Saturday, July 4, 2026

July 4, 1776: The Declaration of Independence

Declaration of Independence, painted by John Trumbull in 1819.
The Committee of Five: Left to right, John Adams, Philip Livingston,
Roger Sherman, Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin.
John Hancock, President of the Continental Congress, receives it.

July 4, 1776, 250 years ago: The Continental Congress approves the declaration by the United States of America of its independence from the Kingdom of Great Britain. Ever since, the 4th of July has been celebrated by the U.S.A. as its Independence Day.

The sequence of independence often gets confused. Here goes:

* April 19, 1775: The Battles of Lexington and Concord are fought outside Boston. This is the beginning of the War of the American Revolution.

* January 10, 1776: Thomas Paine publishes his pamphlet Common Sense, arguing for independence from British rule in the Thirteen Colonies: New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. No part of what eventually became Canada took part in this process.

March 26: South Carolina adopts its own constitution, effectively breaking away from British royal authority.

* April 12: North Carolina produces the Halifax Resolves, making it the 1st of the 13 Colonies to officially authorize its delegates to the Continental Congress to vote for independence from the Kingdom of Great Britain. (The Kingdom was officially renamed "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland" in 1801, and "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland" in 1922.)

* May 4: Rhode Island becomes the 1st Colony to specifically renounce its allegiance to King George III of Great Britain.

* June 7: Richard Henry Lee, a delegate from Virginia, proposes to the Continental Congress, meeting in Philadelphia at the Pennsylvania State House, which would later be renamed Independence Hall, "these united colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent states." This becomes known as the Lee Resolution.

The Lee family arrived in Virginia in 1639. Richard Henry would serve as President of the Confederation Congress from late 1784 to late 1785, and was 1 of Virginia's 1st 2 Senators. His brother Francis Lightfoot Lee, signed both the Declaration of Independence and the Articles of Confederation.

A first cousin, Henry Lee III, a.k.a. Light-Horse Harry, served in the Confederation Congress and the U.S. House of Representatives, and as Governor. He eulogized George Washington as "First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen." His son was Robert E. Lee, who became the leading General of the Confederate States of America.

* June 11: The Continental Congress appoints a Committee of Five to draft a Declaration of Independence: Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, Roger Sherman, Robert Livingston and Thomas Jefferson.

Adams, from Quincy, Massachusetts, who had been the biggest advocate for independence, told Jefferson, from Charlottesville, Virginia, that he should write it: "Reason first, you are a Virginian, and a Virginian ought to appear at the head of this business. Reason second, I am obnoxious, suspected, and unpopular. You are very much otherwise. Reason third, you can write ten times better than I can."

* June 12: The Virginia Convention of Delegates adopts the Virginia Declaration of Rights, written by George Mason.

* June 15: The Delaware General Assembly votes to suspend government under the British Crown.

* June 28: Jefferson finishes writing the Declaration.

* July 2: The Continental Congress adopts the Lee Resolution. Adams wrote of the 2nd of July:

I am apt to believe that it will be celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary Festival. It ought to be commemorated, as the Day of Deliverance by solemn Acts of Devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time forward forever more. 

* July 4: The Continental Congress approves the Declaration of Independence, as written by Jefferson. This turned out to be the day the country honored as its Independence Day, possibly due to the date being printed in the document's heading: "In Congress, July 4, 1776." It begins:

When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. 

Key words: "From the consent of the governed." Britain's Parliament and its King did not have the consent of the people of British America. Jefferson continued:

Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.

But 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. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world.

Jefferson then listed several grievances, some of which would be addressed later on in the Constitution of the United States, or which he was in Paris, as U.S. Minister to France, and had nothing to do with writing, although one of his protégés, James Madison, did; and its Bill of Rights, of which he, in a letter to Madison after receiving his mailed copy of the Constitution, was one of the major recommendors.

It is shocking to see how many of Jefferson's grievances mirror those that we have, today, against Donald Trump. The actions of the British troops in America in 1775 and 1776 have been mirrored by those of ICE in 2025 and 2026. People being held without trial? Trump has done that, too, in his detention centers -- or, as we would have called them after World War II, his concentration camps.

Jefferson wrote that the colonial leaders had written to Parliament and to George III, asking for a peaceful compromise. They got war instead. So independence truly was a last resort. He concluded:

We, therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States; that they are Absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved; and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do.

And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.

Only one man signed the Declaration that day: The President of the Continental Congress, John Hancock of Massachusetts. His large signature has led to a signature, or an autograph, being known as a "John Hancock" ever since. However, the great story that he signed it overside on purpose and said, "There! George III can read that without his spectacles, and double the price on my head!" is apocryphal, and developed long afterward.

* July 8: The Declaration is read in public for the first time, at Independence Hall. The State House Bell is rung in celebration. It becomes known as the Liberty Bell.

* July 9: The Declaration is read in public at Bowling Green in what is now considered Lower Manhattan, in New York City. The mob hearing it tore down the statue there, of George III on horseback. The statue's metal was melted down to make musket balls for the Continental Army.

* August 2: The Declaration is actually signed by most of the men who would end up signing it.

* August 15: British troops sail into New York Harbor. As difficult as it was to get all 13 Colonies to agree to independence, the real hard part now begins: Securing that independence through war.

*

This is what the world was like in 1776:

The men we now call "The Founding Fathers" liked to talk about freedom and liberty. My edition of Webster's New World Dictionary, published in 1982, defines "freedom" as, "1. The state or quality of being free; esp., a) exemption or liberation from the control of some other person or some arbitrary power; liberty; independence" followed by a b) through i)" and "2. A right or privilege."

It defines "liberty" as, "1. Freedom or release from slavery, imprisonment, captivity, or any other form of arbtrary control; 2. The sum of rights and exemptions possessed in common by the people of a community, state, etc." and so on.

There was very little of that in the world at the time, especially in America, where many of the Signers, mostly in Southern States, owned slaves.

The biggest cities in the country were Philadelphia, with about 40,000 residents; New York, about 25,000; Boston, 15,000; Charleston, South Carolina, 12,000; Baltimore, 10,000; and Newport, Rhode Island, 7,000. Georgetown was a town in Maryland, but there was no city of Washington, and no District of Columbia, both of which would absorb it. Fort Pitt existed, but Pittsburgh, as a city, did not. Nor did Buffalo, nor Cleveland, nor Atlanta.

Maine was still part of Massachusetts. West Virginia was still part of Virginia. Even with independence, Britain still controlled what are now the States of Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, parts of Minnesota and North Dakota, and the States of Oregon and Washington still belonged to Britain.

What are now the States of Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota; and most of Minnesota, North Dakota, Colorado, Wyoming and Montana belonged to France. What are now the States of Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Nevada and California belonged to Spain. Alaska belonged to Russia. And Hawaii was an independent kingdom.

Spain still controlled what is now Mexico, and of most Central America and South America. Portugal controlled Brazil, parts of India, and some Pacific islands. Britain controlled the rest of India, and most of Oceania. Britain, France and Portugal dominated Africa. The Ottoman Empire controlled most of the Middle East, including present-day Israel. And Prussia, Russia and Austria had already begun to partition Poland.

Sports, as we know it now, did not exist. Who had time to watch them? Who had time to play them? Who had the money to afford the equipment? Only the rich. There's a reason horse racing is called "the sport of kings." There was boxing, golf, tennis, and early forms of cricket, soccer and field hockey -- but no baseball, American-style football, basketball or ice hockey. And competitive Winter sports were completely limited to cold-weather countries.

People worked from Sunrise to Sunset, Monday through Friday. They worked half a day on Saturday -- which is why sports as we know them developed on Saturdays. Sunday was The Lord's Day. Doing things on Sunday was seen by the people in charge as wrong.

Voting rights for women, black people, and men who didn't own land? A 40-hour, 5-day work-week? Workers' protection? Protection for food and drugs? Banking insurance? Government sponsored health care? Letting women have abortions? Letting people of the same gender marry, or be seen as together? You would be told whatever was the 1776 American version of "Get outta heah, ya bum!"

Roi Louis XVI was on the throne of France. Czarina Ekaterina II, a.k.a. Catherine the Great, was on the throne of Russia. Kaiser Friedrich II a.k.a. Frederick the Great, was on the throne of Prussia. Edward Gibbon wrote The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Adam Smith wrote On the Wealth of NationsJohann Wolfgang von Goethe wrote Stella. Johann Sebastian Bach had been dead since 1750, but his sons Johann Christian Bach and Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach were still alive and composing. So were Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, his not-really-a-rival Antonio Salieri, and Joseph Haydn.

James Madison was 25 years old. Alexander Hamilton was 21. James Monroe was 18. Andrew Jackson was 9. John Quincy Adams was about to turn 9. Arthur Wellesley, the 1st Duke of Wellington, was 7. Napoleon Bonaparte was about to turn 7. Ludwig van Beethoven was 5.

The tallest building in the world was Strasbourg Cathedral in France. Reaching a height of 466 feet, it held that title from 1439 until 1874. There were no computers, no television, no radio, no motion pictures, no telephones, no telegraphs, no airplanes, no automobiles, no railroads. The fastest method communication was a man on a horse. It took about 5 weeks for a copy of the Declaration of Independence to reach the British Parliament and King George III.

Medicine was rudimentary. Artificial organs were not yet possible. Transplantation of organs was not possible. The distribution of antibiotics was not possible: If you got any kind of infection, you could easily die. There were no vaccines of any kind.

In 1776, in events unconnected to the American Revolution, the Presidio of San Francisco was founded by the Spanish, the start of the City By the Bay. The Boshoi Ballet was founded in Moscow. Adam Weishaupt founded the Illuminati in Ingolstadt, Bavaria. Captain James Cook left Britain on what turned out to be his last voyage to the Pacific. The Domínguez–Escalante Expedition made the first exploration of what is now the American Southwest. A hurricane killed 6,000 people on the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe.

Scottish philosopher David Hume, whose writings heavily influenced the Founding Fathers, died. So did King Yeongjo of Korea and King Hsinbyushin of Burma. Canadian explorer Simon Fraser was born.

That's what the world was like in 1776.

*

No, things did not get any easier after the Declaration of Independence was approved:

* August 27: General George Washington and his troops lose the Battle of Long Island, in what is now Brooklyn. They escaped across the East River to Manhattan.

* September 20: Washington and his troops have to evacuate the City. They make it to White Plains. The British burn New York to the ground. This is why there are very few pre-independence buildings in Manhattan.

* September 22: Nathan Hale is hanged by the British for espionage, at the Park of Artillery in Manhattan, roughly at present-day East 66th Street and 3rd Avenue. The Connecticut native and Yale College graduate was 21. British Captain John Montresor recalled that Hale's last words were, "I only regret, that I have but one life to lose for my country."

* October 11: A British fleet routs an American one off Valcour Island in Lake Champlain. The losing commander is General Benedict Arnold.

* October 28: Washington loses the Battle of White Plains.

* November 20: Washington and his troops evacuate New York, crossing the Hudson River into New Jersey. In 1931, the George Washington Bridge would open at that location.

* December 8: Having successfully retreated (for want of a better phrase) across New Jersey, Washington and his troops cross the Delaware River into Pennsylvania. The commander knows that most of his men's enlistments will run out on December 31, New Year's Eve, and that most of them will not want to go through any more of this. And it's getting cold.

* December 19: Thomas Paine publishes again. Embedded (as we would say today) with Washington's troops, his pamphlet The American Crisis is printed in nearby Philadelphia:

THESE are the times that try men’s souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly: it is dearness only that gives every thing its value. 

He wasn't kidding. Washington, America, the cause, all needed a win. Now.

* December 25, Christmas Day: Figuring that the Hessian troops, Germans hired by the British to fight for their side, occupying Trenton, New Jersey would be too hungover and stuffed from their holiday dinner to fight back, Washington begins getting his troops back across the icy Delaware, between 6:00 PM and 3:00 AM. Trenton is 9 miles to the south, along what is now New Jersey Route 29.

* December 26: At 8:00 AM, Washington's troops surprise the Hessians. The Battle of Trenton is exactly the victory that the man, the cause, and the country needed.

The hard part was far from over. But Washington and the Continental Army would hang on, winning by merely keeping the war going. On October 19, 1781, with French troops and ships aiding them, they beat the British at Yorktown, Virginia. With Ben Franklin negotiating, the Treaty of Paris was signed on September 3, 1783. It then had to get across the Atlantic Ocean, and be approved by our side. On January 14, 1784, meeting temporarily at what is now the Maryland State House in Annapolis, the Confederation Congress approved the Treaty.

But we don't celebrate the 3rd of September or the 14th of January as our Independence Day. We celebrate the 4th of July.

Of the 56 Signers:

* John Morton of Pennsylvania was the 1st to die, on April 1, 1777.

* Button Gwinnett of Georgia lost a duel, and died from his wound 3 days later, on May 19, 1777.

* Philip Livingston, of one of New York's most distinguished families, was already ill at the time of the Declaration, and died in 1778.

* Thomas Lynch Jr. of South Carolina boarded a ship heading for Sint Eustatius in the Caribbean in 1779. The ship never arrived, and likely sank. Joseph Hewes of North Carolina had died a few days earlier. John Hart of New Jersey, who had lost his farm to a British raid, died earlier in that year. So did George Ross of Pennsylvania.

* Richard Stockton of New Jersey was captured by the British, and released, but developed cancer, and died in 1781. His house in Princeton, named Morven, served as the Governor's Mansion from 1956 to 1981, and is now a museum. George Taylor of Pennsylvania also died in 1781.

* Caesar Rodney was elected President (Governor) of Delaware, and lived until 1784.

* William Whipple of New Hampshire served as a General in the Continental Army, and lived until 1785. So did Stephen Hopkins of Rhode Island.

* Thomas Stone was elected to the Maryland Senate, and died in office in 1787. Arthur Middleton of South Carolina also lived until 1787.

* John Penn of North Carolina lived until 1788.

* Thomas Nelson Jr. was elected Governor of Virginia, and lived until 1789.

* Dr. Lyman Hall was elected Governor of Virginia, and lived until 1790. So did William Hooper of North Carolina. And so did the most important American who never became President, Benjamin Franklin.

* Francis Hopkinson of New Jersey became a federal Judge. He designed the 13-star, 13-stripe American Flag. Not Betsy Ross. She did something more important than that: She sewed uniforms for the Continental Army. Hopkinson lived until 1791. So did Benjamin Harrison, was elected Governor of Virginia. His son, William Henry Harrison, was a General in the War of 1812, and was elected President in 1840. William Henry's grandson, Benjamin Harrison, was a General in the American Civil War, and was elected President in 1888.

* John Hancock became Governor of Massachusetts. Roger Sherman was elected to the U.S. Senate from Connecticut. Each died in office in 1793.

* The Rev. John Witherspoon was already President of the College of New Jersey, which became Princeton University, and held that office for the rest of his life. Another New Jerseyan, Abraham Clark, was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, and died in office. Richard Henry Lee was elected U.S. Senator from Virginia. Dr. Josiah Bartlett was elected Governor of New Hampshire. All four of these men lived until 1794.

* Samuel Huntington was elected Governor of Connecticut, and died in office in 1796.

* Francis Lightfoot Lee and Carter Braxton, both of Virginia, lived until 1797. So did Oliver Wolcott, who died in office as Governor of Connecticut, having succeeded Huntington.

* James Wilson of Pennsylvania was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court. George Read was appointed Chief Justice of Delaware. Each of them died in office in 1798. Also dying that year was Lewis Morris of New York, for whom the Morrisania section of The Bronx was named.

* William Paca was elected Governor of Maryland, and lived until 1799.

* Edward Rutledge was elected Governor of South Carolina, and died in office in 1800.

* Francis Lewis of New York lived until 1802.

* Samuel Adams, John's cousin, served as Governor of Massachusetts. He lived until 1803. So did Dr. Matthew Thornton of New Hampshire.

* George Walton was elected U.S. Senator from Georgia, and lived until 1804.

* Robert Morris of Pennsylvania became the great financier of the war, was elected U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania, and lived until 1806. So did James Smith of Pennsylvania and George Wythe of Virginia.

* Thomas Heyward Jr. lived until 1809.

* Samuel Chase of Maryland was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court. He remains the only Justice ever impeached, although he was acquitted. He lived until 1811. So did the Rev. William Williams of Connecticut.

* Dr. Benjamin Rush, regarded as America's leading physician, was appointed Director of the U.S. Mint, and died in office in 1813. George Clymer, also of Pennsylvania, also died that year.

* Elbridge Gerry was elected Governor of Massachusetts, and served as James Madison's Vice President. He died in office in 1814. Robert Treat Paine was also from Massachusetts, and also lived until 1814.

* Thomas McKean of Delaware became Pennsylvania's Chief Justice, and then its Governor. He lived until 1817.

* William Ellery was appointed Chief Justice of Rhode Island, and lived until 1820.

* William Floyd was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from New York, and lived until 1821.

* John Adams of Massachusetts, became the 1st Vice President, and was elected President in 1796, defeating Jefferson. He died on July 4, 1826, the 50th Anniversary of the approval of the Declaration, at the age of 90. His last words were, "Thomas Jefferson still lives. Independence forever."

* Thomas Jefferson became the Governor of Virginia, U.S. Minister to France, the 1st Secretary of State, the Vice President, and was elected President in 1800, defeating Adams. Their split was acrimonious, but their friendship was later restored by letter. After leaving office, Jefferson founded the University of Virginia, the 1st university in the world not officially affiliated with any religion.

What Adams didn't know was that Jefferson, too, had died on the 50th Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence he'd written, at 83. A few times, on the night of July 3, he regained consciousness long enough to ask, "Is this the 4th?" Told no, he would lose consciousness again. Finally, once more, he asked, "Is this the 4th?" Unable to bear his disappointment any further, they lied to him, and said yes. With a smile on his face, he lost consciousness for the last time. He breathed his last at 12:50 PM on the 4th; Adams, at 6:20 PM.

* And the last surviving Signer was Charles Carroll, who was elected U.S. Senator from Maryland. He died on November 14, 1832, 56 years after the Declaration of Independence.

Friday, July 3, 2026

Yankee Losing Streak at 7 -- How Soon Before Fireworks?

As we enter the 4th of July weekend, the Yankees are blowing up. And not in a good way. More like a planned fireworks display gone wrong.

After getting swept in 4 straight by The Scum in Boston, they came home to face the Detroit Tigers. No problem, right? They handled the Tigers, including their young ace Tarik Skubal, in Detroit last week, right?

Well, it was a problem. On Monday night, Ryan Weathers had nothing. He didn't get out of the 2nd inning, putting the Yankees in a 5-0 hole that proved impossible for a team without Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton injured to come out of.

Spencer Jones led off the 3rd inning with a double. Jasson Domínguez led off the 8th with a walk, Jones hit another double, and Amed Rosario hit a home run, to at least make the final score look slightly respectable. But those were all the baserunners the Yankees got: Casey Mize pitched 7 innings for the Tigers, allowing 1 hit, no walks, striking out 10. Overall, Tiger pitchers struck out 13 and walked none. Tigers 7, Yankees 3.

With Gerrit Cole still feeling his way back, and Max Fried and Clarke Schmidt injured, it was time for Cam Schlittler to pitch like an ace. He didn't, allowing 6 runs in 4 innings. Control wasn't the issue: He walked only 1, and struck out 5, but allowed 7 hits, including 3 home runs in the 1st. Ben Rice hit a home run, but the Yankees only got 4 hits and a walk, as Skubal got revenge. Tigers 6, Yankees 1.

On Wednesday night, the Yankees got a decent start from Will Warren, 2 runs in 5 1/3rd. From the 6th inning to the 10th, the bullpen allowed no runs, no hits, and 1 walk.

But the Tigers got another great start, from Troy Melton. Rice led off the 1st with a single, and drew a walk in the 3rd. Jazz Chisholm doubled with 2 outs in the 4th. Those were the only 3 baserunners the Yankees got off Melton. Jones and José Caballero led off the 8th with singles, and Oswaldo Cabrera bunted them over. But Rice struck out and Domínguez flew out, and it was still 2-0 Detroit.

With 1 out in the bottom of the 9th, Rosario homered again. 2-1. It's been a while since the Yanks had a good comeback win. Chisholm singled. He stole 2nd. He stole 3rd. Tiger reliever Drew Anderson was rattled, and threw a wild pitch. Tie ballgame. Anthony Volpe was at bat, and he didn't have to do anything: Like Jackie Robinson used to do in the late 1940s and early '50s, Chisolm created a run all by himself.

Then, Volpe did do something: He hit a grounder back to Anderson, who couldn't handle it, and got to 1st base. Winning run on 1st, only 1 out. But then he tried to steal 2nd, and was caught, and Jones popped up. Extra innings. Ghost runners.

Fernando Cruz got through the 10th without allowing a run. But the Yankees couldn't push a run across, either. Cruz had already thrown 17 pitches, so Boone brought Camilo Doval out to pitch the top of the 11th. At first it seemed to work: He got the 1st 2 outs.

But Boone ordered an intentional walk to Riley Greene, to set up the inning-ending force play. This pushed his luck too far: Greene, as anybody in the stadium but Boone (and, maybe, Brian Cashman) could have guessed he would try, stole 2nd, to eliminate the force play. Then Doval walked Hao-Yu Lee, to re-setup the force play, but also to load the bases.

Then he walked Spencer Torkelson, to force home the go-ahead run. Then he gave up a single to Zach McKinstry. On the throw home, Ali Sánchez, who's been a decent backup catcher so far, made an error, and 3 runs ended up scoring. The Yankees went down 1-2-3 in the bottom of the 11th, and the Tigers had won, 6-2.

Few losses are as deflating as those where you come from behind to tie or take the lead, and then blow it afterward, anyway. This was one of those.

*

The Yankees have now lost 7 in a row. And the Tampa Bay Rays keep on winning: The Yankees are now 4 games behind them, 5 in the loss column.

Cliché Alert: In the days of single-division leagues, it was an old baseball adage that the team in 1st place on July 4 usually went on to win the Pennant. In fact, it only happened about 65 percent of the time. And, with the start of Divisional Play in 1969, Major League Baseball went from 2, to 4, to 6 teams in 1st place. Still, being in 1st on July 4 usually gives a team a 65 or so percent chance of winning their Division.

The Yankees will not be in 1st place on the 4th of July. Certainly, injuries are a reason why. But Brian Cashman should have built a team capable of substituting good players for injured ones. He hasn't.

Tomorrow is a night for literal fireworks. How soon before metaphorical fireworks take place in Yankeedom?

Tonight, the Yankees begain a home series against the Minnesota Twins, who are also struggling. We'll see.

UPDATE: Carlos Rodón has been put on the Injured List, with elbow inflammation. In the words of the immortal Vince Lombardi, "What the hell's goin' on out here?"

July 3, 2001: Arsenal sign Sol Campbell

Sol Campbell with the FA Cup (in his right hand)
and the Premier League trophy (in his left)

July 3, 2001, 25 years ago: Arsenal Football Club sign Sol Campbell. The centreback had been Captain of their North London arch-rivals, Tottenham Hotspur F.C., and had led "Spurs" to the 1999 League Cup. But, his contract having run out, he was not given any assurances by team management that they would bring in new talent to improve the team.

In contrast, Arsenal offered the 26-year-old East Londoner the chance to stay in London, and play Champions League games. After he had rejected all overtures by Spurs, and from European giants FC Barcelona, Internazionale Milano and Bayern Munich, Campbell signed with Arsenal. Spurs' Captain was now the rock of Arsenal's defense, ready to replace the aging team Captain, Tony Adams.

Tottenham fans were livid, turning as red as their rivals' shirts. Not with embarrassment, as they should have, but with rage.

Result? In his 1st season with Arsenal, they won the Premier League and the FA Cup -- the Double. 2nd season? The FA Cup again. 3rd season? An unbeaten League season, clinching the title at, of all places, Spurs' White Hart Lane. 4th season? Another FA Cup. 5th season? Arsenal reached the Champions League Final, and Sol scored in the game, although Arsenal lost.

He then left Arsenal, signing with Hampshire team Portsmouth FC. In 2008, Portsmouth made an unlikely run to win the FA Cup, with Campbell as Captain.

To this day, Spurs fans sing about Sol being "Judas," and that's one of the more printable things they say. But he says he has no regrets.

Since he made the North London switch, Spurs have won just 2 major trophies, and that's if you consider the League Cup to be a "major trophy," doing so in 2008, meaning that Campbell still outdid them that season by leading Portsmouth to the FA Cup; and the Europa League to be one, doing so in 2025.

July 3, 2001 was a Tuesday. Folarin Balogun, a Brooklyn native of Nigerian descent who has played for Arsenal, AS Monaco, and the U.S. National Team, was born on this day.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

July 1, 1946: Superman vs. the Ku Klux Klan

July 1, 1946: The Ku Klux Klan, America's leading proponents of bigotry, face one opponent they cannot defeat: Superman.

Superman, of course, is a fictional character. He does not exist in real life. He beat the Klan, anyway. With help.

In 1946, Stetson Kennedy, a human rights activist, 29 years old and a native of Jacksonville, Florida, infiltrated the KKK and other racist/terrorist groups. Concerned that the organization had links to the government and police forces -- which, in the Southern States, it most certainly did -- Kennedy decided to use its findings to strike at the Klan in a different way. (Note: William Stetson Kennedy, his full name, was not related to the Kennedy political family of Massachusetts.)
He contacted the producers of the Superman radio show, which was recorded at station WOR in New York, and syndicated nationally over the Mutual Broadcasting System. He proposed a story where the superhero, voiced by actor and game show host Bud Collyer (born Clayton Johnson Heermance Jr.), battles the Klan. Looking for new villains, and unable to reproduce the effects of some Superman opponents from the comic books due to budgetary reasons, the producers eagerly agreed.

Kennedy provided information, including details of Klan rituals and the like to the writers. The result was a series of episodes, "Clan of the Fiery Cross," in which Superman took on the Klan. The trivialization of the Klan's rituals and natures had a negative impact on Klan recruiting and membership numbers. According to one source, it "led to a steep decline in membership from which the KKK never recovered."

Reportedly, Klan leaders denounced the show, and called for a boycott of Kellogg's products, which sponsored the radio show. However, the story arc earned spectacular ratings, making Superman the most highly rated kids' radio program, and the food company stood by its support of the show. They later sponsored the TV show The Adventures of Superman, starring George Reeves.

Bud Collyer lived until 1969; Stetson Kennedy, until 2011. In 2019, Chinese-American writer Gene Luen Yang and the Japanese-American artist team calling itself Gurihiru adapted the story into a comic book series, Superman Smashes the Klan, setting it in 1946 like the original radio series, and making Chinese-Americans the focus, with assistance from African-Americans, the Daily Planet newspaper, and Superman himself.

July 1, 1926: The Benjamin Franklin Bridge Opens

July 1, 1926, 100 years ago: The Delaware River Bridge opens, connecting Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Camden, New Jersey, over the river in question. For the next 3 years, it is the longest suspension bridge ever built.

The name was changed to the Benjamin Franklin Bridge in 1955, named for Philadelphia's favorite son, since the Walt Whitman Bridge, to the south and also over the Delaware, had been approved.

It connects the downtowns of Pennsylvania's largest city and southern New Jersey's largest city, and carries Interstate 676 and U.S. Route 30, and the PATCO Speedline subway railroad. Because it's close to downtown, it's often used for panoramic photographs of the city.

It was preceded as a Delaware River bridge by:

* 1884: The Calhoun Street Bridge in Trenton.
* 1896: The rail-only Delair Bridge.
* 1903: The Morrisville-Trenton Railroad Bridge.
* 1913: The West Trenton Railroad Bridge.

And it has been followed by:

* 1928: The Lower Trenton Bridge, the one with the big letters on each side, reading, "TRENTON MAKES THE WORLD TAKES."
* 1929: The Tacony-Palmyra Bridge, N.J. and Pennsylvania Route 73.
* 1931: The Burlington-Bristol Bridge, N.J. and Pennsylvania Route 413.
* 1951: The original, now-eastward span of the Delaware Memorial Bridge, Interstate 295 and U.S. Route 40.
* 1952: The Trenton-Morrisville Toll Bridge, U.S. Route 1.
* 1956: The Delaware River-Turnpike Toll Bridge, part of the Pearl Harbor Memorial Turnpike Extension, connecting the New Jersey Turnpike with the Pennsylvania Turnpike, Interstate 276.
* 1957: The Walt Whitman Bridge, Interstate 76.
* 1961: The original Scudder Falls Bridge, which was eventually bannered as Interstate 95.
* 1968: The 2nd, westward span of the Delaware Memorial Bridge.
* 1974: The Commodore Barry Bridge, U.S. Route 322.
* 1976: The Betsy Ross Bridge, N.J. and Pennsylvania Route 90.
* 2019: The new Scudder Falls Bridge.

Although not as famous as the Brooklyn Bridge in New York or the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, both of which tend to get destroyed in disaster movies, the Ben Franklin Bridge was shown seriously damaged in the 2023 film Shazam: Fury of the Gods.

July 1, 1876: The Dewey Decimal System

July 1, 1876, 150 years ago: The publication Library Journal publishes its 1st issue, in Boston. It is founded and largely written by Melvil Dewey, a 25-year-old librarian originally from Adams Center, New York, on Lake Ontario. In this issue, Dewey explained his new cataloguing system for library books, which has come to be known as the Dewey Decimal System.

Dewey was also a believer in the metric system, as it was also a base-ten system. But that's never caught on in America.

Dewey, identifying himself as "the author," explained his system as follows, with my editing:

The plan of the following Classification and Index was developed early in 1873. It was the result of several months' study of library economy as found in some hundreds of books and pamphlets, and in over fifty personal visits to various American libraries.

In this study, the author became convinced that the usefulness of these libraries might be greatly increased without additional expenditure. Three years practical use of the system here explained, leads him to believe that it will accomplish this result; for with its aid, the catalogues, shelf lists, indexes, and cross-references essential to this increased usefulness, can be made more economically than by any other method which he has been able to find. The system was devised for cataloguing and indexing purposes, but it was found on trial to be equally valuable for numbering and arranging books and pamphlets on the shelves.

The library is first divided into nine special libraries which are called Classes. These Classes are Philosophy, Theology, &c., and are numbered with the nine digits. Thus Class 9 is the Library of History; Class 7, the Library of Fine Art; Class 2, the Library of Theology.

These special libraries or Classes are then considered independently, and each one is separated again into nine special Divisions of the main subject. These Divisions are numbered from 1 to 9 as were the Classes. Thus 59 is the 9th Division (Zoology) of the 5th Class (Natural Science). A final division is then made by separating each of these Divisions into nine Sections which are numbered in the same way, with the nine digits. Thus 513 is the 3d Section (Geometry) of the 1st Division (Mathematics) of the 5th Class (Natural Science).

This number, giving Class, Division, and Section, is called the Classification or Class Number, and is applied to every book or pamphlet belonging to the library. All the Geometries are thus numbered 513, all the Mineralogies 549, and so throughout the library, all the books on any given subject bear the number of that subject in the scheme.

Where a 0 occurs in a class number, it has its normal zero power. Thus, a book numbered 510, is Class 5, Division 1, but no Section. This signifies that the book treats of the Division 51 (Mathematics) in general, and is not limited to any one Section, as is the Geometry, marked 513. If marked 500, it would indicate a treatise on Science in general, limited to no Division. A zero occurring in the first place would in the same way show that the book is limited to no Class.

The classification is mainly made by subjects or content regardless of form; but it is found practically useful to make an additional distinction in these general treatises, according to the form of treatment adopted. Thus, in Science we have a large number of books treating of Science in general, and so having a 0 for the Division number.

These books are then divided into Sections, as are those of the other Classes according to the form they have taken on. We have the Philosophy and History of Science, Scientific Compends, Dictionaries, Essays, Periodicals, Societies, Education, and Travels,--all having the common subject, NATURAL SCIENCE, but treating it in these varied forms. These form distinctions are introduced here because the number of general works is large, and the numerals allow of this division, without extra labor for the numbers from 501 to 509 would otherwise be unused. They apply only to the general treatises, which, without them, would have a class number ending with two zeros.

A Dictionary of Mathematics is 510, not 503, for every book is assigned to the most specific head that will contain it, so that 503 is limited to Dictionaries or Cyclopedias of Science in general. In the same way a General Cyclopedia or Periodical treats of no one class, and so is assigned to the Class 0. These books treating of no special class, but general in their character, are divided into Cyclopedias, Periodicals, etc. No difficulty is found in following the arithmetical law and omitting the initial zero, so these numbers are printed 31, 32, etc., instead of 031, 032, etc.

In other words:

* 000: Computer Science, Information and General Works
* 100: Philosophy and Psychology
* 200: Religion
* 300: Social Sciences
* 400: Language
* 500: Pure Science, not covered under any of these other categories
* 600: Technology
* 700: Arts and Recreation
* 800: Literature
* 900: History and Geography

Most entries on this blog would fall under 700, with Music coming in at the 780s, Movies and Television at 792, and Sports at 796; or 900, under History, with 920 being Biography, the 930s for the History of the Ancient World (not coverable here), the 940s for the History of Europe, the 950s for Asia, the 960s for Africa, the 970s for North America, the 980s for South America, and the 990s for "Other Areas," like Oceania (Australia, New Zealand and Pacific islands) or the polar regions.

A book with a Dewey number of 000 would be for computer science. A book with a Dewey number of 999 would be for "extraterrestrial worlds." If the sports entries in this blog were published in book form (unlikely to happen in my lifetime), the sticker on the spine would read 796 PAC, for sports and the 1st 3 letters of my surname. If I included only those entries relating to baseball, it would be 796.357 PAC.

In 1897, when the present Library of Congress building opened, it instituted its own system, the Library of Congress Classification. While some libraries have adopted it, the Dewey Decimal System remains considerably more popular. 

From 1883 to 1888, Melvil Dewey was the chief librarian at the Columbia College Libraries; then, through 1906, the director of the New York State Library. In 1895, at Lake Placid, New York, he and his wife Annie founded the Lake Placid Club, which, by 1924, helped to establish the Winter Olympics, which have been hosted in Lake Placid in 1932 and 1980. In 1926, he moved to Florida, and established a town named Lake Placid there. He died there in 1931.

In the years since his death, unsettling revelations about him have reached the public, including racism, anti-Semitism, and sexual harassment of women. His System has been of great help to anyone using a library, either employee or visitor; but he must be forever consigned to the realm of, "Yes, but... "

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Conservatism Is a Racist Ideology

Today, the Supreme Court of the United States upheld "birthright citizenship."

In a case abbreviated as Trump v. Barbara, the Court recognized that it is explicitly guaranteed to anyone born under the legal "jurisdiction" of the U.S. federal government by the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, adopted on July 9, 1868), which states: "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside."

The vote was narrow as hell, though: 5-4. As expected, Associate Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Katanji Brown Jackson, liberals appointed by Presidents of the Democratic Party, supported birthright citizenship. But so did Chief Justice John Roberts and Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett, both conservative Justices appointed by Presidents of the Republican Party -- including Barrett, appointed by Donald Trump.

The other four Associate Justices, all archconservatives appointed by Republican Presidents, voted against it: Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh.

Once again, the Supreme Court matters. Trump -- or, if something happens to him, Vice President JD Vance taking his place -- has two and a half years left in his term. And Thomas is 78 years old, Alito is 76, Sotomayor is 72, and Roberts is 71. There's a huge chance that whoever is President between now and January 20, 2029 will have to replace one of them, and a good chance that he'll have to replace at least two. The President elected on November 7, 2028 and taking office on January 20, 2029 will almost certainly inherit those new Justices, and, if not, have to replace them and the others.

Since taking office for a 2nd term as President on January 20, 2025, Donald Trump has demanded that the U.S. Supreme Court ignore this vital part of the Constitution, and declare that only children born to parents who are both citizens of the U.S. shall be recognized as citizens of the U.S.

This is anti-immigration rhetoric, aimed largely at black and Spanish-speaking people. It is racist. It is disgusting. It is immoral. It is un-American. And, while the 1st Amendment means that this shouldn't be an issue, so many people claiming it to be true also lie and say they follow Jesus, so I'm going to add this: It is un-Christian.

*

Conservatism is the ideology of racism. From 1837 onward, after the populist Andrew Jackson left office, the Democratic Party was the party of conservatism. Then, after the American Civil War, without Abraham Lincoln to keep an eye on them any longer, the members of the Republican Party saw how much money they'd made on railroads and armaments, and decided they didn't want to pay taxes on that income, and became conservative. This led to the Compromise of 1877, which ended Reconstruction, and thus ended the official move for civil rights in America, for black people and for women. (Hispanics weren't even being considered, although there were moves, even then, to limit immigration from Asia.)

So, at this point, we had two conservative parties, to the point where the Republicans threw former President Theodore Roosevelt out in 1912, when he campaigned to return to the office, on things like universal health coverage and old-age pensions -- essentially, what became Social Security.

Starting in 1932, with Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal, the Democratic Party returned to liberalism, except for their Southern wing, which, while taking in the money from New Deal's liberal projects, remained racist and conservative.

In 1964, the outside-the-South Democrats joined with reasonable Republicans to pass the Civil Rights Act. The most conservative Republicans appealed to the Southern Democrats, and say, "You don't like it? Join us." And they did. And that's where we are now.

So when Republicans call the Democrats the party of racism and the party of the Ku Klux Klan, it's no more true today than the Republicans being the party of Lincoln. Today's racists are united in their support of the Republicans, and of Donald Trump.

And let's drop this myth of "Conservatism is opposed to big government." Conservatives have always believed in big government when it comes to fighting their enemies. Since World War II, they've never had a problem with expanding the Department of Defense, or the CIA, or the FBI. Because that involves spending taxpayers' money. The only time they want smaller government is when bigger government makes them spend more of their own money.