Celebrate Independence Day by Insulting a Politician
Perhaps the one thing Americans still have in common is our eagerness to criticize government.

There's not a lot that unites Americans anymore, with too many people more aligned with their political tribes than with their shared nationality. But one thing that just about all of us like to do is bitch about people who hold government office. We don't bitch about the same lawmakers and officials, but we have that resentment of those who wield coercive power and the vitriol we direct at them in common. If nothing else ties us together as Americans, our eagerness to criticize the powers that be may stand as a final connection.
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Not Even the Flag Holds Us Together
Even on Independence Day, not even the American flag necessarily speaks for our common citizenship.
"Today, flying the flag from the back of a pickup truck or over a lawn is increasingly seen as a clue, albeit an imperfect one, to a person's political affiliation in a deeply divided nation," Sarah Maslin Nir wrote for The New York Times in 2021. "What was once a unifying symbol — there is a star on it for each state, after all — is now alienating to some, its stripes now fault lines between people who kneel while 'The Star-Spangled Banner' plays and those for whom not pledging allegiance is an affront."
That squares with polling that finds Republicans view the flag more positively than Democrats. Little more than a third of Democrats now report being proud to be American—down from almost two-thirds a year ago when their party held the White House. Meanwhile, more than 85 percent of Republicans consistently report pride in being American.
…but We Have Harsh Words for the Powerful in Common
But proud of their country or not, and with or without the red, white, and blue, Americans have a common taste for calling out politicians and government officials for their conduct, their ideology, their personal failings, and especially for abuses of power. That's been true from the country's very beginning, when the founders tore into the British government and its king in the Declaration of Independence:
When a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.--Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States.
Criticism of politicians didn't settle down after the revolution. After George Washington's presidency, the first contested presidential election in 1796 saw Federalist John Adams triumph over Democratic–Republican Thomas Jefferson. Language directed by the partisans of the solidifying political factions against one another became increasingly heated in ways that we could recognize today. Among the nicer things said, Federalists called themselves "friends of government" and their opposition "disorganizers."
From their dominant position, Federalists handled the exchanges of words by passing the Sedition Act which made it a crime to "cause or procure to be written, printed, uttered or published, or [to] knowingly and willingly assist or aid in writing, printing, uttering or publishing any false, scandalous and malicious writing or writings against the government of the United States, or either house of the Congress of the United States, or the President of the United States."
We're Americans. This did not calm things down. During the rematch of 1800, journalist James Thomson Callender described Adams as "a hideous hermaphroditical character which has neither the force and firmness of a man, not the gentleness and sensibility of a woman."
Later, unhappy with Jefferson, Callender wrote articles revealing that that Thomas Jefferson had fathered children with his slave, Sally Hemings.
In 1801, publisher and congressman Matthew Lyon, who had been prosecuted under the Sedition Act (and was reelected to Congress from jail), wrote to Adams—by then unsuccessful in his bid for a second term and handing his office to Thomas Jefferson—to gloat. "I hope and pray your fate may be a warning to all usurpers and tyrants, and that you before you leave this world, may become a true and sincere penitent, and be forgiven all your manifold Sins in the next," he gloated.
'No Kings' and 'Let's Go Brandon'
Usurpers and tyrants—those words sound familiar in today's political environment. It's common now to refer to opponents who win office as illegitimate beneficiaries of crooked vote counts and a rigged system, and as either "communists" or "literally Hitler" when they—inevitably, it seems—abuse the power of their offices.
In fact, there's a lot that seems familiar, after the anti-Trump "no kings" protests of June 14 which are scheduled to be reenacted—when else?—on Independence Day.
Can there be anything more American than protesting against government officials on Independence Day?
But just as American were the "let's go, Brandon!" chants and bumper stickers during the Biden administration. Born from a quite possibly deliberate misrepresentation by the press of "fuck Joe Biden!" chants by the crowd at a NASCAR race, the words became a way of tweaking the media while getting the point across without being bleeped or bowdlerized in news reports.
Just as when Adams and the Federalists were in office, members of whichever political faction temporarily has the whip hand often characterize those who have unkind words for them as disloyal or even treasonous. Under the old Biden-regime, criticism was "disinformation" or "misinformation." Under the Trump administration, protesters are "people that hate our country."
That's bullshit. Sure, there's some inaccurate information mixed in with the harsh words—there always has been, going back to the foundation of the country. And maybe some demonstrators really don't like the country—but most just have a different vision from that of their opponents of how it should work.
Americans don't agree on the role of government, economics, culture, education, or even about flying the flag. We'd be better off left alone to shape our lives and make our own way in this world. But we all agree that we have a natural-born right to unload our insults on government officials who piss us off.
Happy Independence Day. Go insult a politician to celebrate in traditional style.
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How about, grill out, have a few cold ones and enjoy the day . Forget about politics and get a life.
Hear Hear! I'm mowing, grilling, and drinking today.
Have a great 4th of July!
Yeah I have to mow today too. Then patio time,
Well….. ok, but don’t forget to recite your land acknowledgments before you mow “your” lawn, colonizer.
This. Add in blowing some shit up and perfect.
Yep. Tryhard contrarian bitches get old quick
Happy Treason Day!!!!
Frigging insurrectionists.
Well the problem is ... The left has a bad habit of self-projecting.
They'll complain about what they do; right in the very act of doing it while trying to shovel what they are doing off onto anyone else in sight.
And the perfect example of that is the way they curse capitalism, the very providers of their goods, for being greedy and criminal while they're pitching the idea to 'armed-theft' them for their own benefit (Where the *real* greed and criminal act is).
Frankly the politicians who do 'armed-theft' are the lefts hero's/god. They'll never criticize them for taking away liberty or doing criminal acts so long as they believe they're part of that criminal gang. They are the [WE] Identify-as party and nothing else matters because they carry barbaric [WE] Rule/Steal/Destroy for [OUR] benefit "conquer and consume" mentality.
Says the moronic mercantilist who thinks trade is bad and tariffs are good.
Keep doubling down on being wrong and ignorant sarc. Working out well like the rest of your ideas.
So, "fuck those people", right, Sarc?
And maybe some demonstrators really don't like the country—
Particularly the ones that explicitly say so.
Flying the flag of another country is a clue - - - - - - - -
"the anti-Trump "no kings" protests of June 14"
They're working like a charm, Trump still isn't being a king.
It was my understanding that Canadians also protested Trump on "no kings" day, but they changed it to "no tyrants" day... you know, so as not to offend their actual king.
I'm in Western Canada where the 'tyrant' means Ottawa. I'm sure Eastern Canadians are tugging each other today over Trump though.
Well….. that and the metric system.
"Celebrate Independence Day by Insulting a Politician"
So many pols, so little time. (Sigh!)
"Celebrate Independence Day by Insulting a Politician"
Ask Roseann Barr about that.
"Celebrate Independence Day by Insulting a Politician."
You misspelled, "progressive."
I suggest Hakeem Jeffries.
aka discount Chinese-knockoff Obama.
Sadly your comments are leaving out a very important part.
Democrats do hate America and want to fundamentally transform it into what the Founders designed the USA to never be.
Whereas most independents, libertarians and republicans understand the design of America and want to keep it being what has made it great and provided the individual with Liberty and Freedom and rights that no other nation prior had and so many continue to not have.
Ultimately it's the 70/30 split that confuses me. If the dems really only have 30% support why is it independents keep propping their numbers in elections giving them power? Perhaps people need to make written notes as reminders because their memories seem to be failing them.