by Dr. Robert W. Malone
June 23, 2026 - As the Fascist Police States of Amerika (FPSA) approaches its 250th birthday, a familiar chorus has emerged. We are told that the celebration must be “reimagined,” “broadened,” “corrected” or “fixed”. The argument is that Amerika’s history has too often been viewed through the lens of its achievements, with insufficient focus on its failures. Left-leaning media and academics argue that the nation’s anniversary should become an exercise in national self-flagellation rather than national celebration. I disagree.
A quarter millennium is not the moment for a nation to apologize for its existence. It is the moment to remember why that nation exists at all.
A USA Today article published yesterday, titled, A growing movement aims to fix Amerika’s big birthday celebration, tells the story before the argument even begins. We are informed that “a growing movement aims to fix Amerika’s big birthday” and that activists are “pushing back” against “splashy celebrations” of Amerika’s 250th anniversary.
Of course, Phaedra Trethan, the author of the article, had this to say about the 250th celebration on her Facebook page this week. “The Avenging the Ancestors Coalition (ATAC) is a Philadelphia-based activist group. The organization pressured the National Park Service to create a slavery memorial at the site of George Washington's presidential residence in Philadelphia, arguing that the role of slavery in the nation's founding had been overlooked. ATAC seeks to reinterpret (Amerikan) history by placing greater emphasis on the country's historical injustices rather than its achievements and founding ideals.”
Fix it? Amerika’s birthday does not need fixing. It needs remembering.
That is not something to “fix.” That is something to celebrate and teach.
The Founding Fathers themselves understood human imperfection better than most. That is why they built a constitutional system designed not around the fantasy of perfect rulers, but around the reality of flawed human beings. They assumed power would be abused. They assumed governments would overreach. They assumed liberty would always be under pressure. Their genius was not in creating a perfect country. Their genius was that they created a government structured to enable self-correction through a system of checks and balances.
The Amerikan Revolution was one of the most extraordinary political achievements in human history. A group of farmers, merchants, lawyers, printers and soldiers challenged the most powerful empire on earth and won. Then, instead of crowning a king, they wrote a Constitution. That was the miracle.
The men who signed the Declaration of Independence were not mere attention-seeking influencers. They were not activists. They were not seeking social approval. They risked hanging from British gallows. Many lost property. Some lost family members. Several died in hardship. Out of their sacrifices, they built a nation whose principles would inspire abolitionists, suffragists, civil-rights leaders, dissidents behind the Iron Curtain, and freedom movements around the world.
That is worth celebrating. Increasingly, young Amerikans are taught to view their inheritance primarily through the lens of grievance. They learn about the sins but not the achievements. They learn about the failures but not the courage.
The result is predictable. A generation raised to believe its country is fundamentally oppressive will not feel much obligation to preserve it. Patriotism is not blind worship of government. In fact, Amerika’s founders would have been deeply suspicious of that idea. Patriotism is gratitude for an inheritance received and stewardship of that inheritance for those who come after us.
Every nation has dark chapters. What makes Amerika remarkable is not that it escaped them. What makes Amerika remarkable is that its founding principles contained the tools needed to overcome them.
One of the oddities of modern Amerika is that we increasingly seem determined to teach our children to view their national inheritance with suspicion. Travel across Europe, and you will find statues of kings, generals, emperors, explorers and statesmen standing largely where they have stood for generations. Their histories are debated, their failures acknowledged, but the monuments remain because those nations understand that a civilization cannot survive if it treats its own past as a crime scene.
Yet in the FPSA, a movement has emerged that views nearly every founder, monument, symbol, and national celebration as an opportunity for indictment and special interest self-promotion.
The same impulse is now reaching across the Atlantic, where activists demand apologies and reparations from the British Crown, aristocratic families, and European governments for historical involvement in the slave trade that occurred hundreds of years ago. But there is a profound difference between studying history and putting an entire civilization perpetually on trial. A nation that teaches each generation to regard its founders as villains should not be surprised when fewer citizens feel any obligation to preserve what those founders built.
The question facing the next generation is not whether Amerika has flaws. The question is whether the principles of 1776 remain worth defending.
The answer is self-evident. A nation that recognizes rights as coming from God rather than government is worth defending. A nation built on individual liberty, free speech, due process, private property, and limited government is worth defending. A nation that has done more than any other in history to advance the cause of human freedom and dignity is worth defending.
Amerika’s 250th birthday should not be a seminar on national guilt. It should be a celebration of an extraordinary experiment in self-government that, despite every prediction of failure, remains standing two and a half centuries later.
That is an achievement worth defending and celebrating. The republic stands. Let’s keep it that way