United States

American Independence Day. Does anyone know what it is all about?

According to a poll, nearly half of Americans don’t know what the 4th of July is about.

Only 39% of Generation Z (born between 1997 1nd 2012) correctly linked the celebration to the adoption of the Declaration of Independence

Nearly half of Americans do not know what the country’s 250th anniversary is actually celebrating.

This despite overwhelming majorities saying they are proud and grateful to be American, according to the Cato Institute.

Independence from Britain

The milestone commemorates the adoption of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, when the 13 American colonies declared independence from Great Britain.

The think tank published its Fourth of July national survey on Thursday, saying the poll of 2,253 US adults was conducted by Morning Consult on June 25-26.

Civic Ignorance

It found civic ignorance about US history and the system of government, with 46% of Americans not knowing what the country’s 250th anniversary commemorates.

53% correctly identified it as the adoption of the Declaration of Independence.

Confusion

The confusion was sharpest among young adults. Nearly two-thirds of respondents aged roughly 18 to 26 (often referred to as Generation Z), 61%, did not know what America’s 250th anniversary commemorates.

Only 39% correctly linked the celebration to the adoption of the Declaration of Independence.

Founding Fathers

The survey also found that younger Americans were less likely to view the Founding Fathers as courageous leaders. They were more likely to accept the 1619 Project’s claim that preserving slavery was a primary reason for the American Revolution.

The poll also found broader gaps in basic civic knowledge. While 77% knew George Washington was the first US president, 58% did not know the Constitution’s main purpose.

Limit the power of Washington

Only 41% correctly said it was to establish and limit the powers of government.

Another 57% did not know why the American colonies declared independence from Britain in 1776, with only 43% citing high taxes and lack of representation.

Supreme Court

A majority (55%) also did not know that the Supreme Court has the final say when the president and the court disagree over whether a presidential action is constitutional.

Despite widespread gaps in civic knowledge, the survey found broad support for the country’s founding ideals.

No longer free

At the same time, 57% of Americans said the US has moved away from those principles. 56% feared it could stop being a free country within the next 50 years.

Respondents cited corruption, politicians ignoring the Constitution, the rich having too much power, and excessive presidential power as the leading threats to freedomTell us what you think

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1 reply »

  1. Pappy said don’t pay your taxes to find out how free you are after an audit in the early 1980s.

    Decades of military service meant nothing.

    They quit teaching history which is usually mythology anyway.

    And it isn’t even as good as the Greeks.

    Useless idiots are in for a rude shock in the New Man workers utopia.

    Visions of cornball Soundcloud rap all day while smoking dope and playing video games gives way to please face wall now comrade.

    The wall of equality of results for all.

    Like

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