
OK, I am making historians everywhere vibrate with this sentiment. But it’s my right to express it and I think it needs to be said.
#BOYCOTTAMERICA250
We have nothing to celebrate. What is going on in our country today is not what our founding fathers fought and died for.
It’s time to cancel the birthday party.
I’m not sorry about articulating that. Who we are today in this moment are not joyous Americans are we? Isn’t it more true there are so many people with a very twisted perspective on what America is that they’ve literally forgotten the history?
So why should communities spend god-awful amounts of money to celebrate America 250?
Someone wrote to me and told me I should haul it out to Kennett Square on February 10 for this:
There’s a better way than simply boycotting America 250. There’s an effort right here in Chester County to encourage people to read the Declaration of Independence publicly to honor its words. Its words are powerful. I strongly encourage you to attend the Dare to Declare Red Carpet Premiere at the Kennett Library on Tuesday, Feb 10th at 6 pm. There’s a 15 minute video of community members from throughout Chester County reading the Declaration, followed by a panel discussion with some of the readers. It’s NONPARTISAN. And it provokes powerful civic discourse, connecting 1776 to today, which is what we need right now. Here’s the link to more info: cccf250.org.
Sorry, not sorry I do not need a symbolic reading of the Declaration of Independence. Our founding fathers are rolling in their proverbial graves right now IMHO. It seems what they fought, bled, and died for is being squandered by people that Americans foolishly elected, doesn’t it?
We are living through 1930s Germany with social media every single day.
We are living in Orwellian existence we didn’t sign up for that’s now very very real.
“We know that no one ever seizes power with the intention of relinquishing it.”
“Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past”.
“Doublethink means the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in one’s mind simultaneously, and accepting both of them”.
“There was truth and there was untruth, and if you clung to the truth even against the whole world, you were not mad.”
“The ideal set up by the Party was something huge, terrible, and glittering—a world of steel and concrete, of monstrous machines and terrifying weapons—a nation of warriors and fanatics, marching forward in perfect unity, all thinking the same thoughts and shouting the same slogans, perpetually working, fighting, triumphing, persecuting—three hundred million people all with the same face.”
I could Orwell all day, but I won’t. It’s too real right now. It’s kind of freaky.
I mean, if you put the nasty politics aside and the rhetoric every day being shoved down our throats, there are all the other things.
Different kinds of people who aren’t really trained the way you would think, coming into our communities and sometimes it seems rather arbitrary and how they are choosing the people they are targeting, but is it arbitrary? Or is it just simplistic profiling based the color of skin or that someone may look a little different from whom they consider to be Americans? But then they shot a mom who was white, so was it really because she was with her spouse who was a woman? And they shot a male nurse who they said drew a weapon that was really a cell phone?
We’ve had incidents here in Chester County and when it’s close to home, it feels quite different again, doesn’t it? Even if you’re not at target what if you spoke up? Then you are a target aren’t you? Or if you’re just in the wrong place at the wrong time, you’re possibly a target, aren’t you?
People are anxious about going out. People I know who are diverse nationalities, but US Citizens, are walking around with their passports or birth certificates because they’re afraid they’re going to be picked up off of the street for looking not like those who come.
I am a kind of a grateful homebody as a middle-aged woman, and this all makes me more of a homebody. It’s literally such an ugly world. Why do you want to leave your four walls let alone celebrate a big USA birthday when what we are right now today doesn’t represent at all what our founding fathers (and mothers) envisioned?
A couple of my friends were worried because they thought I fell off the face of the Earth the past few days. I finally told one of them I didn’t, I was just tired and I needed a day to myself. I’m feeling life weary because of what we experience every day in this country right now.
I thought I was imagining things thinking that our rights are somewhat subjective these days , and then I read a terrifying article this evening. A man wrote a letter which wasn’t particularly bad. It was expressing how he felt on some topic as an American and it’s like he’s being looked into. That’s kind of crazy town.
https://www.commondreams.org/news/dhs-administrative-subpoenas
https://newrepublic.com/post/206088/homeland-security-67-year-old-us-citizen-criticized-email
https://www.inquirer.com/wires/wp/homeland-security-philadelphia-secret-weapon-dhs-20260203.html
https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/2026/02/03/homeland-security-administrative-subpoena/
(Some of those links have pay walls and I can’t help you. But some of them do not so you can read about it. )
Do we still hold all these truths to be self-evident as Americans? Or are the truths merely subjective depending upon who is reciting them?
I was about a child when the Bicentennial occurred. I loved it. I wrote in a Conestoga wagon through Valley Forge Park.
Prior to the Bicentennial I was the youngest volunteer tour guide for The Park Service giving full tours of the Todd house and the Bishop White House.
I was a child who saw the rebirth of Society Hill, and that was kind of a big deal. I literally lived in an area that represented part of the foundation of this country’s history.
I am someone who was born into a family which had immigrants on both sides. These immigrants arrived at different points in our country’s history and yes legally, but they were immigrants nonetheless.
I remember my maternal grandfather‘s recounting of the “Irish need not apply” signs in shop windows in Philadelphia. As in he saw them and his family experienced it, although from what I can tell based on my research on ancestry.com, a lot of them had been in this country since the late 18th century.
My paternal grandfather was Italian. I remember the stories of them having to change the name of their factory in Philadelphia during World War II so people didn’t mistake them for fascists because they were Italian. I also remember the stories of this grandfather as a very small child traveling with his mother back to the “old country“ so he could meet his Italian relatives and they got caught there through the end of World War I. In Italy he was referred to as L’Americano. When they came back to this country when it was safe to travel again, he was referred to as the Italian boy or something not as nice.
So yes I am making some local historians vibrate with #BoycottAmerica250 but whatever. A true historian should understand the sentiment because can we truly celebrate that which is utterly eroding? I wonder what it is like to be an American at the Olympics this time?
This is sad. And scary. How can we celebrate the past when no one is paying attention to the lessons of our own history?
Every time anyone speaks out now, they have to worry if some government overlord is going to come after them and is this how this country was set up? Do people even understand the Declaration of Independence, the US Constitution, the Bill of Rights?
And I will be perfectly clear. I’m not telling everyone they should boycott America 250. I’m telling you I pretty much am. I just can’t do it with a clear conscience. I just can’t do it because what’s happening now is what our forefathers bled and died to stop, didn’t they? It started for me with the misuse and overuse and incorrect use of the word patriot I don’t think the people that spout it half of the time know what it means.
Someone said to me today we can’t let people sap the joy out of our lives… yet some days I feel that the only thing that is happening in this world.
So I’m keeping my joy and keeping to myself and just not really doing the America 250 stuff. Because to me, in order to participate in something like that, you have to feel like it means something to people and I think people have forgotten what it actually means.
That is all. We need to really remember how and why we got here, and to some? Oh yes those particular truths are way too self-evident.


















































