250 Years Later, Why We’re Still Fighting About Our Founding

250 Years Later, Why We’re Still Fighting About Our Founding

America has no shared language, religion, or fixed borders — which is exactly why the founding myth was invented, and why both parties are still fighting to own it 250 years later.

Jul 3, 2026 36:07 Difficulty: Intermediate Played

TL;DR

Jia Lynn Yang, a New York Times reporter focused on big ideas, joins Michael Barbaro to explore why America's founding myth still divides the country at its 250th anniversary. She traces how the myth — born of necessity in a nation lacking a shared language or religion — has been alternately weaponized, deconstructed, and reclaimed across two and a half centuries. From Parson Weems's fabricated cherry-tree story to Frederick Douglass's radical reinterpretation of the Declaration, to Reagan's Cold War patriotism, to Trump literally inserting his signature into founding documents, the fight over who owns the founding has never stopped. The key takeaway: engaging with the founding's ideals — not just its facts — may be the only way to rebuild a shared national story.

#American founding #founding myth #political polarization #Declaration of Independence #Frederick Douglass #Thomas Jefferson #George Washington #myth vs fact #national identity #bicentennial #Trump and history #Reagan era #abolition movement #immigration and American dream #historical revisionism #250th anniversary #Sally Hemings #Reagan #Trump #abolition #myth-busting #Charles Beard

Jia Lynn Yang of The New York Times joins Michael Barbaro to examine the 250-year history of America's founding myth — why it was invented, how it has been weaponized, deconstructed, and reclaimed across the centuries, and whether it can still serve as common ground in a fractured nation.

Chapter list
  • The episode opens with a standard sponsorship read for Bank of America Private Bank, positioning the brand around ambition, legacy, and powerful financial possibilities. The ad also notes the bank's role as official bank of the FIFA World Cup 2026, a tie-in to the episode's July 4th timing.

  • Michael Barbaro opens by welcoming Jia Lynn Yang to The Daily for the first time — a debut long delayed because, as the former national editor, she was the person who sent other reporters to the show rather than appearing herself. Now in a new role focused on big ideas and national debates, Yang arrives on the perfect occasion: the eve of America's 250th birthday. Barbaro sets up the episode's central question by noting that Yang arrived at a surprising and counterintuitive answer about what this anniversary really means for the country — an answer that will unfold over the next half hour.

  • Yang paints a vivid picture of the run-up to America's 250th anniversary as a politically charged moment rather than a unifying one. Trump has issued executive orders banning mentions of slavery from national park historic monuments, dismantled plaques about the nine enslaved people owned by Washington, and unveiled a commemorative passport featuring his own image standing before the Declaration of Independence with his signature at the bottom — literally inserting himself into the founding. The 250th kickoff itself becomes a campaign-style rally in which Trump compares his political movement to the patriots of 1776, claiming the founding fully for himself and the Republican Party. On the other side, Yang observes a striking silence from the left: a sense of awkwardness, or a willingness to simply let one side take the cultural territory.

  • Before diving into the history, Yang pauses to define her terms — and the distinction is crucial. A founding myth is not a lie; it's a story that helps a people figure out what they stand for, who they are, and where they're going. This is not the same as dishonest political spin, even in an era of constant political lying. Yang reports that even historians who are deepest in the muck of what went wrong — who know every uncomfortable fact — largely argue that America cannot abandon the project of making meaning from its founding. To stop debating the founding, they say, is to stop practicing democracy itself. It's the ongoing argument about what the country is for that keeps the democratic experiment alive.

  • Yang lays out a key historical insight: at its founding, the United States lacked every traditional ingredient for national unity. There was no single shared language, no official state religion — only competing Christian denominations — and the literal geographic borders of the country were constantly in flux. Without those anchors, something else had to hold the experiment together, and that something was the founding story itself. History in the 18th and early 19th centuries was less an academic discipline and more a literary tradition: stories told and retold because they gave people a sense of meaning and identity, not merely because they were accurate. The nation needed a myth, and so one was built.

  • To illustrate how founding mythology was manufactured from the very beginning, Yang tells the story of Mason Locke Weems — not a trained historian, but a traveling Bible salesman who loved George Washington and wrote what he called a biography after Washington's 1799 death. The book is filled with invented stories, most famously the tale of young Washington chopping down a cherry tree and then confessing to his father, 'Father, I could not tell a lie.' The story has no historical basis. No evidence it ever happened. Yet it became one of the most widely repeated tales in American culture for centuries, turning Washington into a moral fable for children and a model of virtuous national character. Yang and Barbaro note the delicious irony: the very story used to establish Washington as incapable of lying is itself a lie.

  • Frederick Douglass is Yang's most powerful exhibit for the argument that engaging with the founding myth — rather than rejecting it — can change history. Douglass was born into slavery and was under no illusions about the country's failure to live up to its founding ideals; he saw hostility from white Americans even after escaping north. Yet in his landmark speech 'What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?', Douglass didn't condemn the Declaration — he elevated it, calling it 'the ringbolt to the chain of your nation's destiny' and its principles 'saving principles' to be stood by on all occasions and against all foes. He reinterpreted Jefferson's words not as the hypocrisy of a slaveholder, but as a prophetic promise that the country was bound to fulfill. That act of creative myth-making was not strictly factual — Yang acknowledges we can't know what Jefferson 'meant' in his own mind — but it was enormously powerful. Lincoln took it up. It fueled abolition. It shaped the moral framework of the Civil War.

  • For most of the 18th and 19th centuries, history was a literary art — compelling stories told by educated gentlemen, not a rigorous academic discipline. That changes with the rise of American research universities in the late 19th century, which brought scientific standards of evidence to the study of the past and created the profession of trained historian. Once historians were required to prove their claims, the halos started slipping off the Founders. The pivotal early moment comes from historian Charles Beard, who argued in the early 20th century that the Founders were not selfless visionaries divinely touched by God, but self-interested elite farmers and aristocrats who waged revolution to protect their own property and material wealth. Conservatives recoil; the left embraces the critique but finds ways to still extract meaning from the founding — arguing that the story of elite self-interest at the founding is precisely why modern movements for broader democratic participation are just.

  • By 1976, the United States is living through one of its most turbulent periods: the fallout from Vietnam, the Watergate scandal, and deep racial unrest. It is not a time when the country feels like a success story. Yet the bicentennial cannot be avoided — 200 years is 200 years — and what's striking to Yang is how even the fiercest critics of the founding myth reach for it to legitimize their causes. Gay pride marchers tell the cameras that gay people have been here since the Revolution and fought and died for this country. The Afro-American Bicentennial Corporation claims that Black Americans have their own relationship to the bicentennial, distinct from the dominant white narrative, but still grounded in a claim on the founding's revolutionary spirit. Even as they critique, they invoke. Even as they reject the mainstream myth, they build their own version of it. The founding remains the common currency of American political argument, even if the silos are deepening.

  • Brief transition moment between the bicentennial discussion and the Reagan era segment.

  • If the 1976 bicentennial showed both sides still fighting over the founding, the Reagan era in the 1980s tips the balance decisively. Reagan's Cold War rhetoric frames the founding as being fundamentally about personal liberty rather than equality — 'If we lose freedom here, there's no place to escape to' — making the founding the ideological foundation for resistance to big government. Simultaneously, the evangelical movement is surging, declaring America a nation under God, built on Judeo-Christian principles, divinely called to greatness. Reagan and the GOP absorb both currents, fusing them into a single story: the founding is ours, it is about liberty and God, and we are its true inheritors. By the time this narrative has taken hold, Yang observes, the Republican Party has consolidated a commanding cultural ownership of the founding myth that will persist into the Trump era.

  • The late 1990s bring a story that shakes the founding myth to its core for the American left. Historian Annette Gordon-Reed publishes a landmark book documenting that Thomas Jefferson — the man who wrote 'All men are created equal' — fathered children with Sally Hemings, one of his enslaved people. A year later, DNA testing confirms her findings. The story becomes front-page news: a 200-year-old sex scandal returned to the headlines with scientific proof. For anyone who had grown up seeing Jefferson as the embodiment of Enlightenment ideals and American promise, this is more than disillusionment — it's the myth exploding. Combined with growing scholarship about the dispossession of Native Americans and the lived realities of enslaved people, the left now faces a founding that feels almost impossible to draw inspiration from.

  • This is the episode's most analytically sharp moment. Yang is clear: she is fully committed to truth as a journalist, and the facts of the founding — slavery, dispossession, hypocrisy — are not optional. But she argues that facts alone do not produce meaning, and a political movement that can only articulate flaws cannot sustain itself. The act of finding meaning in the founding — not sanitizing it, but constructing a story about what it points toward — is a completely separate endeavor from fact-finding, and one the left has largely abandoned. More facts can actually make the meaning-making harder, producing cynicism rather than direction. Even some historians, Yang notes, have become reflective about this: revealing facts is just one corner of understanding the American founding. No amount of facts leads you straight to the question of what it all means — that requires a different kind of intellectual and political work.

  • So what's the way forward? Yang's answer is both modest and radical: read the documents. The Declaration's opening lines. The Gettysburg Address. They are short. But when Yang reread them in the course of reporting this story, she found her imagination reignited — a sense that there are so many possibilities, so many ways to interpret the founding, so many directions the country could still go. She describes it as recovering a 'lost tradition' — the tradition of people like Douglass and Lincoln who took the founding's words and made new meaning out of them, changing the country in the process. The country will never agree on what liberty means, or what equality means; those are the biggest ideas there are. But the country has found its bearings when it is genuinely engaged in arguing about them — and that argument has to start somewhere.

  • Barbaro closes the interview with a personal question: as the child of immigrants, what does all of this mean to Yang's own family? Her answer is one of the episode's most moving moments. Yang describes her father's love of reading Lincoln's writing — a man who, in the absolute darkest hour of the country, when the whole thing felt like it was going to be lost, still believed the country could become something that had never been seen before. That belief — in possibility, in reimagination, in the founding as a beginning rather than a conclusion — is, Yang says, why some immigrants become America's most devoted believers in its myths. There are reasons for cynicism every day. But America is, she says, a place that's always imagining something else. It begins by imagining a democracy never seen before, and it keeps reimagining. The challenge for the country now is to figure out what the founding means to us today, and to find — as others have done in every generation — a story that holds us together.

  • After the interview concludes, Barbaro transitions to The Daily's standard closing format. He reads two significant news stories: Russia's retaliatory ballistic missile and drone attacks on Ukraine's capital Kyiv — described as retaliation for weeks of Ukrainian strikes deep inside Russia that caused fuel shortages and political pressure on Putin — killed at least 21 people and injured 85 more. He then covers a dangerous heat dome pushing temperatures near 100 degrees across tens of millions of Americans from the Midwest to the East Coast, with New York City's mayor warning residents to stay indoors. Production credits follow, naming producers, editors, engineers, and composers, before final sponsor reads for Rippling and Planned Parenthood Federation of America close out the episode.

Founding myth
A set of stories and beliefs about a nation's origins that serve to unify its people and give them a shared identity, distinct from strictly factual historical accounts.
Ringbolt
A bolt with a ring attached, used to secure ropes or chains; Douglass used 'ringbolt to the chain of your nation's destiny' as a metaphor for the Declaration being the anchor point of America's future.
Bicentennial
A 200th anniversary celebration; refers here to the United States' 1976 celebration of 200 years of independence, which unfolded amid Vietnam, Watergate, and racial unrest.
American exceptionalism
The belief that the United States is uniquely special or divinely chosen among nations, with a distinctive mission in world history — closely tied to founding mythology.
Mason Locke Weems
An early 19th-century traveling Bible salesman who wrote a popular but largely fabricated biography of George Washington, inventing the famous cherry-tree story.
Myth-busting
The practice of systematically debunking accepted stories or beliefs using factual evidence; in this episode, refers to the academic dismantling of founding-era hagiography.
Charles Beard
An early 20th-century American historian who argued the Founding Fathers were motivated primarily by self-interest and material wealth rather than altruistic ideals, sparking the modern ideological debate over the founding.
Annette Gordon-Reed
A historian who documented the relationship between Thomas Jefferson and his enslaved woman Sally Hemings, later confirmed by DNA evidence, in a landmark late-1990s book.
Sally Hemings
An enslaved woman owned by Thomas Jefferson with whom DNA evidence confirmed he fathered children, a revelation that deeply complicated Jefferson's legacy as a founding idealist.
Heat dome
A meteorological phenomenon in which a sprawling high-pressure weather system traps warm air near the ground, causing prolonged extreme heat over a wide geographic area.
Hagiography
A biography that idealizes or uncritically venerates its subject; used here to describe the early mythologized accounts of the Founding Fathers.
Evangelical movement
A broad Protestant Christian movement emphasizing personal conversion and active faith; in the 1980s it became a major political force fusing Christian nationalism with Republican founding rhetoric.
Sanitize (history)
To selectively remove uncomfortable or unflattering historical facts from public narratives, making the past appear cleaner or more flattering than evidence warrants.
Paragon
A person or thing regarded as a perfect example of a particular quality; used here to describe how Jefferson was once seen as a paragon of American ideals before the Hemings revelations.
Dispossession
The act of depriving people of land or property; used here in the context of what the founding and westward expansion meant for Native American peoples.

Chapter 2 · 00:35

Introduction: The 250th Anniversary and the Founding Myth

Michael Barbaro opens by welcoming Jia Lynn Yang to The Daily for the first time — a debut long delayed because, as the former national editor, she was the person who sent other reporters to the show rather than appearing herself. Now in a new role focused on big ideas and national debates, Yang arrives on the perfect occasion: the eve of America's 250th birthday. Barbaro sets up the episode's central question by noting that Yang arrived at a surprising and counterintuitive answer about what this anniversary really means for the country — an answer that will unfold over the next half hour.

Chapter 3 · 02:37

Trump, the 250th, and the Battle Over Who Owns the Founding

Yang paints a vivid picture of the run-up to America's 250th anniversary as a politically charged moment rather than a unifying one. Trump has issued executive orders banning mentions of slavery from national park historic monuments, dismantled plaques about the nine enslaved people owned by Washington, and unveiled a commemorative passport featuring his own image standing before the Declaration of Independence with his signature at the bottom — literally inserting himself into the founding. The 250th kickoff itself becomes a campaign-style rally in which Trump compares his political movement to the patriots of 1776, claiming the founding fully for himself and the Republican Party. On the other side, Yang observes a striking silence from the left: a sense of awkwardness, or a willingness to simply let one side take the cultural territory.

Claims made here

Cruz dismantled plaques telling the stories of nine enslaved people who lived in the president's house and were owned by George Washington.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

The Trump administration issued executive orders prohibiting mentions of slavery from national park historic monuments.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

Trump's 250th anniversary kickoff featured a campaign-style rally in which he compared his political movement to the patriots of 1776.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

Chapter 4 · 06:55

What Is a Founding Myth — and Why Does It Matter?

Before diving into the history, Yang pauses to define her terms — and the distinction is crucial. A founding myth is not a lie; it's a story that helps a people figure out what they stand for, who they are, and where they're going. This is not the same as dishonest political spin, even in an era of constant political lying. Yang reports that even historians who are deepest in the muck of what went wrong — who know every uncomfortable fact — largely argue that America cannot abandon the project of making meaning from its founding. To stop debating the founding, they say, is to stop practicing democracy itself. It's the ongoing argument about what the country is for that keeps the democratic experiment alive.

Chapter 5 · 09:16

A Nation Without Glue: Why the Myth Was Invented

Yang lays out a key historical insight: at its founding, the United States lacked every traditional ingredient for national unity. There was no single shared language, no official state religion — only competing Christian denominations — and the literal geographic borders of the country were constantly in flux. Without those anchors, something else had to hold the experiment together, and that something was the founding story itself. History in the 18th and early 19th centuries was less an academic discipline and more a literary tradition: stories told and retold because they gave people a sense of meaning and identity, not merely because they were accurate. The nation needed a myth, and so one was built.

Chapter 6 · 10:20

Mason Locke Weems and the Birth of the Washington Legend

To illustrate how founding mythology was manufactured from the very beginning, Yang tells the story of Mason Locke Weems — not a trained historian, but a traveling Bible salesman who loved George Washington and wrote what he called a biography after Washington's 1799 death. The book is filled with invented stories, most famously the tale of young Washington chopping down a cherry tree and then confessing to his father, 'Father, I could not tell a lie.' The story has no historical basis. No evidence it ever happened. Yet it became one of the most widely repeated tales in American culture for centuries, turning Washington into a moral fable for children and a model of virtuous national character. Yang and Barbaro note the delicious irony: the very story used to establish Washington as incapable of lying is itself a lie.

Claims made here

Mason Locke Weems invented the story of George Washington and the cherry tree in an 1800 biography, and there is no historical evidence the event ever occurred.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

Chapter 7 · 13:20

Frederick Douglass and the Radical Power of the Founding Myth

Frederick Douglass is Yang's most powerful exhibit for the argument that engaging with the founding myth — rather than rejecting it — can change history. Douglass was born into slavery and was under no illusions about the country's failure to live up to its founding ideals; he saw hostility from white Americans even after escaping north. Yet in his landmark speech 'What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?', Douglass didn't condemn the Declaration — he elevated it, calling it 'the ringbolt to the chain of your nation's destiny' and its principles 'saving principles' to be stood by on all occasions and against all foes. He reinterpreted Jefferson's words not as the hypocrisy of a slaveholder, but as a prophetic promise that the country was bound to fulfill. That act of creative myth-making was not strictly factual — Yang acknowledges we can't know what Jefferson 'meant' in his own mind — but it was enormously powerful. Lincoln took it up. It fueled abolition. It shaped the moral framework of the Civil War.

Claims made here

Frederick Douglass was born into slavery and later ran away to freedom in the North, where he still faced significant hostility from white Americans.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

Frederick Douglass's speech 'What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?' argues that the Declaration of Independence is a sacred document containing 'saving principles' that are the 'ringbolt to the chain of your nation's destiny.'

Jia Lynn Yang Frederick Douglass, 'What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?' speech

Chapter 8 · 15:58

The Rise of Professional History and the Myth-Busters

For most of the 18th and 19th centuries, history was a literary art — compelling stories told by educated gentlemen, not a rigorous academic discipline. That changes with the rise of American research universities in the late 19th century, which brought scientific standards of evidence to the study of the past and created the profession of trained historian. Once historians were required to prove their claims, the halos started slipping off the Founders. The pivotal early moment comes from historian Charles Beard, who argued in the early 20th century that the Founders were not selfless visionaries divinely touched by God, but self-interested elite farmers and aristocrats who waged revolution to protect their own property and material wealth. Conservatives recoil; the left embraces the critique but finds ways to still extract meaning from the founding — arguing that the story of elite self-interest at the founding is precisely why modern movements for broader democratic participation are just.

Claims made here

American research universities emerged in the late 19th century, transforming history from a literary tradition into a rigorous, evidence-based academic discipline.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

Early 20th-century historian Charles Beard argued the Founding Fathers were elite aristocrats motivated by self-interest and desire to protect their material wealth rather than altruistic ideals.

Jia Lynn Yang Charles Beard's early 20th-century historical work on the Founding Fathers

Chapter 9 · 18:20

The 1976 Bicentennial: Fighting Over the Founding in the Dark

By 1976, the United States is living through one of its most turbulent periods: the fallout from Vietnam, the Watergate scandal, and deep racial unrest. It is not a time when the country feels like a success story. Yet the bicentennial cannot be avoided — 200 years is 200 years — and what's striking to Yang is how even the fiercest critics of the founding myth reach for it to legitimize their causes. Gay pride marchers tell the cameras that gay people have been here since the Revolution and fought and died for this country. The Afro-American Bicentennial Corporation claims that Black Americans have their own relationship to the bicentennial, distinct from the dominant white narrative, but still grounded in a claim on the founding's revolutionary spirit. Even as they critique, they invoke. Even as they reject the mainstream myth, they build their own version of it. The founding remains the common currency of American political argument, even if the silos are deepening.

History
The 1976 Bicentennial: Even Critics Still Claimed the Founding

250 Years Later, Why We’re Still Fighting About Our Founding · Jul 3, 2026 History

Even at the height of Vietnam, Watergate, and racial unrest, America's sharpest critics didn't abandon the founding — they fought over who inherited it. Gay rights marchers and Black activists both marched under the banner of revolutionary spirit, proving the myth's resilience even among those it had failed.

Chapter 10 · 23:15

Ad Break

Brief transition moment between the bicentennial discussion and the Reagan era segment.

Chapter 11 · 23:17

Reagan, the Evangelical Movement, and the GOP's Ownership of the Founding

If the 1976 bicentennial showed both sides still fighting over the founding, the Reagan era in the 1980s tips the balance decisively. Reagan's Cold War rhetoric frames the founding as being fundamentally about personal liberty rather than equality — 'If we lose freedom here, there's no place to escape to' — making the founding the ideological foundation for resistance to big government. Simultaneously, the evangelical movement is surging, declaring America a nation under God, built on Judeo-Christian principles, divinely called to greatness. Reagan and the GOP absorb both currents, fusing them into a single story: the founding is ours, it is about liberty and God, and we are its true inheritors. By the time this narrative has taken hold, Yang observes, the Republican Party has consolidated a commanding cultural ownership of the founding myth that will persist into the Trump era.

Chapter 12 · 25:50

Jefferson, Sally Hemings, and the Exploding Myth

The late 1990s bring a story that shakes the founding myth to its core for the American left. Historian Annette Gordon-Reed publishes a landmark book documenting that Thomas Jefferson — the man who wrote 'All men are created equal' — fathered children with Sally Hemings, one of his enslaved people. A year later, DNA testing confirms her findings. The story becomes front-page news: a 200-year-old sex scandal returned to the headlines with scientific proof. For anyone who had grown up seeing Jefferson as the embodiment of Enlightenment ideals and American promise, this is more than disillusionment — it's the myth exploding. Combined with growing scholarship about the dispossession of Native Americans and the lived realities of enslaved people, the left now faces a founding that feels almost impossible to draw inspiration from.

Claims made here

Historian Annette Gordon-Reed wrote a book in the late 1990s documenting that Thomas Jefferson fathered children with Sally Hemings, one of his enslaved people, and DNA testing subsequently confirmed her findings.

Jia Lynn Yang Annette Gordon-Reed's book on Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson; subsequent DN…

Chapter 13 · 28:02

The Cost of Fact-Finding Without Meaning-Making

This is the episode's most analytically sharp moment. Yang is clear: she is fully committed to truth as a journalist, and the facts of the founding — slavery, dispossession, hypocrisy — are not optional. But she argues that facts alone do not produce meaning, and a political movement that can only articulate flaws cannot sustain itself. The act of finding meaning in the founding — not sanitizing it, but constructing a story about what it points toward — is a completely separate endeavor from fact-finding, and one the left has largely abandoned. More facts can actually make the meaning-making harder, producing cynicism rather than direction. Even some historians, Yang notes, have become reflective about this: revealing facts is just one corner of understanding the American founding. No amount of facts leads you straight to the question of what it all means — that requires a different kind of intellectual and political work.

Claims made here

The American left largely ceded the symbolic and emotional territory of the founding to Republicans and Trump by 2025, without an organized counter-narrative comparable to that seen during the 1976 bicentennial.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

Chapter 14 · 31:10

The Path Back: Read the Documents, Make New Meaning

So what's the way forward? Yang's answer is both modest and radical: read the documents. The Declaration's opening lines. The Gettysburg Address. They are short. But when Yang reread them in the course of reporting this story, she found her imagination reignited — a sense that there are so many possibilities, so many ways to interpret the founding, so many directions the country could still go. She describes it as recovering a 'lost tradition' — the tradition of people like Douglass and Lincoln who took the founding's words and made new meaning out of them, changing the country in the process. The country will never agree on what liberty means, or what equality means; those are the biggest ideas there are. But the country has found its bearings when it is genuinely engaged in arguing about them — and that argument has to start somewhere.

Chapter 15 · 33:10

A Personal Note: Immigrants and the Deepest Belief in America

Barbaro closes the interview with a personal question: as the child of immigrants, what does all of this mean to Yang's own family? Her answer is one of the episode's most moving moments. Yang describes her father's love of reading Lincoln's writing — a man who, in the absolute darkest hour of the country, when the whole thing felt like it was going to be lost, still believed the country could become something that had never been seen before. That belief — in possibility, in reimagination, in the founding as a beginning rather than a conclusion — is, Yang says, why some immigrants become America's most devoted believers in its myths. There are reasons for cynicism every day. But America is, she says, a place that's always imagining something else. It begins by imagining a democracy never seen before, and it keeps reimagining. The challenge for the country now is to figure out what the founding means to us today, and to find — as others have done in every generation — a story that holds us together.

Society & Culture
Immigrants as America's Most Devoted Believers

250 Years Later, Why We’re Still Fighting About Our Founding · Jul 3, 2026 Society & Culture

Some immigrants become America's most devoted believers in its founding myths precisely because they chose to come. Jia Lynn Yang's father reads Lincoln in America's darkest hours and finds a person who still believed the country could become something never seen before — and finds reasons to do the same.

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3 / 12 cited (25%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

The Trump administration issued executive orders prohibiting mentions of slavery from national park historic monuments.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

Cruz dismantled plaques telling the stories of nine enslaved people who lived in the president's house and were owned by George Washington.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

Mason Locke Weems invented the story of George Washington and the cherry tree in an 1800 biography, and there is no historical evidence the event ever occurred.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

Frederick Douglass was born into slavery and later ran away to freedom in the North, where he still faced significant hostility from white Americans.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

Frederick Douglass's speech 'What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?' argues that the Declaration of Independence is a sacred document containing 'saving principles' that are the 'ringbolt to the chain of your nation's destiny.'

Jia Lynn Yang Frederick Douglass, 'What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?' speech

American research universities emerged in the late 19th century, transforming history from a literary tradition into a rigorous, evidence-based academic discipline.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

Early 20th-century historian Charles Beard argued the Founding Fathers were elite aristocrats motivated by self-interest and desire to protect their material wealth rather than altruistic ideals.

Jia Lynn Yang Charles Beard's early 20th-century historical work on the Founding Fathers

Historian Annette Gordon-Reed wrote a book in the late 1990s documenting that Thomas Jefferson fathered children with Sally Hemings, one of his enslaved people, and DNA testing subsequently confirmed her findings.

Jia Lynn Yang Annette Gordon-Reed's book on Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson; subsequent DN…

Trump's 250th anniversary kickoff featured a campaign-style rally in which he compared his political movement to the patriots of 1776.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

Russia's retaliatory attacks on Kyiv in response to Ukrainian strikes inside Russia killed at least 21 people and injured at least 85 more.

Michael Barbaro no source cited

Dangerous heat reaching around 100 degrees blanketed tens of millions of Americans on July 3rd, spreading from the Midwest to the East Coast including Atlanta and New York City.

Michael Barbaro no source cited

The American left largely ceded the symbolic and emotional territory of the founding to Republicans and Trump by 2025, without an organized counter-narrative comparable to that seen during the 1976 bicentennial.

Jia Lynn Yang no source cited

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