With all of the political infighting going on in the country these days, it seems like many of us have different ideas of what it means to be a united nation. This should be symbolized by the upcoming Independence Day. Again this year the Fourth of July will find people celebrating in their own different ways.
Most people around my state will be having barbecues, usually while stuck in traffic on the Atlantic City Expressway. The soothing stench of burgers burning on the radiator has become a holiday tradition among the drivers meeting every year in the six mile backup from Exit Seven.
If you choose to stay at home, the fun of a family barbecue begins with the smell of charcoal, hot dogs, and Raid Ant and Roach Killer. You generally invite family members to these affairs who you haven’t seen in a year, forgetting that there must have been a reason for that. These relatives usually start their day’s drinking just a little bit earlier than you, like the weekend before the Fourth.
Then at the end of the day, everyone loves to see fireworks. Fireworks displays will be seen across South Jersey this year despite the constant rumors that due to state budget constraints they would be replaced by a guy with some Blow Pops and rolls of bubble wrap.
I would really like to remember what it must have felt like to first receive our independence. Actual field research would have involved too much work, but fortunately I was able to acquire archival footage from 1776 from Dan Rather and the 60 Minutes crew.
George Washington was originally the father of our country, mainly through the use of Cialis. Some mistaken reports today have concluded that the father had been Kevin Federline.
According to stories from early tabloid newspaper the Colonial Enquirer, George Washington's first wife was actually responsible for sewing the American flag, not Betsy Ross. After her later remarriage, she became better known as Martha Washington Stewart. She also catered the celebration for signing the Declaration of Independence at the Market Street K-Mart in Philadelphia.
The Declaration of Independence was signed back in 1776 in Philadelphia, around the time Philly won its last major sports championship. The Declaration was approved by the Second Continental Congress and written by Thomas Jefferson, on Microsoft LXXVI's Word Perfect Version 1.0.
The Declaration was signed by 56 members of the Washington Administration, including Jefferson, John Adams, Samuel Adams, who supplied beer for the celebration, and Benjamin Franklin, who arrived late from Sea Isle City after encountering shore traffic on the Garden State Parkway.
In March 1775, Patrick Henry gave his famous speech at a Virginia constitutional convention, declaring "give me liberty or give me death." He was preparing the colonists for the Revolutionary War, after discovering muskets of mass destruction in England.
In April 1775, the Revolutionary War began. Paul Revere rode to Lexington and announced that the redcoats were coming. He later went on to form a rock band with the Raiders, win the first-ever Colonial Idol, and headline Live VIII in 1776 in Philadelphia along with King George Michael, Queen, and Thomas Jefferson Airplane.
Benedict Arnold became a major force for both sides in the War, finally leaving his wife Roseanne and defecting to the British camp in 1780. His aides were later charged with war crimes back in the US. But fortunately for Arnold, Los Angeles was founded in 1781, so he had their trial delayed and moved to LA, where they were eventually acquitted of all charges.
Then in January 1776, Thomas Paine wrote his famous pamphlet entitled "Common Sense", which declared the American case for independence. There is little evidence of this title still being in circulation today. The pamphlet is hard to find too.
It's that kind of patriotic sentiment which help us to remember what it means to be free, even in today's changing times. Our freedoms are summed up well in the Declaration of Independence, which reads:
"We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness."
Of course in 2006, a recent addition was: And the Pursuit of ONE DAY without a Brad and Angelina update.
Bob H