The Signal

Celebrate our independen­ce

- -Robert M. Hutchins American educationa­l philosophe­r, dean of Yale Law School.

On July 4 we celebrate a remarkable 241 years of a functionin­g democracy in this nation, of a people standing together and saying with one voice: “We can be smart enough, tough enough, kind enough, thoughtful enough and far-seeing enough to govern ourselves.”

Certainly those 241 years have been a struggle at times. A nascent nation was governed initially under the Articles of Confederat­ion, replaced in 1789 by the U.S. Constituti­on, a surprising­ly sturdy but flexible document that has managed to hold together this nation, and its democratic tradition, through a civil war, two world wars, a major depression and several economic recessions, plenty of political upheavals, 17 constituti­onal amendments that followed the Bill of Rights, along with a technologi­cal revolution.

The forethough­t of those Founding Fathers more than two centuries ago is astounding.

We hope you will join us this Fourth of July as we celebrate the signing of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce – Santa Clarita Valley style – from blueberry pancakes to mall-front fireworks and an 85-year-old parade tradition along the way. See the Fourth of July page on B6 of Friday’s Signal for details about activities.

At the same time we urge you to recommit to those hard-earned democratic principles the Founding Fathers gave us.

Don’t let the hustle and bustle of everyday life get in the way of voting, of taking a political stand, of becoming involved and influencin­g your world.

To protect our democracy, we must move ahead with the same passion for good governance as our forefather­s had 241 years ago.

“The death of democracy is not likely to be an assassinat­ion from ambush. It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifferen­ce, and undernouri­shment.”

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