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A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day....07 - 1 thru 4 -05..."America Has a Birthday"
DollyCali | July 1, 2005 | DollyCali; Nicollo;

Posted on 07/01/2005 10:04:57 AM PDT by DollyCali



A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day
Free Republic made its debut in September, 1996, and the forum was added in early 1997.   Over 100,000 people have registered for posting privileges on Free Republic, and the forum is read daily by tens of thousands of concerned citizens and patriots from all around the country and the world.
A Few of FR's Finest....Every Day was introduced on June 24, 2002. It's only a small room in JimRob's house where we can get to know one another a little better; salute and support our military and our leaders; pray for those in need; and congratulate those deserving. We strive to keep our threads entertaining, fun, and pleasing to look at, and often have guest writers contribute an essay, or a profile of another FReeper.
On Mondays please visit us to see photos of A FEW OF FR'S VETERANS AND ACTIVE MILITARY
If you have a suggestion, or an idea, or if there's a FReeper you would like to see featured, please drop one of us a note in FR mail.
We're having fun and hope you are!

~ Billie, Mama_bear, dutchess, Aquamarine, DollyCali ~








Historical




The American War for independence
covered a period from 1763 to 1775.

Britain had 3 times more people than America, and considerably more wealth. The British also had a strong military with a powerful navy. At the start of the revolution, the American soldiers were poorly trained and had little military experience. Not all Americans were in favor of the rebellion. To the American's advantage, they were fighting on their own land and were experienced wilderness fighters from their battles with the native Indians. And equally important, George Washington turned out to be a brilliant leader.

There were many battles throughout the northern and the southern colonies. In defending themselves, the colonies knew they must act as a nation to survive. The war brought the colonies together with a single purpose, to defend their land and their freedoms.



The major events/battles of the Revolution were:

Battle of Lexington and Concord
Capture of Fort Ticonderoga
Battle of Bunker Hill
Olive Branch Petition
British Evacuation of Boston
Invasion of Quebec, Canada
Battle of Long Island
Battle of White Plains
Battle of Fort Washington
Washington crossing the Delaware River
Battle of Trenton
Battle of Princeton
Battle of Brandywine
Battle of Germantown
Battle of Bennington
Battle of Saratoga
Battle of Monmouth
Winter at Valley Forge
Battle of Savannah
Battle of Charleston
Battle of Camden
Battle of King's Mountain
Battle of Cowpens
Battle of Guilford
Battle of Eutaw Springs
Battle of Yorktown




The Declaration of Independence, unanimously declared
by the thirteen United States of America,
was adopted on July 4, 1776.




Those who signed the Declaration of Independence


JOHN HANCOCK, President

Attested, CHARLES THOMSON, Secretary

New Hampshire: JOSIAH BARTLETT, WILLIAM WHIPPLE, MATTHEW THORNTON

Massachusetts-Bay: SAMUEL ADAMS, JOHN ADAMS, ROBERT TREAT PAINE, ELBRIDGE GERRY

Rhode Island: STEPHEN HOPKINS, WILLIAM ELLERY

Connecticut: ROGER SHERMAN, SAMUEL HUNTINGTON, WILLIAM WILLIAMS, OLIVER WOLCOTT

Georgia: BUTTON GWINNETT, LYMAN HALL, GEO. WALTON

Maryland: SAMUEL CHASE, WILLIAM PACA, THOMAS STONE, CHARLES CARROLL OF CARROLLTON

Virginia: GEORGE WYTHE, RICHARD HENRY LEE, THOMAS JEFFERSON, BENJAMIN HARRISON, THOMAS NELSON, JR., FRANCIS LIGHTFOOT LEE, CARTER BRAXTON.

New York: WILLIAM FLOYD, PHILIP LIVINGSTON, FRANCIS LEWIS, LEWIS MORRIS

Pennsylvania: ROBERT MORRIS, BENJAMIN RUSH, BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, JOHN MORTON, GEORGE CLYMER, JAMES SMITH, GEORGE TAYLOR, JAMES WILSON, GEORGE ROSS

Delaware: CAESAR RODNEY, GEORGE READ, THOMAS M'KEAN

North Carolina: WILLIAM HOOPER, JOSEPH HEWES, JOHN PENN

South Carolina: EDWARD RUTLEDGE, THOMAS HEYWARD, JR., THOMAS LYNCH, JR., ARTHUR MIDDLETON

New Jersey: RICHARD STOCKTON, JOHN WITHERSPOON, FRANCIS HOPKINS, JOHN HART, ABRAHAM CLARK



PATRIOT'S DECLARATION


"One of the most essential branches of English liberty is the freedom of one's house. A man's house is his castle." --James Otis (1761)

"The Sun never shined on a cause of greater worth." ----Thomas Paine (1776)

"I am well aware of the Toil and Blood and Treasure, that it will cost Us to maintain this Declaration, and support and defend these States. Yet through all the Gloom I can see the Rays of ravishing Light and Glory. I can see that the End is more than worth all the Means. And that Posterity will tryumph in that Days Transaction, even altho We should rue it, which I trust in God We shall not." ----John Adams (1776)

"There is not a single instance in history in which civil liberty was lost, and religious liberty preserved entire. If therefore we yield up our temporal property, we at the same time deliver the conscience into bondage." ----John Witherspoon (1776)

"Our cause is noble; it is the cause of mankind!" ----George Washington (1779)

"The American war is over; but this far from being the case with the American revolution. On the contrary, nothing but the first act of the drama is closed. It remains yet to establish and perfect our new forms of government, and to prepare the principles, morals, and manners of our citizens for these forms of government after they are established and brought to perfection." ----Benjamin Rush (1786)

"[T]he flames kindled on the 4 of July 1776, have spread over too much of the globe to be extinguished by the feeble engines of despotism; on the contrary, they will consume these engines and all who work them. ... The Declaration of Independence...[is the] declaratory charter of our rights, and the rights of man." ----Thomas Jefferson (1821)

"On the distinctive principles of the Government ...of the U. States, the best guides are to be found in...The Declaration of Independence, as the fundamental Act of Union of these States." ----James Madison (1825)

"And it is no less true, that personal security and private property rest entirely upon the wisdom, the stability, and the integrity of the courts of justice." ----Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution (1833)






Traditional



Parades, Picnics and Patriots.


Many common Fourth of July traditions today have their roots in the celebrations of the early republic. On July 25, 1776, citizens of Williamsburg, Virginia celebrated the colonists' victory with military parades and cannons firing. One year to the day after the signing of the Declaration of Independence, Philadelphians participated in a huge birthday bash complete with fireworks, parades, music and the firing of cannons.

The first official Fourth of July celebration, as affirmed by a legislative act, occurred in Massachusetts in 1781. By the mid 1800s, it became a United States custom to commemorate Independence Day in states and territories. Today, we use parades, picnics and fireworks to honor our country's fight for freedom.

Parades, which usually begin mid-morning, are the first tradition followed each Fourth of July. The small-town parade, with baseball teams, baton twirlers and the high school marching band, is a common sight in cities across the country. Our veterans and active duty military as well as local dignitaries participate in most events. Fathers hoist toddlers up on their shoulders for a clear view, while children munch popcorn and wave small flags. It's a fun, inspiring way to get into a patriotic mood.

After the parade it is picnic time, folks usually head home or to a relative's house for a family reunion or get-together. Although many families stay home and enjoy a relaxing day inside or in the backyard, it's also customary to spend the day at the beach or lake. Many public beaches have built in barbecues, so family and friends can enjoy hot barbecued ribs or chicken with fresh potato salad and sodas packed in the cooler. Softball games, volleyball, horseshoes, badminton, croquet…all bring back memories of years past and laughter & excitement

The most popular foods in a recent survey include: Hamburgers/Cheeseburgers,BBQ Ribs (Beef or Spare),Hot Dogs,BBQ Chicken,Cole Slaw/Potato salad,Baked Beans,Chips (various flavors) and Dip ,Pies (Cherry or Blueberry, but especially Apple),Corn on the Cob,Ice Cream (any flavor),Sliced Tomatoes.

Most popular beverages are: Beer Soda pop and tonic water Sangria (homemade or already made) Lemonade,Iced Tea (sun tea or traditional eabags)

When the parades are over and everyone's fingers are licked clean, the best is still yet to come—the fireworks display.

Fireworks are one of the oldest and most stunning ways to commemorate America's birthday. Frequently the nation's colors—red, white and blue—are used in these spectacular displays of patriotism. The sounds and display remininscent of the sights and sounds of the battlefield of years past.

The four primary effects of fireworks are noise, light, smoke and floating materials (such as confetti and other near-weightless objects). Taken alone or in combination with each other, they can create a vision and a sensation of utter electricity in a crowd of "oohers" and "aahers."

Firework RecordsThe world's largest firework was discharged on July 15, 1988 at the Lake Toya Firework Festival in Hokkaido, Japan. The Universe I Part II firework weighed 1,543 pounds and produced a light burst measuring 3/4 mile in diameter!

The world's longest firework display took place on February 20, 1988 in Johor Bahru, Malaysia. Including more than 3.3 million firecrackers and containing 1,468 pounds of gunpowder it burned for 9 hours and 27 minutes!

Firework Facts

A firework typically travels 3 to 7 seconds before bursting in the sky.
After bursting, it remains visible for 2 to 5 seconds.
A typical 10 to 12" firework will rise to as much as 1,300 feet before bursting

The basic ingredient in all fireworks, from the largest aerial shell to the smallest firecracker, is gunpowder, which is made up of:
75% saltpeter (potassium nitrate);
15% charcoal;
10% sulfur.

The colors come from the following materials

Red = strontium salts
Orange = calcium salts
Yellow = sodium salts
Green = barium salts
Blue = copper salts
Purple = strontium + copper salts
Silver = aluminum, titanium or magnesium
White = barium oxide or superheated magnesium or aluminum


The Arts


Literature, paintings, poetry, Movies and now computer graphics. So many expressions of the time of the Revolution and birth of our country



The Death of General Warren at the Battle of Bunker's Hill (John Trumbull, 1786). Trumbull, an important painter of the American Revolution, witnessed the battle.

More Revolutionary War Art(and good historical review)




June 17, 1775, the Revolutionary War Battle of Bunker Hill took place near Boston. The battle, which actually occurred on Breed's Hill, was a costly victory for the British, who suffered heavy losses while dislodging the rebels.

Since we won that battle, as a gesture of goodwill, below is reproduced a poem from the Loyalist side:


THE AMERICAN TIMES

When Faction, pois'nous as the scorpion's sting,
Infects the people and insults the King;
When foul Sedition skulks no more concealed,
But grasps the sword and rushes to the field;
When Justice, Law, and Truth are in disgrace,
And Treason, Fraud, and Murder fill their place;
Smarting beneath accumulated woes,
Shall we not dare the tyrants to expose?

Bad are the Times, almost too bad to paint;
The whole head sickens, the whole heart is faint;
The State is rotten, rotten to the core,
'Tis all one bruize, one putrefying sore.

Hear thy indictment, Washington, at large;
Attend and listen to the solemn charge;
Thou hast supported an atrocious cause
Against thy King, thy Country, and the laws;
Committed perjury, encourag'd lies,
Forced conscience, broken the most sacred ties;
Myriads of wives and fathers at thy hand
Their slaughter'd husbands, slaughter'd sons demand;
That pastures hear no more the lowing kine,--
That towns are desolate, all -- all is thine.

I swear by Him, who rules the earth and sky,
The dread event shall equally apply;
That Clinton's warfare is the war of God,
And Washington shall feel the vengeful rod.

O! may that hour be soon! for pity's sake,
Genius of Britain, from thy slumber wake,
Too long has mercy spoke, but spoke in vain;
Let justice now in awful terror reign.

-- Jonathan Odell (1780)



Jonathan Odell was one of the best educated men in the colonies at the time of the Revolution. A physician turned Anglican minister turned writer, he was appointed chaplain of the First Battalion of Pennsylvania Loyalists, maintained close ties with the British high command, and was deeply involved in the treason of Benedict Arnold. Odell wrote many verses for the "Royal Gazzette" in the British stronghold of New York City. "The American Times" is one of his best known. His poems illustrates the anger loyalists felt toward their former neighbors as well as frustration with the British war effort.





Computer technology has permitted graphic artists such as Martin_Fierro to make images as the above: a composite of old glory made with the portraits of FReepers.



Cinema has wonderful images of some of the stories that emerged during the time of the birth of our nation. One of my favorites is The Patriot, a 2000 production with Mel Gibson starring as a widower and father of many children who reluctantly takes up the cause and heroically does his part to secure the revolution. Three other notable movies include: The Crossing, . The American Revolution , and 1776









Commentary


The Glorious Fourth


by Michael L. Bromley (copyright 2005). Freeper Nicollo is "Michael L. Bromley , a writer of political and social commentary and automotive history. He lives in Bethesda, Maryland."
Nicollo’s Profile Page

Nicollo’s Blog - Bromleyisms


On March 4, 1789, the United States Congress met for the first time under a new Constitution. Having been adopted the previous year with the consent of a ninth state, the document was far more than a political compact, a treaty between the sovereign states, or the forming of a nation. Its enormity, though, was simple enough: it was a container, a mere vessel to carry the ideas and the nation born on July 4, 1776.

When Lincoln sought refuge in first principle, he did not look to 1789. Those 87 years ago took him back to 1776. Part of it is that naming the Constitution’s founding date is a confusing exercise. Was it September 17, 1787, when George Washington adjourned the Philadelphia Convention? Was it 21 June of the next year when New Hampshire ratified it, or that 4th of March of 1789, or April 30 when the first President took the oath of office? The Constitution presents no moment of glory. Its formation was a long beginning of the what, at the end of the Revolution, Washington knew was to be the more hard work of making a functioning nation. The Constitution and its adoption was a technical and not an inspired, spontaneous event we might want for celebration. So we look to the “Glorious Fourth,” as they used to call it, for the national identity and birth.

The long, hard years of the Revolution, the two years’ wait for the Treaty of Paris and the two long months thereafter before British troops finally left New York, and the Confederation period throughout, marked little moment, and dragged out, and even lessened the meaning of the Fourth of July. (Indeed, outside of 1776, the greatest event of the period, larger than the War’s end itself, was Washington’s resignation from the Army.) Its importance was set by the later success of the nation. Nevertheless, the world was touched immediately by that July 4. Whatever Americans saw in it, the rest of the world could not ignore it. Some, even, acted upon it. First with the Marquis de LaFayette, whose “heart was enrolled in it” upon hearing the news (and whose fuller name demands repeating: Marie Joseph Paul Roch Yves-Gilbert du Motier, marquis de La Fayette), and next most importantly with the Baron Von Steuben’s arrival to America in February of 1778 (convinced to attend by Franklin and, supposedly, in the face of a pending sodomy charge in Prussia...), and the many others who arrived for the fight, be it out of ideal, like LaFayette, professional duty, as for Von Steuben, or for escape, for money, or for adventure, the American Revolution, from that magnificent, Glorious Fourth, escaped America itself, and became an event of man proper, one that belonged to all the world, and now to all the ages.

LaFayette’s story lands for a time, mangled by his birth country’s launch upon equality and liberty, victims of the intemperate, confused, and twisted French Revolution. LaFayette got it going. He alone had the guts to sign a petition -- at risk of his life and liberty just as had the signers of July 4 -- demanding in 1787 that the French King convene a new Estates General, the republican body abolished by the Loueys a century before. LaFayette authored the “Declaration of the Rights of Man,” which notably included the right to property, and was based upon Jefferson’s 4th of July. From there, LaFayette and his American ideals fell blow by blow to that great warning of the 20th century to come and the global rise of communism in the Commune, the Directory, and Napoleon. Histories of the French Revolution will mention and sometimes even detail the influence of the American Revolution upon France. Little connection, however, is made between those events of 1789 on either side of the Pond, the convocation of the new American government and Constitution, and the Estates General in France and its attempts at fundamental law -- that is, making good on the Fourth of July.

The example was hardly confined to France. England was forced again to accommodate 1776 in her own middle class revolts of the 1820s. All of Europe variously erupted in cries for liberty and equality throughout the 19th century, whatever the twist or bastardization in its application. And, of course, Latin America, too, took to 1776. One of those first attempts against Colonial rule you may not know. It came of an odd fellow, a versatile, middle class son of the Enlightenment who practiced the various arts of politics, science, medicine and war, Joaquim Josê da Silva Xavier, popularly known as “Tiradentes” for that one of his talents in dentistry. From far away Vila Rica, then the largest city in Brazil, and one of the largest in all the Americas, Tiradentes found such inspiration in the new American Constitution. He didn’t get far, and was strung up, quartered, and displayed in his various parts as to the destination of revolutionaries. No matter, in history, anyway, for Tiradentes is today a Brazilian hero, revered for his martyrdom to Brazil’s ultimate independence. (Unknown to your author is whether or not Brazilians, especially the current leader, Lula, he another of the solo-named Brazilians --a tradition that may or may not have commenced with Tiradentes -- appreciate that Tiradentes fought not against Portuguese rule so much as against its arbitrary rule and, most importantly, its high taxes.)

Individuals and nations across the time since have pursued those dangerous, radical ideas of 1776 and their messy but crucial embodiment in fundamental law. From our view in America, we can only hope they’ll finally get it, and not get away from it, as they have all too often. The best attempts remain so frustratingly near. I cringe and hold my arms across my heart to think of them: East Berlin in 1953, spitting upon Soviet rule, then crushed by it. Poland in ‘56, advancing, by inches, the cause, and, animated by it, Hungary, more violent in defiance and so violently destroyed. Czechoslovakia a decade later, crushed, too, while America, who inspired the fight, and tied up by nuclear bombs, did nothing. I cringe, too, so bad, at last week’s elections in Iran. Our ideas -- 1776 -- gave many there hope. Instead, a fool, an enemy of July 4 won. Why he won is our doing, too. He won because we empowered him in hating us, in hating and defying the Spirit of ‘76. But know this: even the Iranian Mullahs have to speak the language of July 4, and hold elections.

When in 1849, with Russian help, the Austrian crown fell upon an earlier, upstarted Hungarian independence, it was an oppression of the same of a century later. Then, the chief annoyance was Louis Kossuth, a minor noble, and a lawyer who knew and loved the American example. In him Americans first saw the force of their ideas abroad. Kossuth told them

, "I believe your glorious country should everywhere freely unfurl the star-spangled banner of liberty with all its congenial principles... Your glorious declaration of independence proclaims the right of every nation to assume among the powers of the earth the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and nature’s God entitle them."

Hungary’s independence lasted but a year, and Kossuth fled, ultimately landing in America to find common cause and, he hoped, American help for a free Hungary. Brilliant and charming, Kossuth brought Americans to tears, and nearly to his cause. England received Kossuth first, and celebrated him, although, for England he was a geopolitical tool for protesting Austria and Russia, not a political ideal. For Americans, he meant something, as he showed them, in themselves. A hero of 1812, Jackson’s Secretary of War, and then Senator from Michigan, Lewis Cass, was moved to declare America’s culpability in the Kossuth story:

"And now the world-renowned exile is coming to us. The expatriated leader is seeking refuge in the New World from the injustice and oppression of the Old. At once the champion and the representative of a glorious cause- the cause of Human Freedom -- he has a right to our esteem and affection, and such manifestations of popular favor as will convince both the oppressor and the oppressed that wherever a nation is struggling for freedom, the hearts and hopes of the American people are with it in the effort. May the land of Washington ever be the asylum of the exiled patriot, who, less fortunate than Washington, but like him, devoted to his country, is doomed to abandon it, and to seek safety among strangers from the vengeance of arbitrary power. And in this spirit may the great Republic welcome her guest, and testify her respect for him, and her hope that he may ere long return to his beloved Hungary, to enjoy the gratitude and confidence of a free and happy people."

At a dinner in New York in December of 1851, at which the Cass letter, and others from Clay, Webster, Seward, and more were read, Kossuth pleaded for American intervention. Your example -- you -- he said, must again save us as you already have. But for your Constitution, but for your Day of Independence, Hungary’s own means little. Washington’s great admonition against foreign involvement, Kossuth pleaded, was annulled by Washington’s own acts. In creating America, in saving America, Washington created and saved the world, which you, his descendants, must now fulfill.

Those diners, and on through Kossuth’s tour, loved the flattery -- and ignored the kiss. For them, the conclusion of America’s means and ways was for America alone -- in concept, anyway. The world was easy to ignore. As America sorted out its domestic problems, she saw but herself in the mirror. Self-reflection and other such effects were brought upon her by Kossuth. If he was nothing for America, they had to ask, what did such a man mean for France, England, and Spain, and their colonies? In the Americas, especially, the weight of Kossuth fell upon Spain. During his tour of America, England swore herself to Cuba and its governor, Spain, against any “aggression on the part of the American Government.” Spurred by Kossuth, the fear was real. Still, not for another fifty years would America really consider it, and even then reluctantly. When it finally came, it was 1776 that made her do it.

Forget geopolitics. Forget Britain and Spain, and the Monroe Doctrine. Cuba’s entreaty for American intervention was the same as that of Kossuth a half century before. We want your ideas, yes, but, more, your ideas command you to help us. America didn’t go blindly or unwittingly into the Spanish American War -- taught by history as the inaugural of American Imperialism, the way of the Twentieth Century. Where later on, Communism looked to spread, and conveniently found excuse and opportunity, America of the late 19th century tripped and fell into the world without knowing quite why. Yes, many Americans demanded the War in Cuba, but just as importantly so many resisted it. A major party ran two candidacies against it. A Speaker of the House lost his position over opposition to it against his own party. The President himself prayed for guidance before launching it. It was as politically divisive as any war the moderns might imagine, or want. (How today’s dissent-junkies would have loved to hate the Spanish-American War-- especially its aftermath and the long, hard fought peace.) Whatever God’s reply to McKinley, the President’s reluctance was less than his resolve, which was more powerful for his reluctance. He had no say in purpose, for he inherited that from LaFayette, Von Steuben and Kossuth. McKinley prosecuted the war, and gave it meaning, precisely for his hesitation going into it. When he asked Judge Taft to head the civil government in the Philippines, now taken from Spain, Taft replied that he couldn’t take the position for he didn’t believe in the war. That was, McKinley replied, exactly why he wanted Taft for it.

It was no simple thing, this applying America abroad. For McKinley and Taft, the Philippines were a very test of democracy. Paternalism and imperialism were not in the design. Instead, it was, Taft said, a “great experimental laboratory of practical government.” From Manilla Taft wrote home asking for “upright” and experienced lawyers who spoke some Spanish, and by whose “example these people [will] know what Anglo-Saxon justice means.” If in self-governance, the law comes of the consent of the governed, he reasoned, then the governed must be capable of making and living by the law. Taft’s job was no less than recreating the great object of 1789, in putting July 4 into action in that little, backward, and brand new nation. If imperialism, it was the most unusual sort. America’s self-interest lay in the self-interest of the occupied lands. As he said in Cuba in 1906 during a brief intervention there, Taft looked upon the American occupation as a “receivership.” This was not paternalism; it was responsibility. “We are here against our will,” he explained, “and only for the purpose of aiding Cuba.”

I trust this sounds familiar to 2005. The Philippines and Cuba were not the unmitigated success McKinley, Roosevelt and Taft hoped. In 1913, a Democratic President, Woodrow Wilson and his relativist, feel-good Secretary of State, William Jennings Bryan, reversed these policies under the guise of anti-imperialism. The Filipinos were cast unto themselves, and Cuba and Mexico were left to their own, bad courses, free of those impossible but world-making demands of the example of America that McKinley wished upon them. But it was not a lost wish. In 1946, starting over after World War II, the Filipino government chose July 4 to declare itself newly free. The ideals of 1776 remain in today’s lost Cuba, too, for Castro exists by, for and of anti-Americanism. He is a creature of opposition alone.

July 4, 1776 is and always will be America’s greatest export. Made for domestic consumption, its demand was immediate and worldwide. As Kossuth explained in 1851,

"The very existence of your great country, the principles upon which it is founded, its geographical position, its present state of civilization, and all its moral and material interests, would lead on your people not only to maintain, but incessantly more and more to develope [sic], your intercourse with the world."

“Moral and material interests” -- what a fantastic way to call the imperative of 1776! Wishing it for his own people, Kossuth begged his American audience to keep it true for themselves:

"And as to your glorious Constitution, all humanity can only wish, in the common interest of mankind, that you and your posterity may yet long conserve this religious attachment to its fundamental principles, which by no means exclude development and progress; and that every citizen of your great Union, thankfully acknowledging the immense benefits of this Constitution, may, even in the moments of the most passionate irritation, never forget to love that Constitution more than the momentary passion of his heart, or the egotistical interest of the passing hour."

So many errors, so many problems across the time and ongoing experiment of America, and so many practicing that disbelief Kossuth feared. Yet, whatever our self-loathing, it comes of the demands our Fathers made upon us. It was a cruel thing, this, to give us freedom and self-government, and we have tried and keep trying to ruin it. It is so demanding, so unrelenting, so thoroughly right that even we today can’t screw up enough to kill it. It guides us, it makes us, and it is us and all that we do. We might see the end in the last or the next election, court decision, regulation, tax, or global event. If we didn’t want 1776 so badly, we wouldn’t care, and for it we carry on the fight, in the ongoing process of making the nation, launched in 1789. For me a saddest day was when little Elian was returned to Castro’s Cuba -- McKinley betrayed, and Lady Liberty lowered her torch. It was just one kid, good friends told me, and his father ought to have him. I’ll remember it always, and cry. But I cry not just for what Elian lost, but for what we could have had in him in the affirmation of America. These are tears of resolve and faith. So, dear Kossuth, we yet believe in our fundamental principles. We stray, yes, but we believe, and we are hard on ourselves for it.

Oh glorious Fourth of July, 1776, by which all things of man’s realm are ever since measured.










From all of us to all of you, our Finest FReeper FRiends, we wish for you a joyous and safe holiday week-end. This thread will be here all weekend and Monday for the Fourth of July holiday for those who might be in town and want to drop in from time to time. Please share you favorite holiday memory and your favorite graphics. Your Finest hostess crew: Dolly Cali, Billie, Dutchess; Mama_bear; and Aquamarine.





06-28-05 ~ Hall of Fame #12

THIS WEEK'S THREADS

06-27-05 Military Monday
06-28-05 "Hall of Fame #12
06-29-05 Celebrating Summer
06-30-05 Give Libs Enough Rove, and they’ll hang themselves

Opinions by our own 'King of Ping'
The guy's good, folks!



TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 4thofjuly; betsyross; canadaday; ceegarguy; decofindep; dubya; faithmouse; fireworks; flags; food; fourthofjuly; fun; georgewashington; melgibson; movies; nicollo; parades; patriots; picnics; poems; poetry; revolution; troops; wolfie
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To: DollyCali; The Mayor

21 posted on 07/01/2005 10:59:45 AM PDT by FreeTheHostages
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To: DollyCali

Fantastic! You've outdone yourself!!!


22 posted on 07/01/2005 10:59:51 AM PDT by Bommer
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To: DollyCali
Magnificent work, Dolly! It looks beautiful. (And damned fine HTML.)

Any delay to get the thread up was all mine -- I worked Dolly's deadline from last night into noon today. Dolly gave it a fine recovery, and here we go into a more GLORIOUS FOURTH for this beautiful thread.

Dolly, I got caught up researching news of past Fourths. As best I can tell, the meaning and intensity Fourths of July come and go with bad times and reformist presidencies. Until WWI got underway, patriotism waned under Woodrow Wilson. It was near absent during the Great Depression, and also during the 1970s. A terrifically sad Fourth of July story I found was of Chiang Kai-shek, who issued this statement for the 1946 celebration:

"On this Independence Day of the United States, I and all Chinese people express our respect for your Revolutionary heroes and the people of your country who have taken precious part in the stuggle to protect peace and democracy... the United States always is willing to help friendly neighbors realize their ideals of democracy. It assures us that, because of this close cooperation among the peoples of the United States and other peace-loving peoples, a new era of freedom and equality will definitely come over the world."
Oh my. Well, anyway, Happy Fourth of July to Taiwan, too!

And a very Happy Fourth of July to all your wonderful people.

23 posted on 07/01/2005 12:03:05 PM PDT by nicollo (All economics are politics.)
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To: All
Hope you don't mind me barging in....

Ok ya'll, I have the coolest thing to share!!  Today I went to the Post Office to mail a couple of packages.  As I pulled into the parking space, I saw that the window of the van parked next to me had a double Blue Star decal on it.  I hurried up and got around and knocked on the window.  The lady rolled her window down and we talked (and cried) for a couple minutes.  She is the mom of 2 Marines, both have been to Iraq.  One has been twice and won't go back.  The other has to go back.  They were both home on leave at the same time (talk about a happy woman!!)  I gave her business cards for the Canteen and also for Proud Patriots and asked her to thank her sons for me.  She, in return, gave me a business card for Marine Comfort Quilts.  What a cool organization.  She told me that she has made a quilt square for every fallen Marine in this conflict.  Please, if you have a minute, take the time to stop by their website and check them out.  They are looking for help making the quilt squares - they can handle the quilting, but if you can do a square, what a great and meaningful place to get involved.  God bless these folks real good.  Click the pic to transport to their site.

CLick to visit Marine Comfort Quilts!

The second part of this is an encouraging word.  Sometimes I WANT to say something to people about what we do here on the Canteen and also at Proud Patriots, but I sort of chicken out and mumble a thank you and move on.  This experience has taught me that I need to be bolder in my thank you's.  These young men and women and their families need to know that we appreciate them.  So my challenge to you all is look for the opportunity.  I know most of you do.  But I just want to give you a boost!!  *HUGS!*

24 posted on 07/01/2005 12:04:43 PM PDT by StarCMC (Old Sarge is my hero...doing it right in Iraq! Vaya con Dios, Sarge.)
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To: DollyCali; Aquamarine; dutchess; Mama_Bear; The Mayor; All

OH   MY   GOSH!!

Hello, Dolly! Your HTML studying has paid off BIG TIME! I believe you've got it down. :) This is incredible. You truly put your heart in your work, and it shows. Thank you for being our sistah.

25 posted on 07/01/2005 12:21:40 PM PDT by Billie
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To: DollyCali

Thanks for the Beautiful thread for the 4th's celebration.


26 posted on 07/01/2005 12:22:20 PM PDT by GailA (Glory be to GOD and his only son Jesus.)
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To: StarCMC

Thanks for sharing this important contact. Isn't it amazing the folks we can meet / engage if we make the effort? Hugs hon!


27 posted on 07/01/2005 12:25:10 PM PDT by DollyCali (Don't tell GOD how big your storm is -- Tell the storm how B-I-G your God is!)
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To: DollyCali; Aquamarine; dutchess; Mama_Bear
I KNOW, that you KNOW..

Hey, I *like* the fireworks behind the bottom links! It's festive! :)

28 posted on 07/01/2005 12:30:27 PM PDT by Billie
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To: StarCMC

Star, I bookmarked the link. That Marine Mom has my utmost respect. My heart feels so puny by comparison.


29 posted on 07/01/2005 12:30:39 PM PDT by La Enchiladita (Remembering our Heroes today and every day.)
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To: Billie; DollyCali
Hey, I *like* the fireworks behind the bottom links!

I think it works. It is original. ;)

30 posted on 07/01/2005 12:34:19 PM PDT by Aquamarine
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To: DollyCali

Gorgeous Pledge graphic, too!


31 posted on 07/01/2005 12:34:20 PM PDT by Billie
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To: nicollo; All
I am in awe with "what you know".. and I thank you from the bottom of my heart for sharing your fine thoughts and knowledge with us here for this thread.

I sent out to my Email list the link to the thread. AOL was not happy & suspended my account. I am back but a little POd at AOL. Okay, okay so I exceeded the regulation for minimum of 50 per/mailing (I think I sent to a couple hundred)

Michael, I was afraid to put that blockquote in 5 more times.. We have all had nightmares here with stray blockquotes & centers!!!! With sufficient time I would have taken a chance. What you sent me looked so nice (even title etc) and I was racing against time. The last little error I had the other day took close to 8 hours to locate!

BTW - how was tennis? either it is a lot cooler in the DC area or you are made of stronger stuff than I am. In this hot weather, I head for water - don't look for ways to sweat more!!!

ALL .. Michael has written a couple books (one of which I have read & feel pretty smug in knowing things about Taft, I would have NEVER known otherwise)

His books are:

"Stretching It: The Story of the Limousine" (2002)
"William Howard Taft and the First Motoring Presidency, 1909-1913" (2003)

and currently preparing a book on the 1912 election, working title, "The Constitution's Bodyguard," about William Howard Taft's defense of constitutionalism during the election of 1912.

He states he "loves automobiles principally because I see in and in their history them the great American spirit. "

Here is a pix of Nicollo & me taken the night before the Inauguration at a DC FReeper get together


32 posted on 07/01/2005 12:41:02 PM PDT by DollyCali (Don't tell GOD how big your storm is -- Tell the storm how B-I-G your God is!)
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To: Billie
Hey, I *like* the fireworks behind the bottom links! It's festive! :)

I am pretty sure I did something wrong.. couldn't figure out what though. Guess it fits the spirit of the thread!

33 posted on 07/01/2005 12:46:39 PM PDT by DollyCali (Don't tell GOD how big your storm is -- Tell the storm how B-I-G your God is!)
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To: DollyCali

The Post is fantastic and I KNOW the work that went into it. You covered everything well....and I do like that the links were included in the 4th celebration. :)


34 posted on 07/01/2005 1:01:04 PM PDT by Aquamarine
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To: DollyCali; Chong; austinTparty; Caipirabob; gonzo; Jimmy Valentine's brother; LS
That was too much fun to see you in DC, Dolly. Thanks for putting up the photo and for the memories. Pinging a few FRiends now:

- x, thought you might enjoy -- and correct -- this essay...
- Chong: Hi! I've been silent of late, but missing you nonetheless for it.
- ATP: How-R-ya?
- Caipirabob: thought you'd enjoy this story of Tiradentes. I'd love to learn more about him.
- gonzo: GONZO!
- Jimmy Valentine's brother: faith, brother! That was waay fun hanging with you at the bar Inuaug eve.
- LS: some Patriotic history for you!

Folks, if you haven't checked out LS's history textbook, please do at his FR homepage .

35 posted on 07/01/2005 1:02:19 PM PDT by nicollo (All economics are politics.)
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To: La Enchiladita; StarCMC; GailA; NicknamedBob; Mama_Bear; lysie; MozartLover; prairiebreeze; ...
Gotta See this Ping

to part of my personal list to the Finest Holiday Weekend thread & PLEASE NOTE NICOLLO's fine work in the body of the thread.

Thanks to NicknamedBob(poet) & Mama_bear(graphic artist) for allowing me to use/modify the post below from last year. Well, they didn't ACTUALLY allow me.. I just borrowed it and did it!!!



















Independence?

The Lady holds a tablet. There is a date engraved.
July 4, 1776. A memo that we saved.
Within that page of History, we hold the American Rose.
Pressed by weight of moments, the album now we close,

To mark the beginning of Man’s finest striving,
Wherein heroes, villains, and events were arriving,
At a small town we call Philly, (That’s where we keep the bell.)
To speak their piece, and start a war, and put them all through Hell.

It was a needed moment. We had to take our place,
Among the giants of the earth, for Life stepped up the pace.
We had to shoulder burdens, that no one else could bear,
And send the finest of our land, to fix things ‘over there.’

The blood we shed has nourished the Freedom that we sowed,
And gave the homeland back ten-fold, all debts that we had owed.
Just to ensure survival of the plantings that we nourished.
We went back for a second time, to make sure that it flourished.

We thought that we could take a break, and live a private life,
Unburdened by the problems of the world and all its strife.
But this small world kept shrinking, and our moat gives no protection,
From enemies who should be friends, except for their infection.

We’ll need to cure their illness, whatever the cost may be,
Or we will not enjoy the life we have, a life of liberty.
It’s not enough to shine a light beside the door,
We have to go among them, and boost the ‘yearnings’ of the poor.

NicknamedBob . . . . . . . . . . . . July 3, 2004

...............................................



Below is a pix of Mama_bear(Lori) and NicknamedBob(Bob)along with Just amy & Jen from the same Freeper social in January before the inauguration as the prior pix of Michael & me


36 posted on 07/01/2005 1:13:39 PM PDT by DollyCali (Don't tell GOD how big your storm is -- Tell the storm how B-I-G your God is!)
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To: DollyCali
Dolly, I had forgotten all about that graphic that I did for NnB's poem last year. I think I will snag it for my profile page for the weekend.

Of course, you are more than welcome to borrow any of my graphics. :-)

37 posted on 07/01/2005 1:25:11 PM PDT by Mama_Bear (My heroes wear camouflage.)
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To: Mama_Bear

I took out the Amy's place part & the margin's tightened up. Changed font & that is about all. thanks, I knew you would not mind. How is the baby doing?


38 posted on 07/01/2005 1:29:40 PM PDT by DollyCali (Don't tell GOD how big your storm is -- Tell the storm how B-I-G your God is!)
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To: nicollo; Syncro; Jimmy Valentine's brother


Cuddled up here at Inaugural Ball with JVb (incognito) for a photo op
39 posted on 07/01/2005 1:32:43 PM PDT by DollyCali (Don't tell GOD how big your storm is -- Tell the storm how B-I-G your God is!)
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To: DollyCali
How is the baby doing?

He's fine. He is laying on my computer desk chewing on his chew toy. He likes to lay on the mouse pad, so it makes it a bit difficult to navigate on the page. LOL. Fortunately, I have a wireless mouse, so there is no cord he can chew on.

I just snapped some photos of him. If I got any good ones, I will post them.

40 posted on 07/01/2005 1:38:32 PM PDT by Mama_Bear (My heroes wear camouflage.)
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