Tag Archives: Andrew Walder
A Minority’s Miracle: 250 Years of American Exceptionalism
Two hundred and fifty years ago, on July 4, 1776, a small group of men — educated, propertied, and fully aware of what they risked — pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor to take the first step toward founding something the world had never seen: a nation grounded in the conviction that rights come from God, not from government.
Posted in Religious Liberty
Tagged America, American Revolution, Andrew Walder, Bastille, Bolsheviks, Committee of Public Safety, Congress, Declaration, Declaration of Independence, Declaration of the Rights of Man, Deutsche Welle, Fidel Castro, Freedom, French Revolution, Hamilton, Jefferson, John Adams, John Hancock, Lenin, Liberty, Madison, Mao Zedong, Marx, Napoleon Bonaparte, Patrick Henry, Reign of Terror, Robespierre, Samuel Adams, Sons of Liberty, Stalin, The Black Book of Communism, Virginia House of Burgesses
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