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MORNING GLORY: A summer of celebration followed by a fall of mourning

The next four months are anniversary heavy. Before the fireworks of the 250th Fourth of July begin, try with family and friends to agree on what we are celebrating, and try as well to articulate why and how we defend what our country has long been committed to on paper and for 250 years in actual and expanding practice. While the Semiquincentennial is upon us in a month, we are also only three months and an handful of days away from the 25th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks by Al...

Fox News 8d ago

Why America’s next 250 years can be greater than its first 250

In August of 1776, the Revolution in America was almost snuffed out. Earlier that year, 44-year-old George Washington had marched 19,000 ragtag soldiers to Manhattan after forcing a British evacuation of Boston in the months before the declaration. In July, the British launched an attack on the colonies with the full weight of the most powerful military in the world.

Fox News 3d ago

Words of War

Decades ago, it was a truism that the 24/7 news cycle exercised a malign influence on policy making. It kept senior leaders fixated on a flickering television screen when their time would have been better spent weighing evidence, debating alternatives, and considering opposing views. But today we contend with 24/7 commentary, which is so ubiquitous that we barely notice it, even as it causes a kind of dry rot of our good judgment.Supporters of the Trump administration’s war against Iran...

The Atlantic 13d ago

A Written Language for the Cherokee So Efficient It Was Thought to Be Magic

America at 250: The Revolutionary Spark A Smithsonian magazine special report The Man Who Created a Written Language for the Cherokee Did It So Efficiently and Elegantly, His Peers Thought It Was Magic Sequoyah’s syllabary faced suspicion initially, but after a demonstration, his version of “talking leaves” was widely embraced. And then the word spread At first, they laughed. Finally, they accused him of witchcraft.

Hacker News 5h ago

What It Would Take to Finally Slay the Gerrymander

This is an edition of Time-Travel Thursdays, a journey through The Atlantic’s archives to contextualize the present. Not long after the original gerrymander took its monstrous shape in 1812, The United States Gazette issued a harsh prophecy. Massachusetts Governor Elbridge Gerry might otherwise have been forgotten to history but for the wicked practice that would come to bear his name.

The Atlantic 6d ago