As I awake that morning every year,
a sense of anticipation overtakes me. I
put on all the garb I picked out the day before, prepare for the food I’ll be
consuming, the sun that is going to turn my skin into a shade like unto an
apple for I’ll forget to reapply the sunscreen.
I know I must savor every moment of this day for it is one I enjoy more
than Christmas, more than my own birthday.
The 4th of July. The
time that my patriotism shines through most, when I recall the ideals that made
this country great, remembering our founding fathers as well as all the
soldiers who sacrificed their lives for us.
My country. America. My home.
I marvel at the circumstances that
surrounded the establishment of this country.
The founding fathers created a government that really worked, that was
divined by God. A country that would be
full of freedoms, liberty, and justice.
Equality, a melting pot of all the cultures that I’ve come to fall in
love with. It is meant to be a country
for all people. It’s supposed to unite
the countries of the world, giving people a place of refuge, a place where they
can be who they are and share their culture with us all. It was created by immigrants and should allow
all to partake.
Though I love my country very much
because of the foundation on which it stands the principles of freedom,
equality, and justice, I know it doesn’t have the same rapport it used to or
the same ideals. Americans, to quote my
grandfather,” are too fat, dumb, and happy.”
The American image is one of obese white males who only care about guns
and McDonalds, naïve to the issues facing the country and the world. People on the outside looking at America see
these people who are entitled and over proud of a country that has veered so
far away from the principles it was founded on that it just makes us look like
bigots.
I wanted to extrapolate the
difference between my pride for my country and how differently I see it from how
the world sees it. I took the iconic
picture of George Washington crossing the Delaware River because it was a
pivotal point in our success in the Revolutionary war and envelops a man that
had the right vision for our country. I
was hoping the images I superimposed on the image would be more offensive, but
it sort of turned more humorous like the “Untold adventures of George
Washington” imgur account. Yet, it still
works to bring the message across with the use of humor. It was interesting the correlation with my
topic and the reading talking about creating an idea into a cult. Essentially the idea of America could be the
greatest cult there is, people dress up in the garb, everyone knows the quotes
of the America characters, and they pick apart the original story.