Is the “Fourth of July” safe with Donald Trump in control?*

By Gatoaitele Savea Sano Malifa 05 July 2017, 12:00AM

Today is the Fourth of July. So what is the Fourth of July?

To Americans everywhere, it’s Independence Day. It marks the birth of America as a nation, and the day the United States of America secured its independence from the British Empire.

On that day, July 4, 1776, the thirteen colonies of America, then at war with Britain, declared themselves to be states of a new nation.

The declaration was made through the adoption of the Declaration of Independence, which was drafted by their founding father, Thomas Jefferson.

The Thirteen Colonies were a group of colonies run by the British, who started colonizing North America in the 16th Century.  

In 1775 the Continental Congress – a meeting of delegates from the colonies – declared a war of independence against Britain. 

The first Independence Day celebrations took place on Rhode Island on July 4, 1977 - the one-year anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. 

Thirteen gunshots were fired in a salute, one for each of the original colonies. The area has longest-running Independence Day celebrations in the country. 

Today, in an article published in the New York Times, it seems clear that Americans are worried. This is what they said.

Sheldon Henderson, 60, and Robbie Robinson, 63, were planning a day of motorcycling around the ski town of Breckenridge, Colo. Sheldon served in the Navy and Robbie in the Air Force, which helps feed a friendly rivalry between the two.

Sheldon: This is a good country, regardless of the current political air.

Robbie: Fourth of July — I have mixed emotions. Being a veteran, I’m disappointed things haven’t gotten any better than it was when I was in the service. I thought that by now we’d be closer to utopia than we were. We’re no closer. Talk of the country’s divides took the men’s thoughts to President Barack Obama and the recent uproar over whether to remove Confederate statues and monuments from public squares.

Robbie: If we’re all Americans, we’d treat each other as if we’re all Americans. We actually elected a black man president eight years ago. But here’s the thing: When you have people all over the country in an uproar because they don’t want to bury their rebel flags? The only reason you would want to keep something like that around is for hatred.

Steph Jester, 35, a clinical social worker from Thornton, Colo., was getting ready for a rugged weekend with her sister and nieces with no electricity and few creature comforts in a camper in the high country. Her husband, a National Guardsman, is deployed in the Middle East, so she said the family was celebrating “just being together and the freedom we’ve got.”

Her view of patriotism, now: 

It means respecting each other’s rights to have different opinions. And not thinking they’re bad.

Doug Windemuller, 73, a mostly retired financial planner, was buying buns, milk and Coke at the Pine Junction Country Store, just down the road from his home in Pine, Colo. Traffic gets so bad on the two-lane roads that he and his wife are spending the weekend close to home with friends and having a backyard hot-dog roast.

How was he planning to celebrate?

Display the flag, honor it. Believe in country, God. I’m a patriot. Loyal to the government and the president. We need to respect the position, and right now that’s not happening in this country.

That’s how we’re going to get undivided: by being loyal to the country.

‘A Lot of People Don’t Have What We Have’

Roger Ash, 51, and his son, Ethan, 14, were in Pine, Colo., headed for a day of mountain biking before their family flew from Denver to Costa Rica for a vacation. Ethan wasn’t sure whether there would be fireworks down there. Roger, a teacher in Denver, said the holiday made him think back to his days working for the Peace Corps.

Roger: I don’t think many Americans realize how lucky we are. Yeah, we do have people struggling right now, but we live better than everybody in the world I’ve ever seen.

Ethan: A lot of people don’t have what we have.

On patriotism and President Trump.

Roger: I don’t agree with him. I’m a bleeding-heart liberal, but I still have to support the guy because he is our president. If we don’t, we’re just dividing that nation even more. It’s embarrassing that our kids see this. ‘We’re Still Free to Choose, and to Be.’

Sveta Bartsch, 40, a paralegal, and her husband, David, 54, a landscape architect, were making the six-hour trek from Cambridge, Mass., to drop off their daughter at camp in Canada.

David: We’re celebrating hope for the future of the country, hope for  change. We’ve got to get people into office who actually take responsibility  for their jobs.

Sveta: I adopted America as my country. I feel proud to be able to live here. 

There are so many more opportunities here than anywhere else. For that  reason, I live here, even though the rest of my family’s in Russia. 

Health care  costs are a financial stress, and David said he felt his family slipping to the  lower rungs of the middle class. 

But he said the country’s troubles offered some inspiration: It makes me feel more motivated to get this country on track. ‘Realizing How Good We Have It’ Jonny Aquino, 30, from Boston, and his stepfather, George Bethoney, 52, of Medfield, Mass., were riding their motorcycles up to Old Orchard  Beach, Me., to enjoy a break from their carpentry jobs and, Jonny said, be “a  couple of beach bums.” 

What are you celebrating most?

Jonny:  New life. I had a daughter not too long ago. Her first Fourth of July. 

In these divided times, what does patriotism mean to you?

George: Honoring our country, honoring our freedom. Supporting our president and realizing how good we have it. Realizing that we can get on our bikes, ride up to Old Orchard and get back to work.

Jonny: You can call that the American dream. ‘Maybe It Can Bring a Sense of Unity’

Sterlin Jenkins, 34, a mover from Lawrenceville, Ga., planned to eat barbecue and lie low: “I just try to hang close.” He said his parents’ military service taught him the meaning of the Fourth.

I would say the holiday is more important this year. Maybe it can bring a sense of unity after all of the police brutality and politics and elections. We can just sit back and be one. But we’ll probably wake up on July Fifth and get back to the same thing.

‘The South Really Thinks About It’

Kristy Glass, 36, a real estate agent from Hartwell, Ga., stopped at a Cracker Barrel for lunch as she headed to the airport for a trip to Las Vegas with Bryan Vassar, 41, who works in the poultry industry. 

What does the Fourth mean to you?

Kristy: It just means the freedom of our country and the lives people lost  for our country, and the people fighting for everything now. Do you think people think about what you see as the true meaning of the Fourth?

Kristy: There’s a lot of people who don’t, but the South really thinks about it. Does that feeling stick around after the holiday?

Kristy: People do sit around and think about these things for a short period of time, but then they go on about your life after that.

Bryan: I still know what I’m here for, and what I stand for. The Fourth of July is not the same.

Arturo Guerrero, 22, a heating and cooling service technician from Gainesville, Ga., was going to visit family in Texas, watch fireworks and have a cookout. He played with his 18-month-old daughter, Arabella, as he spoke.

The country’s more divided than usual, and the Fourth isn’t the same. To me, the “Sandlot” movie, that’s actually the Fourth of July, when they have the Fourth of July and the whole neighborhood has a cookout and celebrates all together. That doesn’t happen. It’s just so divided, and you can’t hang out with your neighbors and have a cookout together. That’s my ideal, even though it’s a movie.

So what do you think? Are the freedoms Americans are taking for granted today with the Fourth of July’s protection, under threat of being taken away with President Donald Trump in control?

Tell us what you think.

 

* Material in this article was taken from interviews published in the New York Times on 3 July 2017, for which we are sincerely grateful.

By Gatoaitele Savea Sano Malifa 05 July 2017, 12:00AM
Samoa Observer

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