America’s 250th Birthday — and Its Manifold Gifts to the World
America’s influence has not been confined to its own borders; it has advanced the cause of human dignity far beyond them.
As the United States approaches its semiquincentennial, I find myself reflecting on the innumerable benefits America has bestowed upon the rest of humanity.
Today is June 2, a day in my native country of Bulgaria dedicated to honoring fallen heroes. It also commemorates the life of Hristo Botev — a 19th‑century poet and revolutionary whose story embodies the universal struggle for liberty.
Botev was captivated by Patrick Henry’s immortal words, “Give me liberty or give me death!” He devoted his short life to writing fiery poetry and organizing an uprising to free Bulgaria from nearly five centuries of Ottoman rule. Drawing from the Bulgarian émigré community in Romania, which enjoyed a measure of autonomy at the time, he assembled a group of committed young patriots.
In late April 1876, Botev and his “band of brothers” boarded the Austrian steamer Radetzky from a Danube port near Giurgiu, posing as gardeners traveling to Vienna, where Bulgarians were widely sought as skilled horticultural workers. As the ship approached the Bulgarian shore, Botev revealed the mission and demanded an unscheduled stop. The captain initially refused but ultimately relented in the face of determined, armed revolutionaries and allowed them to disembark.
The plan was to join a broader uprising already underway. But miscommunication about timing proved fatal. Botev’s detachment was isolated, surrounded, and ultimately destroyed. The young poet fulfilled in deed what he had proclaimed in words: he gave his life for the freedom of his country.
Elsewhere, the rebellion was crushed with brutal force. In towns such as Perushtitsa and Batak, irregular units aiding Ottoman authorities massacred men, women, and children — even after their surrender. These atrocities might have remained obscure were it not for two Americans: the diplomat Eugene Schuyler and the journalist Januarius MacGahan. Their investigations brought the truth to the world, galvanizing international outrage.
That outrage helped set in motion the chain of events that led to Bulgaria’s liberation in 1878. The newly restored Bulgarian state expressed its gratitude in formal telegrams — one addressed to Schuyler, recognizing that without his courage and integrity, the full extent of the atrocities might never have been known.
In 2018, my husband and I had the privilege of helping arrange for Schuyler to be honored posthumously by the Bulgarian government. A descendant of his family accepted the medal on his behalf — a small but meaningful act of remembrance.
At a time when anti-Americanism is deliberately cultivated and amplified by both external and internal enemies, such stories are worth recalling. America’s influence has not been confined to its own borders; it has advanced the cause of human dignity far beyond them.
As the nation marks its 250th anniversary, we would do well to remember not only its founding ideals but also the lives — abroad and at home — that those ideals have touched. Passing that understanding on to future generations is both a responsibility and a tribute to a remarkable legacy.
Nora D. Clinton is a Research Scholar & Project Manager at the Legal Insurrection Foundation. She was born and raised in Sofia, Bulgaria. She holds a PhD in Classics and has published extensively on ancient documents on stone. In 2020, she authored the popular memoir Quarantine Reflections Across Two Worlds. Nora is a co-founder of two partner charities dedicated to academic cooperation and American values. She lives in Northern Virginia with her husband and son.
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Comments
In America today, half the country struggles for a continuation of liberty while the other half of the country struggles for power over the first half.
I’ve been in email correspondence with one of the other LIers and we both agree that a revolution is long overdue.
Part of the pressure is being relieved by the productive relocating to welcoming states or municipalities, but I don’t think that will be quite enough.
It does seem that one might be brewing. People relocating to normal states or municipalities is helping for now, but, what happens when enough blue refugees show up and vote blue since they learned nothing from their recent past? Human nature is constant and tribalism is one aspect. To keep normal as being the greater good, the new comers can be run out when they see the refugees ruining their communities. Not by firearms necessarily, but by shunning, shaming, demonstrating in front of their homes, by making life miserable for them so they move.
I can’t even imagine how you manage that securely. I’m going to be motoring through Tucson in a couple weeks, and would love to take you to lunch. I thought Disqus might have a DM feature, but if it does, they hid it well.
Thank you, Nora. This is a reminder of why we observe Memorial Day. In our comfort, we tend to forget who sacrificed all they had, including their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor, so we can enjoy what we have.
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My mother came to the US from South Vietnam in 1970, I remember when I was a kid she would always ask the question why Americans seem to hate their own country.
She couldn’t grasp why these people who had toilets, air conditioning, refrigerators, washers and dryers, cars, beautiful houses, money, jobs, televisions, etc…
I couldn’t understand it myself when I was a kid, listening to friends in school bitch about their own home country and how rotten it was at times.
Fear not friend because it’s not everyone who feels this way, having lived in many different states the past 50+ years I’ve learned that most Americans love their nation.
They’re usually just quite about it.
They want to be left alone.
But I have this feeling that the moment they find their voice is coming pretty quick, and a lot of these regular people are armed and really good shots.
Happy 250th to you all.
I have a feeling you are right. A free people will only take so much.
god bless!
“Happy 250th to you all.”
Same back to you. And, please, folks. It’s “Independence Day”, not “forthage ah ly”.
“when I was a kid she would always ask the question why Americans seem to hate their own country.”
Entitlement invariably breeds ingratitude.
It’s a counterintuitive but immutable facet of human nature.
It’s yet one more reason why capitalism breeds a better society than socialism.
D-Day is the (one of them ) crowning points where america liberated the world from the prequels of obama fjb and the communistnazislam takeover
we salute thoseeee brave men!!
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