaigned for. And less than a month ago Donald Trump declared his support for a plan for the United States of America to join the British Commonwealth.
In which event, America would have a king for the first time in a quarter of a millennium and all the blood spelled by patriots during the Revolutionary War would be dishonored. All to gratify the ego of one evil man.
But let's not let that happen.
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