What the 250th Anniversary Means Today… Living Under Trump: ‘I love America But It Can Do Better — the Torch Has Been Passed to Us’
By Anonymous #7
Today marks the 250th anniversary of American Independence Day. It feels very different from the celebrations I remember growing up.
When I was a child, July 4th was a spectacle. My family gathered every year. My grandfather fired up the grill while my grandmother made potato salad and all the fixings. After lunch there was homemade ice cream or fresh peach cobbler. But the real excitement came after dark. Growing up in Texas, fireworks were everywhere, and lighting them was what I lived for each summer.
As we grow older, however, our understanding of history changes. I learned that the celebration of American independence has never meant the same thing to everyone. For many Native Americans, it marked the beginning of the destruction of their way of life. For African Americans, freedom would not come for another 89 years, followed by generations of unequal treatment. Women would wait nearly a century and a half before gaining the right to vote.
America, in its infancy, was not as great as history often portrays it. It was a extraordinary idea, one that produced many achievements, but had a long journey ahead before it could truly live up to its founding ideals.
That journey included a Civil War, two world wars, and countless struggles for civil rights and equality. America became a nation admired around the world, because it had shown an ability to grow, correct itself, and strive toward something better.
America has always had skeletons in its closet, so perhaps it should not surprise us that, on the nation’s 250th anniversary, we find ourselves moving backward in some ways. We elected a convicted felon as president. That fact alone says less about one man than it does about us.

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By Anonymous #6
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By Anonymous #4
By Kate Callen
Believing that a display of the word “FUCK” would violate FCC rules governing broadcast content, Shepherd alerted KPBS Chief Content Officer Nancy Worlie. He wanted to audit Nguyen’s past work. Worlie “vehemently disagreed” and said that Shepherd was “grossly overreacting.” Soon after, he was fired.
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It is indeed the last four days of the OB Rag
Sixty years ago today — the Ocean Beach Pier first opened on July 2nd, 1966.
Every Saturday at 10:30 am. San Diego Climate Mobilization Coalition Meetings. July 4th,11th, 18th, and 25th. Keep up to date on climate issues and Climate Action events. To register email Jon Findley at jon@climatemobsd.org. More info: https://www.facebook.com/SDClimateMobilization/
By Kate Callen
What Was It, What Is It, and What Will It Be?




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