Last Wednesday thousands gathered in Fort Totten Park in
Bayside, Queens for a fireworks display. The event had all the makings of
potential disaster by modern metrics. Thousands of diverse people crammed into
a limited area and jockeying for space to get a good view. A little league
soccer team was wrapping up practice as people took their places in the expanse
of green field between portable toilets and a row of food trucks. Bounce
castles entertained children before the fireworks started and people took what
they thought were the best positions to view the show as they waited for the
sky to get dark enough.
The fireworks started promptly and a roaring whoop went up
from the crowd as fireworks lit up the sky. New Yorkers cheered
enthusiastically for this celebration of our War of Independence. When it was
over, the crowd made its way out of Fort Totten without incident, or at least
any major ones.
From parts of Fort Totten you can see the glitter of the
Manhattan skyline and be inspired by the nighttime majesty of the Throgs Neck
Bridge lit up. It is a marvel how New York holds itself together while the
country seemingly tears itself apart. Gotham is as rife with division as
everywhere else: New York City gave us both Donald Trump and Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez.
The greatness of New York serves as a microcosm of America.
We see all the same issues in New York first, and the city, rightly or wrongly,
serves as a template for how the rest of the country can navigate its problems.
The Fourth of July brings us down to Earth, reminds us of
how American we are. It is popular to look upon outward signs of patriotism as
right-wing or quaint, but if you believe America is for everyone and that
patriotism is expansive and great, then join the celebration. The freedom we
have was purchased in a bloody war, several actually.
The land we are on we do not claim by divine right. Every
inch of America was fought over. We waged war on France, Great Britain (twice),
Mexico (twice), Spain and countless Native American nations to get the current
borders of the United States. July 4th celebrates the birth of our
nation, a hard-fought war for Independence that was in effect our first civil
war. When the war started it was not a foregone conclusion that we would win.
The patriots who signed their names to the Declaration of Independence knew
that the document would serve as their death warrant if the war didn’t go their
way.
The Battle of Brooklyn was one of the bloodiest fights in
the history of the American Revolution, and the war would have ended had
Washington not been able to retreat to Manhattan. The British held New York for
most of the war, but the city has signs of the American Revolution everywhere.
The first woman who took up arms for America, Margaret Corbin, fought at the
Battle of Fort Washington in Manhattan.
Some are fatalistic and see America as it is headed now as
intrinsically doomed. There is no cultural coherence to sustain us through
these times, they say, and new communities and nations will rise out of what is
now a crumbling empire. But New Yorkers have bridged these divides in the
crucibles of ambition and creativity. We are strong when we demand truth and
strength, and turn to leaders not afraid to speak honestly and make the right
enemies. We can do that in America as a whole if we are willing.
Let the American Revolution be our call to action today.
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