
CWEB US News – In a day of profound national significance, the United States commemorated its 250th anniversary with stirring oratory, time‑honoured pageantry, and an unmistakable sense of resurgent pride, centred upon the vibrant harbour of New York City.
President Donald J. Trump, in an address of considerable historical sweep, evoked the heroic narrative of the American people – from their first arduous footsteps into an untamed wilderness, to the forging of iron railroads that bound a continent, from the monumental excavation of the Panama Canal to the decisive defeat of global tyranny in two world wars. There is, the President declared, no challenge that Americans cannot surmount, and no ambition that lies beyond their collective grasp.

Surveying two and a half centuries of world history, President Trump observed that mighty empires, vast kingdoms, and fearsome despots have risen and subsequently faded into obscurity. Yet this American Republic, he affirmed, still stands tall and unyielding; its flag still waves – proud, free, and beautiful. He attributed this enduring vitality to the extraordinary calibre of the Founders, the righteousness of the national cause, the dauntless courage of its citizens, and a cultural exceptionalism whose ultimate destiny, he asserted, is divinely inscribed.
“For 250 years, the United States of America has been the HOPE, the PROMISE, the LIGHT, and the GLORY among all of the nations of the world.” – President Donald J. Trump 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/FxKumFAyeq
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) July 5, 2026
At 250 years of age, the nation, he insisted, remains in its vibrant youth, its finest chapters yet unwritten. The spirit of 1776, he proclaimed, still roars in the hearts of patriots, thunders through every city and town, and illuminates the entire world with the radiant glow of American liberty. “The best is yet to come,” he affirmed with unshakeable conviction.

Earlier in the day, Vice President J.D. Vance participated in the International Naval Review 250, the International Aerial Review, and the Sail 4th 250 events in New York Harbour. During these proceedings, he visited the sailors aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Kearsarge, where he oversaw a reenlistment ceremony and observed the impressive assembly of naval vessels and aircraft from the deck. In his subsequent remarks, Mr Vance framed the occasion as a celebration of 250 years of facing the future without fear – a testament to what a free people, under the providence of their Almighty Creator, can achieve together.
The Vice President paid gracious tribute to iconic figures of American ingenuity, from George Washington to the engineers James B. Eads and Henry J. Kaiser. Yet, with a tone of gentle but firm admonition, he acknowledged that even on this most auspicious of birthdays, a small but vociferous minority might choose to dwell upon national imperfections rather than national greatness. These voices, he suggested, would speak of the powerless and dispossessed, framing history as an unending contest between the weak and the strong.

In a compelling and unifying peroration, Mr Vance urged his fellow citizens to reject such a reductive, two‑dimensional view of their country and their compatriots. He implored them to spurn zero‑sum thinking, reminding his audience that America’s true saga is not one of citizens pitted against one another, but of a common people carving a magnificent civilisation out of the wilderness. “Reject the view of your nation that sees only its sins, but not its grace and its greatness,” he exhorted, emphasising that every triumph has been achieved not through division, but through collective endeavour – as one nation, striving harmoniously towards a shared and prosperous future.
As chronicled by CWEB US News, the day stood as a powerful testament to unity, resilience, and the enduring promise of the American ideal – a celebration rendered all the more poignant by the dignified rhetoric of its leaders and the majestic backdrop of New York Harbour, where the Statue of Liberty herself stood sentinel over the proceedings.

