
President Donald Trump has never hidden his love for this country. While many politicians spend their Fourth of July weekends apologizing for America in Ivy League terminology, Trump takes every opportunity to remind us of our roots. He doesn’t just wave the flag—he knows where it came from, who carried it into battle, and why they did it.
Unlike the Biden administration, which seemed more interested in rebranding our founding principles as “problematic,” Trump is doing what real patriots do: honoring the brave men who literally faced down tyranny in 1775. You know, the ones with muskets, not pronouns.
While the Left wants to swap George Washington for Karl Marx in your grandkids’ history books, Trump is busy proclaiming April 19, 2025, as a national day to commemorate the Battles of Lexington and Concord—the first shots fired in the American Revolution, and quite possibly the loudest bang of liberty the world has ever known.
A president who remembers what the fight was for
Donald Trump’s official proclamation doesn’t just mark a date on the calendar. It’s a battle cry—one that echoes the spirit of the 77 minutemen who stood on a misty Lexington Green and dared to tell the greatest empire in the world: “We will not bow.”
From ‘The Post Millennial’:
April 19, 1775, stands to this day as a seminal milestone in our Nation’s righteous crusade for liberty and independence… their fortitude remains our inheritance, their resolve remains our birthright, and their unwavering loyalty to God and country remains the duty of every American patriot.
These aren’t empty words. They carry the weight of men like Captain Parker and Paul Revere, whose midnight ride warned patriots of the incoming British threat, and men like Captain Isaac Davis who shouted, “Fire, fellow soldiers, for God’s sake, fire!” as he led the colonial resistance at Concord’s North Bridge. It was faith, duty, and determination that won the day—concepts that today’s Left considers outdated, if not outright offensive.
Woke vs. the Minutemen
Let that sink in: while today’s progressive leadership is busy erasing monuments, rebranding Columbus Day, and rewriting textbooks to paint patriots as oppressors, Donald Trump is shouting from the White House that our founding matters. That these men matter.
This isn’t just a commemoration—it’s a line in the sand. Trump is reviving a moment when everyday citizens, unpolished and unafraid, said no to government overreach and yes to freedom. They fought against forced compliance, unjust taxation, and a distant elite who thought they knew better than the people themselves.
Sound familiar?
Today’s ruling class may wear suits and speak in Twitter threads, but the agenda is the same: social engineering through censorship, control, and cultural guilt. Trump’s April 19 declaration isn’t just about remembering the past—it’s about declaring that our future still belongs to free Americans.
Preserving truth while others push propaganda
At a time when public education replaces clarity with ideology, when history is “reimagined” instead of remembered, and when patriotism is labeled a political threat, a proclamation like Trump’s sends a different message.
That message? We are not ashamed of our beginning.
Commemorating the “shot heard ’round the world” isn’t a history lesson—it’s a warning. Because if we allow the enemies of truth to dictate what our children learn, then we surrender everything the patriots of 1775 fought to build.
The legacy of Lexington isn’t just about muskets. It’s about moral clarity in the face of confusion. About standing up when others kneel to the mob. About knowing that some values are worth fighting for—even 250 years after the first shot rang out.
Key Takeaways:
- Trump declared April 19 a national day honoring America’s founding stand for liberty.
- The Left pushes to erase our roots—Trump is reviving them with patriotic purpose.
- Lexington’s legacy is not just about muskets—it’s about resisting tyranny in all forms.
- Commemorating history is a conservative act when radicals demand we forget.
Sources: The Post Millennial