Live to Shoot - Defending our 2nd Amendment Rights
Live to Shoot - Defending our 2nd Amendment Rights
July 1776 - America, Happy 250th Birthday
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It's July 1776 — the month that changed everything. In this special 250th anniversary episode, Jeff walks through the dramatic days leading to the Declaration of Independence, from Caesar Rodney's midnight ride to soldiers melting down King George's statue into musket balls. This is the story of how armed citizens turned words on paper into a nation — and why it still matters for your Second Amendment rights today.
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Welcome to the Live to Shoot podcast. My name is Jeff Dowdle, and I've been a licensed firearm dealer for the last 18 years. In this podcast, we talk about all things related to the Second Amendment, anything else going on in the world, sports story, or anything else I find interesting. So welcome, welcome, welcome. Well, happy birthday, America. Um, we have finally arrived. We have been marching towards America's 250th anniversary, the birthday of July 4th, 2026, and we've been doing this series month by month, going back 250 years, looking at what was happening during the American Revolution. We started way back, and we've walked through the debates, the battles, the arguments, the fear, the courage, and now we are here, July 1776. This is the month. This is the one that changed everything. So let's set the stage. By the time the calendar turned to July of 1776, the colonies had been at war with Britain for over a year. Shots had been fired at Lexington and Concord, Bunker Hill had been fought, the British had been driven out of Boston, but there still had not been a formal declaration. The Continental Congress had spent months going back and forth. Some g- delegates still hoped for reconciliations. Others knew that ship had sailed a long time ago. But by July, the momentum was unstoppable. Thomas Paine's Common Sense had swept through the colonies. Colonial legislatures were passing their own resolutions of independence. Virginia had already instructed its delegates to propose independence. North Carolina had authorized its de-delegates to vote for it. The people were ahead of the politicians, which honestly is how it should work. So, on July 1st, 1776, the Continental Congress began its final debate on Richard Henry Lee's resolution. Now, Lee had introduced the re-resolution back on June 7th, and it said plainly, "These United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent states." That's about as clear as you can get. July 1st, they debate- debated, and it wasn't unanimous, not yet. Pennsylvania and South Carolina initially voted against it. Delaware was split. New York abstained because their delegates hadn't been authorized to vote for independence yet, so they didn't have the votes for a unanimous declaration on July 1st. But overnight, things shifted. Caesar Rodney, and this is one of the favorite stories from the Revolution, Caesar Rodney of Delaware rode 80 miles through the night, through a thunderstorm, sick with cancer, to break the tie in Delaware's delegation. He arrived just in time on July 2nd. South Carolina changed its vote. Two Pennsylvania delegates who opposed independence conveniently stayed home, which allowed the remaining delegates to swing Pennsylvania's vote, and New York still abstained, but they came around later. So on July 2nd, 1776, the Continental Congress voted to declare independence. John Adams actually thought July 2nd would be the date we celebrate forever. He wrote to his wife, Abigail, that July 2nd would be the most memorable day in the history of America. Well, he was close, but it's July 4th that stuck because that's the date Congress formally adopted the final wording of the Declaration of Independence Now, Thomas Jefferson had been drafting this document for weeks. He'd been holed up in a rented room in Philadelphia, writing and rewriting, and what he produced is one of the most important documents in human history. "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." Think about that. They didn't say the government gives you rights. They said you already have them. You were born with them. The government's only job is to protect them, and when it fails to do that, when it becomes destructive of those ends, the people have the right to alter or abolish it. That is revolutionary. That was revolutionary then, and honestly, it's still revolutionary now. Now, here's what I want to bring home. While Congress was debating and signing, the war was very much on. The British were assembling the largest expeditionary force in their history. By July, hundreds of British ships were arriving in New York Harbor, tens of thousands of troops, British regulars, and those Hessian mercenaries we talked about months ago were preparing to invade. George Washington had moved the Continental Army to New York, and he knew what was coming. He had his troops dug in, but he also knew they were outmanned and outgunned. On July 9th, Washington had the, the Declaration of Independence read aloud to his troops in New York. Imagine that moment. These men, many of them farmers and tradesmen, standing there hearing for the first time that they were no longer fighting for their rights as British subjects. They were fighting for a new nation. They were fighting for independence. And that night, soldiers and citizens in New York tore down a statue of King George III. They melted it and t- and down and turned it into musket balls. Now, if that isn't the most Second Amendment story you've ever heard, I don't know what is. So what does all that mean today? Here's the bottom line: the Declaration of Independence didn't just announce a new country, it established a philosophy. It said that rights come from God, not from government, and that's when government tries to strip those rights away, the people not only have the right to resist, they have the duty to resist, and that is the foundation of everything we believe about the Second Amendment. The men who signed the document on July 4, 1776, they weren't just putting pen to paper. They were signing what could have been their own death warrants. If the revolution failed, every single one of them would have been hanged for treason. They pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor, and many of them lost everything. But they did it because they believed that liberty was worth more than safety, that freedom was worth more than comfort. And none of it, not one word of that declaration, would have mattered if ordinary citizens had not been armed and willing to fight. The Declaration of Independence was back up, backed up by the muskets of common men. That's the lesson of the July four-- July 1776. Your rights mean nothing if you can't defend them. So, as we celebrate this 250th anniversary of American independence, let's remember what it actually took. It took courage, it took sacrifice, and it took an armed citizenry that refused to be subjects. That's what the Second Amendment protects, not hunting, not sport shooting, the right of free people to remain free. This has been special. We've been building this for a long time, and we're gonna keep going. Um, we're gonna keep going all the way through the rest of the year as what's been happening because I think this has been very informative. So, but if you found it valuable up to this point, share it, give it five stars, leave a comment, do whatever it takes to get the word out because people need to know what it took to form this country. I'm Jeff Dowdle. This is Live to Shoot: Defending the Second Amendment. Stay free, stay armed, and never forget what it cost. Talk to you later.
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