Harry Targaly 4, 2026, America will celebrate 250 years of independence. of p 56 signatures, America began the
greatest political joey in human history,” said President Trump of this
momentous anniversary. Natures, Amern
the journey in human history,” said President Trsary.
Class, Race, Patriarchy, Imperialism and
the “American “Revolution”
We should celebrate the continued call for democracy,
human rights, and freedom. But we need to be honest with ourselves. The United
States over these years has been among the most racist, violent, and
exploitative nations in human history.
First, and it is obvious, the proponents of
independence from Great Britain, the then reigning colonial empire, and
soldiers who took up arms were owners and supporters of the
slave system, the ravages of which exist even today. As Ted Allen documented,
the concept of race in what became the United States was invented to justify
slavery and the division of the working class. In other words, by 1776 the
slave system served profit and split the working class. American “revolutionaries” then I(and now)
celebrated freedom and democracy and accepted without discomfort the
superiority of “the white race.”
https://www.democracynow.org/2026/6/29/eddie_glaude
And the “revolution” was not only about defending
slave labor. It was about land. “He has excited
domestic Insurrections amongst us, and has endeavored to bring on the
Inhabitants of our Frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages, whose known Rule of
Warfare, is an undistinguished Destruction, of all Ages, Sexes and Conditions.”
As Rachel Nagle described on Democracy Now the American Revolution
was about the “right” of colonials to expand, slaughter, and occupy the
continent. As she compellingly argues, the American revolution
institutionalized imperialism, a project that continues till today. https://www.democracynow.org/2026/6/30/rebecca_nagle_first_america
And, of course, the Declaration boldly
states that “all men are created equal.” The system of patriarchy proclaimed
in this document was enshrined in the constitution and lives on in economics,
politics, and culture today.
On American Exceptionalism

U.S.
policymakers believe and still propagate various illusions or rationales for
United States foreign policy that become part of common political discourse. In
relations with Latin America, and particularly Cuba, policy has been built upon
economic interest, geopolitics, and ideology. The ideological discourse
justifying U.S. hegemony in the Western Hemisphere can be traced back to the
nineteenth century. Its modern exposition is surprisingly similar to
significant declarations by foreign
policy elites during the era of the Cuban war against Spanish colonialism.
For
example, shortly after the U.S. victory in the Spanish/Cuban/American war,
Indiana Senator Albert Beveridge articulated what was to become the new
ideology of American empire linking
economics to Godly purpose: “We will establish trading posts throughout the
world as distributing points for American products.” “Great colonies, governing
themselves, flying our flag and trading with us,
will grow about our posts of trade, And American law, American order, American
civilization, and the American flag will plant themselves on shores hitherto
bloody and benighted” (in Greg Jones, Honor in the Dust: Theodore
Roosevelt, War in the Philippines, and the Rise and Fall of America’s Imperial
Dream, 2012, 93).
In a
campaign speech in Indianapolis, Beveridge articulated a spiritual call and
rationale for a global policy that transcended mere economic gain. America’s
destiny required the U.S. “…to set the world its example of right and honor…We
cannot retreat from any soil where providence has unfurled our banner. It is
ours to save that soil, for liberty, and civilization" (in Jones, 96).
And speaking before the Senate justifying the colonization of the
Philippines, he proclaimed a U.S. mission that transcended politics; “It is
elemental…. it is racial. God has not been preparing the English-speaking and
Teutonic peoples for a thousand years for nothing but vain and idle
self-contemplation and self-admiration. No! He has made us the master
organizers of the world to establish system where chaos reigns. He has given us
the spirit of progress to overwhelm the forces of reaction throughout the
earth.” (Congressional Record, 56 Congress, I Session, pp.704-712).
Within
a few years of the U.S. colonization of Cuba and the Philippines, President
Theodore Roosevelt elaborated on the U.S. world mission. He spoke of the
necessity of promoting peace and justice in the world: a project that required adequate military capabilities both for “securing respect for
itself and of doing good to others.” To those who claim that the
United States seeks material advantage in its activist policy toward the
countries of the Western Hemisphere, Roosevelt responded that such claims were
untrue. The U.S., he said, is motivated by altruism: “All that this country desires is to see the neighboring countries stable, orderly, and
prosperous. Any country whose people conduct themselves well can count upon our
hearty friendship.”
Cuba was an example, he said: “If every country washed by
the Caribbean Sea would show the progress in stable and just civilization which
with the aid of the Platt Amendment Cuba has shown since our troops left the
island, and which so many of the republics in both Americas are constantly and
brilliantly showing, all questions of interference by the Nation with their
affairs would be at an end.” He assured Latin Americans in this address to
Congress in 1904 that “…. if they thus obey the primary laws of civilized
society, they may rest assured that they will be treated by us in a spirit of
cordial and helpful sympathy. We would interfere with them only in the last
resort….” (“Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine,” President’s Annual
Message to Congress, December 6, 1904).
During
a presentation in Norway in 1910 Roosevelt praised the U.S. for leaving Cuba as
promised after the war to return only temporarily because of
“….a disaster…a revolution” such that…. we were obliged to land
troops again.” The President proudly declared that: “And before I left the
Presidency Cuba resumed its career as a separate republic, holding its head
erect as a sovereign state among the other nations of the earth. All that our
people want is just exactly what the Cuban people themselves want—that is, a
continuance of order within the island, and peace and prosperity, so that there
shall be no shadow of an excuse for any outside intervention.” (“the Colonial
Policy of the United States,” An Address Delivered at Christiania, Norway, May
5, 1910).
Earlier
on January 18, 1909, to the Methodist Episcopal Church (“The Expansion of the
White Races”) Roosevelt applauded the increasing presence--he estimated 100
million people—of “European races” throughout the world. The indigenous peoples
of the Western Hemisphere
have been assimilated with their “intruders” with the end result “that the
Indian population of America is larger today than it was when
Columbus discovered the continent and stands on a far higher plane of
happiness and efficiency.”
And to
highlight the missionary message Roosevelt added: “Of course the best that can
happen to any people that has not already a high civilization of its own is to
assimilate and profit by American or European ideas, the ideas of civilization
and Christianity, without submitting to alien control; but such control, in
spite of all its defects, is in a very large number of cases the prerequisite
condition to the moral and material advance of the peoples who dwell in the
darker corners of the earth.”
Before
the reader dismisses these simplistic, racist statements, it is useful to
examine more recent proclamations of the motivations for United States foreign
policy particularly toward Latin America. It is worth remembering that recent
U.S. presidents, including Barack Obama, quote favorably from the words of
Theodore Roosevelt on various subjects.
For
example, in March, 1961, and clearly as a response to the Cuban revolution,
President John Kennedy announced the creation of a new “Alliance for Progress,”
in Latin American, “a vast cooperative effort, unparalleled in magnitude and
nobility of purpose, to satisfy the basic needs of the American people for
homes, work, and land, health and schools.” The Alliance was to be a ten-year
program of social and economic
development that would transform the hemisphere “into an historic decade of
democratic progress.” Representatives of participating countries
would prepare plans for their own development that would “establish targets and
priorities, insure monetary stability, establish the machinery
for vital social change, stimulate private activity and initiative, and provide
for a maximum national effort.” JFK promised U.S financial contributions to
stimulate economic reform and in the end transform
“the fragmentation of Latin American economies.” The variety of
programs—education, land reform, tax reform—would rebuild the region.
The
United States also pledged its assistance to those countries whose independence
might be threatened. And, of course, the President proclaimed that the United
States supports an alliance of free governments and will work to eliminate
“tyranny”. JFK expressed “our special friendship to the people of Cuba and the
Dominican Republic and the hope they will soon rejoin the society of free
men….” Sixty years after the proclamations of Teddy Roosevelt the United States
remained committed to offer the blessings of freedom and democracy to the
peoples of Cuba. (President John F. Kennedy “Preliminary Formulations of the
Alliance for Progress,” March 13, 1961).
Twenty-two
years later President Reagan again underscored the U.S. presumption of its
special role in the Hemisphere, restating the U.S. role more in the language of
Roosevelt than the subtler Kennedy. The speech was presented at a gathering of Cuban Americans. Reagan praised assembled Cuban Americans, such as Jorge Mas
Canosa, who came to the United States motivated by a passion for liberty.
Reagan spoke of descendants of pioneers and emigrants from various locales who
started “fresh” in the “New World”; people who “share the same fundamental
values of God, family, work, freedom, democracy, and justice.” (“Perhaps the
greatest tie between us can be seen in the incredible number of cathedrals and
churches found throughout the hemisphere. Our forefathers took the worship of
God seriously.”)
Reagan
then warned of the “new colonialism that threatens the Americas.” This, of
course, was represented by the revolutionary government of Nicaragua, the
revolutionaries fighting against dictatorship in El Salvador, and the enduring
threat to freedom, Cuba. In the latter, the independent labor movement was
destroyed in 1959, churches suppressed, all free speech eliminated, and young
Cubans sent to
faraway places to defend unpopular regimes. And remembering the sacrifices of
the United States in the Cuban war against Spanish colonialism,
Reagan regretted that “Cuba is no longer independent.” He promised that “we
will not let this same fate befall others in the hemisphere….”
After
endorsing 1980s policies such as the Caribbean Basin Initiative and Radio Marti
President Reagan reminded his audience of the perpetual burden Americans face
in defending freedom. He quoted Teddy Roosevelt; “We, here in America, hold in
our hands the hope of the world, the fate of the coming years; and shame and
disgrace will be ours if in our eyes the light of high resolve is dimmed, if we
trail in the dust the golden hopes of men.” And Reagan ended: “finally, let us
pledge ourselves to meet this sacred responsibility. And let us pledge
ourselves to the freedom of the noble, long suffering, Cuban people.” (“Text of
President Reagan’s Speech on Threat to Latin America, New York Time,
May 21, 1983).
President
Obama’s opening remarks at the Summit of the Americas (April 14, 2012) were
different in tone than those cited above. He celebrated economic development in
the region, encouraged continued economic globalization, praised the growth of
Latin American nations such as Brazil and Colombia proving that “a lot of the
old arguments on the left and the right no longer apply.” The challenge for the
future, he said, was to continue distributing the benefits of globalization to
more and more people and “giving businesses opportunities to thrive and create
new products and new services and enjoy the global marketplace.”
The
President called on the Hemisphere nations to continue training people to
compete in the global economy, stimulate trade, establish more mutually
beneficial trade agreements like the one he signed with the President of
Colombia, become more energy efficient, and promote education. He concluded
with some of the more traditional presidential language,
albeit in less than messianic terms, about core principles of governance:
“democracy and rule of law, human rights being observed,freedom
of expression.” In addition, he mentioned “personal security, the
capacity for people to feel as if they work hard then they’re able to achieve,
and they have motivation to start a business and to know that their own work
will pay off.”
President
Obama emphasized the connections between “clean, transparent open government
that is working on behalf of its people.” These features, he said, were
important for business. “The days when a business feels good working in a place
where people are being oppressed—ultimately that’s an unstable environment for
you to do business. You do business well when you know that it’s a
well-functioning society and that there’s a legitimate government in place that
is going to be looking out for its people.” With that said, Obama praised both
the governments of Colombia and Brazil.
The
Obama comments at the opening Summit of the Americas in 2012, more paralleling
the language of President Kennedy’s Alliance speech than the missionary
statements of Beveridge, Roosevelt, and Reagan, still suggest that the United
States, and some Latin American political and economic elites, reflect the
interests and values of the masses of Latin America’s citizens. All the
speeches offer a common standard to judge what is best for the vast majorities
of the peoples of the Hemisphere; whether the region is moving toward or away
from God, Democracy (defined in very selective ways) and Markets. And, whether
stated or implied, the polar opposite of this standard is most starkly
represented by the Cuban revolution.
And
now we have President Trump who on July 1 flew into Medora, a small North
Dakota town (in his newly acquired airplane gift from the government of Qatar)
to view the opening of the Theodore Roosevelt presidential library. TR to Trump
was “a really a great he-man.” He praised the mythology of Roosevelt liberating
Cuba, which he said that after
many decades is “coming our way.” Trump also praised TR’s role in the
construction of the Panama Canal.
A week
earlier, Trump, speaking on the National Mall, declared: “A short time ago, we
were a dead country, we were dead, now
we’re the hottest country anywhere in
the world…We’re respected by everybody. Nobody is laughing at us anymore.” (C-Span.org,
June 25, 2026).
Friends
of Trump, funders of Freedom 250 who are working to create a celebratory
narrative of the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of
Independence, include Palantir, Lockhead Martin, and Oracle. Other groups have
organized to remember the 250th anniversary in a more nuanced way,
in the words of The Guardian, to challenge “how Trump has hijacked
America’s 250th and how instead the event should have been cause for
a unifying celebration” (June 30, 2026).
In sum, the struggle over historical
narratives matters. In the case of the 250th year anniversary of the
Declaration of Independence is a pivotal site for symbolic struggle. And the
most compelling arguments about the remembrance are that democracy, freedom,
and human rights matter and should be celebrated BUT the history of the United
States contradicts these celebratory words. US history is a history of white
supremacy, slaughter in the name of imperialism, and the institutionalization
of patriarchy. All of these have been celebrated by “American Exceptionalism.”
The project for progressives today, as
it was in the past, is to make the history of the present and future move in
the direction of the words of the
declaration.