We shouldn’t celebrate the Founding Fathers on America’s 250th


This year, we should celebrate America’s 250th anniversary as a nation. 

It took me a while to reach that conclusion. When I think back to everything I learned about the Declaration of Independence, I remember the colonists fought for their natural right of liberty. I also remember the enslaved Africans and indigenous people who were left out of the freedom this country promised. 

As I got older, my understanding of America’s founding grew even more complex. When Thomas Jefferson wrote “all men are created equal,” a 14-year old enslaved teenager stood mere feet away from him. Those founding ideals were not applied to everyone, and it would take centuries for even a smidge of those ideals to become so. 

What historians tell us is that this was no oversight. Some argue that patriot leaders like John Adams weaponized prejudice at the time against African American and Native peoples to unite the colonists. They instilled fear that they’d join the British and take up arms against them, to spark a revolutionary spirit throughout the colonies. Once they declared “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal,” they didn’t mean enslaved and native peoples. In fact, they meant to exclude them. 

I took a class this semester titled “The Declaration of Independence at 250,” where I learned much about this fraught history surrounding this nation’s founding. I struggled to grapple with the questions that arose from it. What does it mean if the document we treat today as a representation of our commitment to freedom also planted white supremacy into this country’s roots — intentionally? Is America’s founding even worth celebrating in 2026? 

There’s no right answer to that question. But on July 4, 2026, I will remember the Declaration of Independence not for the people who wrote it in 1776, but for everyone after who fought to realize its ideals. 

I choose to celebrate the Declaration because I see those who truly represented the Declaration and its ideals. As the newly minted United States of America entered the 19th century, the Declaration of Independence rose to prominence as marginalized Americans recognized the unfulfilled promise behind the words “all men are created equal,” and held White America to their words.

In the Seneca Falls Declaration of 1848, Elizabeth Cady Stanton confronted a male-dominated society by using the language of the Declaration, “We hold these truths to be self-evident: all men and women are created equal; that they are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights.” We also owe the Declaration to Black Abolitionists. In “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” Frederick Douglass called July 4th “a day of mourning,” an example of America’s hypocrisy. American people already knew enslaved Black Americans were entitled to liberty. “You have already declared it.” 

We treat America’s founders with too much reverence. Elementary and high school students hear that the colonists were emboldened by revolutionary principles and bravely fought against the British who infringed upon their natural rights. That narrative remains incomplete. The values we live today that came from the Declaration of Independence are thanks to the struggles of marginalized Americans. It’s their struggle that makes July 4th worth celebrating this year. 

However, we should be extremely cautious not to stop at celebrating. Nineteenth-century abolitionists and women’s rights activists drew from this country’s founding ideals to confront the injustices of their own eras. If we looked around ourselves today, is there justice? Can we yet call ourselves a truly free society? If the answer is anything but a yes, we have much work to do as a nation.

Sabri Abdusalam is a student studying political science at Macalester College.



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If Game Two of their first-round playoff series with the Denver Nuggets saved the 2025-26 season for the Minnesota Timberwolves, Game Three showed why it should be saved. 

The Timberwolves were a different beast while decisively thumping the Nuggets, 113-96 Thursday night at Target Center, in a game that wasn’t nearly that close. These Wolves were the mythical creature we’d heard about in preseason lore, purposefully locked and loaded to be both marauding and staunch. They owned both ends of the court, gleefully transferring back and forth from irresistible force to immovable object. 

A quartet of Timberwolves deserve special mention, but it begins with Jaden McDaniels. After his team had toppled Denver to even the series at a game apiece Monday night, McDaniels used the sizable chip on his shoulder to etch some graffiti into the public discourse, casually castigating the most prominent Nuggets players by name as “bad defenders” in a matter-of-fact manner that had the media compelling him to confirm what he had just said. 

Trash talk is fleetingly fungible in the jaundiced social environment of 2026, functioning more like coupons than currency in that it needs to be rapidly leveraged before its expiration date. The common perception naturally was that McDaniels was calling out the Nuggets. But in a more subtle, profound way, he was also putting his teammates on notice. 

All season long the Timberwolves have procrastinated on their full potential, frequently demonstrating that their preseason talk about maturity and commitment was cheap. By contrast, those words uttered by McDaniels were expensive. He had just picked a fight with the opponent, leaving open the question of how many of his teammates would join him in the fray. 

That he would lead the charge was established early, after the Timberwolves’ top two scorers, Anthony Edwards and Julius Randle, had each missed a pair of open looks against Denver’s bad defenders in the game’s first 90 seconds.  

With the game still scoreless, the NBA’s best pick-and-roll combo, Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray, were clustered around the foul line with Minnesota’s best defenders, McDaniels and Rudy Gobert. As they jammed up Jokic, McDaniels picked the ball loose and started sprint-dribbling the other way. To no one’s surprise, Donte “Ragu” DiVincenzo was also on his horse in transition, receiving a pass from McDaniels and then lobbing it back for a Jaden slam against a hapless Murray and Murray’s late-arriving teammate, Cam Johnson, who committed the foul that allowed McDaniels to finish with the “and-1” free throw. 

On the Timberwolves next offensive possession, McDaniels muscled his way to two offensive rebounds, feeding Ragu off the first one for a missed three-pointer, which he corralled for the second one and executed the putback in traffic. It was McDaniels 5, Nuggets 0, setting the tone for a game in which not only did the Wolves never trail, but never let the lead go under double digits after McDaniels made a consecutive pair of driving layups eight minutes into the game. 

“Spectacular. I thought his activity offensively in the first quarter was outstanding,” said Wolves coach Chris Finch after the game. “He was inspirational.” 

Among the most inspired were McDaniels fellow wing players, Ragu and Ayo Dosunmu. Ragu is exactly the kind of player who will have your back in a squabble, and his galvanized performance seemed borne of satisfaction that someone else had clarified the mission. As usual, the Timberwolves were at their best with him on the court: +20 in the 32:54 he played, -3 in the 15:06 he sat. 

“He makes so many hustle plays, momentum plays, different styles of plays.” Finch raved. “He’ll make a shot, get a transition bucket, he’ll rebound, get a steal, blow something up. So many different plays. He’s just a basketball player.”

Related: How the Timberwolves sparked a season-saving Game 2 comeback over the Nuggets in Denver

Then there was Ayo, whose fearless, blazing, bee-lines for the bucket were quicksilver kryptonite for a Nuggets defense that is neither swift nor rugged. “I’ve been waiting for him to wake up a little bit in this series,” Finch accurately observed. “The downhill mindset that he played with all season for us was back.”

Back with the sort of multipurpose propulsion that leaves witnesses with giddy whiplash. Ayo led the team with 25 points and 9 assists in 32 minutes of time-lapse hoops, the lone blemish being three clanks from long range. Why chuck treys when you can so easily undress players in the paint? Ayo was 10-for-12 on two-pointers and none of those dozen shots came from anywhere but beneath the rim. Five of his nine dimes likewise yielded layups or dunks, which means he personally accounted for 30 of the 68 points in the paint by the Timberwolves on Thursday, doubling up the Nuggets’ 34.

Which brings us to the non-wing in Game 3’s ring of honor, Rudy Gobert. For the third straight game, Gobert blunted the supposed advantage Denver had with the magical playmaker Nikola Jokic at the controls. Suffice to say that in the last five quarters, Jokic has shot 8-for-33 from the floor. If that continues, the Nuggets are toast in this series. 

When I asked Finch after the game if the herculean job Gobert was doing on Jokic made planning his defense simpler and better thus far, he replied, “Rudy is making all of us look good right now with his defense.” 

Amen.

If there is an asterisk on this game, it would be the absence of Denver’s brutishly versatile power forward Aaron Gordon. Nuggets coach David Adelman should be given a lot of credit for his honesty and transparency in dealing with the media during his first full season at the helm, but it came back to bite him and his team during the pregame presser, when he was clearly rattled and dejected by the sudden unavailability of Gordon, whose playing status went to “probable” to “out” in a period of a few hours due to a chronic calf strain. 

Gordon is far and away his team’s best defender, making the timing of his injury especially troublesome in the wake of McDaniels laying down his marker. Rattled is a good way to describe the entire team’s performance in the first quarter, an emotional wounding that needs to heal as fast as Gordon’s body if the Nuggets are going to be competitive in a series that had dramatically been flipped on its head over the past three days. 

That the Timberwolves played with such dominance despite mediocre outings from Ant and Randle would be a good thing for both of those current cornerstones to keep in mind. Ant was beset by foul trouble and Randle had a solid second quarter, but it stood out that neither player fully embraced what so often works on offense when the Wolves are at their best: Push the pace, move the ball, move without the ball, and make quick decisions. Ant and Randle can still be first among equals and blend into that catechism if they stay attuned to the possibilities of a greater good, one that all of sudden doesn’t have to end with them being postseason fodder for the Spurs or the Thunder. 

Not when you’ve got three wings at a collective peak, with a chaser of Rudy semi-clowning the Joker. 



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