The Daily Signal - VDH: This July 4th, We Remember the Fallen
Episode Date: July 4, 2025VDH: This July 4th, We Remember the Fallen A year and two months after the first shots of the American Revolution were fired at the Battles of Lexington and Concord, the 13 American colonies decl...ared independence from Great Britain on July 4, 1776. Whether ridding the continent of British influence following the revolution, or coming to their aid during both World Wars, over 1 million soldiers have perished fighting to “protect the ideas of the American Revolution and the United States itself.” “And on this July 4th, we need to give them a due. And remember what they did, who they were, and why they did it,” argues Victor Davis Hanson on this July 4 edition of “Victor Davis Hanson: In His Own Words:” 👉Don’t miss out on Victor’s latest videos by subscribing to The Daily Signal today. You’ll be notified every time a new piece of content drops: https://www.youtube.com/dailysignal?sub_confirmation=1 👉If you can’t get enough of Victor Davis Hanson from The Daily Signal, subscribe to his official YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@victordavishanson7273 👉He’s also the host of “The Victor Davis Hanson Show,” available wherever you prefer to watch or listen. Links to the show and exclusive content are available on his website: https://victorhanson.com The Daily Signal cannot continue to tell stories, like this one, without the support of our viewers: https://secured.dailysignal.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today is the Fourth of July, and I'd like to remind everybody what the Fourth of July is.
It's the formal date when the Second Continental Congress decided to formally disband the 13 colonies from Great Britain.
And we all know it from our high school days, the famous Lee family, John Adams, and mostly Thomas Jefferson, the formal Declaration of Independence.
There's a couple of other things to remember on the Fourth of July.
Look at any of the British Commonwealth, or for that matter, any country in Europe, they follow a parliamentarian.
system. But the founders who created the United States and through this revolutionary war learned
about what were the alternatives for consensual government. They came up with this tripartite
based on monoscue and the separation of powers. It goes back to the Spartan and Cretan Constitution
Antiquity. They came up with a unique government.
Hello, this is Victor Davis Hansen for the Daily Signal. Today is the Fourth of July,
and I'd like to remind everybody what the Fourth of July is.
It's the formal date when the Second Continental Congress, about a year and four months after the shots heard around the world,
the first shots of the Revolutionary War at Lexington and Concord were fired,
the Second Continental Congress decided to formally disband the colonies, the 13 colonies from Great Britain.
Now, two days earlier, Richard Henry Lee of the famous Lee family, he was the first cousin of Light Horse Harry Lee,
the father of Robert E. Lee, he had introduced an amendment called the Lee Resolution that
formally was approved and said, we are divorcing ourselves from Great Britain. But two days
later, John Adams and mostly Thomas Jefferson decided they needed a more holistic document that
would list 23 grievances, why it was necessary. So that version of Jefferson and to a lesser
extent Adams became the formal declaration of independence, and it was ratified on July 4th.
And we all know it from our high school days, or we should, the first famous line, when in the
course of human events, it becomes necessary to disband.
And then we hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal, the first
line of the second paragraph.
So it's a foundational document, and it doesn't mean that men are God.
So when Jefferson wrote, we hold that all men are created equal, it doesn't mean that they were equal at that time, but it gave an aspirational goal that if you think about it, it would put the founders out of business, so to speak, because if all men are created equal and you create this wonderful place, then people, and you don't have a blood and soil argument that only the people who were here are related to the founders by race, ethnicity, or are
but all men are equal, then people will flock to the United States.
And maybe the original founders might, they might not look like the original founders,
but they would represent the original founders.
They would be the same type of people by ideas and values.
And so the idea of America was really established with the Fourth of July.
And we're going to have the 250th anniversary a year from now that will celebrate the
250 years of the United States of America. Today it's the 249th anniversary of the 4th July.
This is not the Constitution that will be ratified in 1787 and will formally establish the government.
This 4th of July declares that the 13 colonies who have been at war with Great Britain
for about 14 or 15 months and are operating on what we will call the Articles of Confederation
will then free themselves at the Battle of Yorktown, and then they will have a new type of government,
which we now call the U.S. Constitution.
There's a couple of other things to remember on the 4th of July.
The British have a very different idea than we do.
When they look at the 23 grievances, they said,
But wow, you guys have it pretty easy.
We've been as nice to you or better than the people in Canada, and we have all of these commonwealth, and they're not revolting.
And if you want to look at an interesting document, read the great historian, a good friend of mine, Andrew Roberts, and he has addressed all 23 grievances from the British point of view and said, oh, that was nothing.
Oh, they were cry babies.
You shouldn't have done it.
So it was an interesting argument, but it has a phenomenal effect on history because if you look at Canada, if you look at New Zealand, if you look at the former South Africa, if you look at any of the British Commonwealth, or for that matter, any country in Europe, they follow a parliamentary system.
But the founders who created the United States and through this revolutionary war learned about what was wrong with the British.
And what were the alternatives for consensual government?
They came up with this tripartite based on monoscue and the separation of powers.
It goes back to the Spartan and Cretan Constitution and antiquity.
They came up with a unique government of checks and balances,
Supreme Court, Congress, president, executive, legislative, judicial, all equal branches,
all checking each other and balancing each other based on a system of federalism that each state
would have the right to be autonomous and free as long as it did not contradict or conflict
with the laws of the union itself. And they solved that problem of the Articles of Confederation.
And this system, 249 years ago, whether it persevered, I don't know how it persevered in the
Revolutionary War, it didn't have a lot of assets, the Americans. The French helped a great deal.
But then we had the War of 1812, the War of 1848, and of course the American Civil War where 700,000 Americans died trying to abolish slavery and some trying to perpetuate it.
And then, of course, we had the Spanish-American War, and then World War won where 117,000 Americans died.
Two million of them went across the Atlantic Ocean to save France in Iraq.
Britain from German Prussianism or German autocracy. And yet less than 22 years later,
the United States would be in another World War and we would lose about 420,000. And then the
Korean War, 1950 to 53, 35,000, 56,000 of Vietnam. So it's very valuable on this date to realize that
from time to time, from generation to generation, thousands of Americans have fought to protect
the ideas of the American Revolution and the United States itself. And on this July 4th, we need to
give them a do and remember what they did, who they were, and why they did it. Thank you very much.
This is Victor Davis Hansen for The Daily Signal.
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