We Are the Minute Men of Our Times - Page 2

The idea of freedom and the willingness of individuals to fight for it is an enormously powerful force which still draws people to America 230 years later, willing to make their own sacrifices in order to be free. Unfortunately, those who have enjoyed freedom for generations often forget the sacrifices their forefathers made to attain that precious liberty and are seduced into leading complacent lives where they take their liberties for granted and may not notice as they slip away bit by bit through the incremental erosion of greed and ambition and well-intentioned folly.

Every July 4th we light off fireworks and they're loud and bright, but while they may grab our attention for a moment, they don't have the power to direct it towards the truth which the date of the Declaration of Independence ought to remind us of. That Declaration was the written expression of the beliefs which inspired the Minutemen who fought at Concord and for the rest of the War of Independence. What those fireworks ought to be telling us is that freedom is not free, that it must be paid for in blood and that we're never done spilling that blood and paying that price. Freedom is like a subscription and it has to be renewed periodically and each generation has to pay for that renewal or the subscription expires and becomes something less than what we signed on for in the first place.

Each of us in some way can act to keep freedom alive in our times. We can volunteer to help out in our community. We can change our habits to reduce our dependence on foreign oil. We can keep watch on our government and our leaders and on the forces abroad which threaten us. We can embrace and support those who love freedom and resist and oppose those who would destroy it. At the very least we can be informed on the issues and vote. We owe it to their great sacrifice to make our own smaller sacrifices to preserve the legacy of freedom which they entrusted to us.

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Article Author: Dave Nalle

Dave Nalle has been a magazine editor, freelance writer, capitol hill staffer, game designer and taught college history for many years. He is now a pro-liberty political activist and designs fonts for a living. …

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  • 1 - Lumpy

    Jul 04, 2006 at 5:21 pm

    Hell, instead of fireworks let's all take our guns out and fire them in the air like they do in the middle east. We can still have guns, right?

  • 2 - Dave Nalle

    Jul 04, 2006 at 7:36 pm

    You might want to make sure they're loaded with blanks. I sometimes fire off black powder pistols without balls on the 4th. Much fun.

    Dave

  • 3 - Clavos

    Jul 04, 2006 at 8:24 pm

    Hell, instead of fireworks let's all take our guns out and fire them in the air like they do in the middle east.

    They do that here in Miami every holiday, and not with blanks, either.

    People get killed by falling rounds fairly often.

    Scares the crap out of me.

  • 4 - Clavos

    Jul 04, 2006 at 9:01 pm

    Dave,

    Your article beautifully expresses the real significance of the day.

    Thank you.

    "Freedom is not free."

    Indeed.

  • 5 - JP

    Jul 04, 2006 at 10:24 pm

    I'm not a fan of the "freedom is not free" cliche, but you have a good overall point--and if even one or two readers were moved to be more conscious of oil consumption or to pay closer attention to politics by virtue of your writing, that'd be a good result.

  • 6 - RJ Elliott

    Jul 04, 2006 at 10:43 pm

    Good article, Dave. Happy 4th!

  • 7 - Dave Nalle

    Jul 04, 2006 at 11:45 pm

    Yes, I know the article is loaded with cliches. That's the nature of the beast. I've got another 4th of July article, but I'm on the road and probably won't be able to post it until tomorrow.

    Rather cool stuff. We went and saw a CAF B-17 bomber and I got some cool photos.

    Dave

  • 8 - Clavos

    Jul 04, 2006 at 11:52 pm

    We went and saw a CAF B-17 bomber and I got some cool photos.

    Dave, A CAF B17 used to be parked at SAT airport back in the early 90s, when I worked there--is that the one you saw?

  • 9 - Dave Nalle

    Jul 05, 2006 at 12:02 am

    There are supposedly 6 of them, but this one is called 'Sentimental Journey" and has a picture of Betty Grable on the side as well. Let me tell you, getting my 6'2" 250lb self through the various parts of the plane on our tour was no picnic.

    BTW, did you know the CAF is now the 'commemorative' AF instead of the 'confederate' AF? News to me.

    Dave

  • 10 - Clavos

    Jul 05, 2006 at 12:09 am

    Nope, I didn't--when did that happen? I guess Confederate isn't PC enough these days.

    Can't remember the name on the one in SAT, but don't think that was it. I DO remember thinking as I crawled through that it was no place for claustrophobics.

    Fun stuff, tho.

  • 11 - Dave Nalle

    Jul 05, 2006 at 12:48 am

    The UnPC issue was how they explained it when I asked today. Not sure how long the change has been in place for. Another example of our society blanding down.

    Dave

  • 12 - Bliffle

    Jul 05, 2006 at 10:31 am

    "Hell, instead of fireworks let's all take our guns out and fire them in the air like they do in the middle east.

    They do that here in Miami every holiday, and not with blanks, either.

    People get killed by falling rounds fairly often."

    Redwood City, with a large mexican community, mostly illegal, used to have that problem, but the police installed an acoustic triangulation system that pinpoints discharged guns. Stopped it dead. Year 'round.

  • 13 - The Right Stiff

    Jul 05, 2006 at 10:39 am

    I don't see the problem so long as you aim your gun so the parabola ends on the house of a democrat.

  • 14 - Michael J. West

    Jul 05, 2006 at 11:45 am

    I liked this very much. You hear a lot about remembering the true meaning of the holiday, but it was nifty to read one about the true meaning of 4th-of-July fireworks. "The rocket's red glare" indeed.

  • 15 - Ruvy in Jerusalem

    Jul 05, 2006 at 12:19 pm

    Well written piece, Dave. I might have appreciated it more if I were still selling whoppers in St. Paul instead of my writing here...

  • 16 - Dave Nalle

    Jul 06, 2006 at 1:51 am

    You were a candy salesman, Ruvy?

    dave

  • 17 - troll

    Jul 06, 2006 at 9:42 am

    save your love for the dancing shadows on the cave's walls...the abstract is a cold mistress

    further - I reject the author's premiss: *we're never done spilling that blood and paying that price.*

    'freedom' based on murder isn't freedom - it's solipsism

    and change is possible...it's a matter of individual free choice

    troll

  • 18 - Dave Nalle

    Jul 06, 2006 at 4:36 pm

    Troll, who said anything about murder?

    There are plenty of other circumstances under which blood can be spilled in the defense of liberty, and I was referring more to the blood of martyrs to the cause of liberty than anything else.

    Dave

  • 19 - gonzo marx

    Jul 06, 2006 at 4:46 pm

    i've been slightly Wondering who the "we" is?

    certainly those who think "patriotism" is putting yellow ribbon magnets on their cars don't count as "minutemen"?

    but i digress

    Excelsior?

  • 20 - Dave Nalle

    Jul 06, 2006 at 5:08 pm

    I'm not sure the yellow ribbon magnets have anything to do with patriotism. That's a different agenda alltogether, I suspect.

    As for who 'we' is, it's all of us who care enough to keep this Republic free. You can be part of that group or not as you choose.

    Dave

  • 21 - troll

    Jul 06, 2006 at 5:35 pm

    Dave - I understood what you were saying about those bloody martyrs and was indicating the (inseparable) 'other side of the coin'

    and my use of 'murder' was drama - the rejection of hairsplitting

    troll

  • 22 - MCH

    Jul 06, 2006 at 11:16 pm

    "As for who 'we' is, it's all of us who care enough to keep this Republic free. You can be part of that group or not as you choose."
    - Dave Nalle

    Oh, you mean the group who believes wars are won and the Republics freedom is preserved by typing hundreds of thousands of rhetorical words on a blogroll from the safety of their keyboard?

    I'll choose to avoid that group.

    No doubt we'd all be speaking with heavy British accents if the original minutemen were anything like the author, ie, choosing to avoid action by hiding out in their fenced compounds .

  • 23 - gonzo marx

    Jul 06, 2006 at 11:23 pm

    now now MCH...i give credit to those who follow the Paine example...

    each does what they can

    but i do tend to give more credence to those willing to Sacrifice...

    that olde "my Life, my Fortune and my sacred Honor" bit holds more weight for me

    but i'll not denigrate any who are willing to do more than just stick a magnet on their car and then bitch

    your mileage may vary

    Excelsior?

  • 24 - Dave Nalle

    Jul 07, 2006 at 12:27 am

    I'll choose to avoid that group.

    Strange how you show up here again and again anyway, with nothing positive to contribute. Just providing a pointless distraction seems even more useless than trying to sway a few hearts and minds with 'hundreds of thousands of rhetorical words'.

    dave

  • 25 - gonzo marx

    Jul 07, 2006 at 12:29 am

    well, there does need to be some counterpoint to a few of the ideological opposites who do the same, but without the core message that MCH hammers on

    and i know you know the ones i mean

    Excelsior?

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