Twelve score and nine years ago, if you’ll indulge me, the Second Continental Congress, gathered in Philadelphia, did something momentous: they adopted the Declaration of Independence, as mostly written by Thomas Jefferson, and thus announced to the world the birth of a new nation, one based explicitly on democratic principles and rooted in radical, atheistic philosophy. That this American achievement was imperfect and marred by the crime of slavery, among others, should not detract from our admiration. The Americans took on a mighty empire and won (with the help of the French, let us not forget), and what was begun in 1776 culminated in the creation of the world’s first and oldest, and possibly even greatest, secular democratic republic.
The history of America is the history of revolution and counter-revolution. It is the story of the unfolding of the promise of the Declaration—an unfolding opposed, and sometimes stemmed and even rolled back, by racists, oligarchs, and theocrats. The land of freedom was also the land of slavery; the epicentre of modern global secularism was also—is also—the epicentre of Christian fundamentalism.
Today, under the second Donald Trump administration, almost everything that actually made America great is being spat upon by people who claim to be American patriots. Christian nationalism is stronger than ever, American imperialism is capital-B back, the rule of law and the system of checks and balances and the democratic process are being subverted. The true America, or at least the best, the noblest America—the America of Thomas Paine—is dying. 249 years on from that world-historical turning point in Philadelphia, will this America survive until the Semiquincentennial next year?
As an admirer of America from afar, I hope so, I truly do. (And I hope that I am being more pessimistic than realistic in my assessment that this America is dying.) The freethought movements in Britain and America have always been close friends, and it is to American freethinkers and secularists that we must look now. (One might begin by checking out The Truth Seeker, edited by Roderick Bradford.)
Meanwhile, the Fourth of July is a good moment to look back on some Freethinker articles and interviews which touch on the subject of America’s soul, to greater or lesser extents; many of these will explain the characterisation I gave above, particularly the mention of America’s roots in ‘radical, atheistic philosophy’.
In no particular order, then (and note that this is not an exhaustive list):
How Trump will reshape America’s global role in his image, by Matt Johnson
The end of American idealism, by Matt Johnson
American democracy will soon turn 250. Freethought can reinvigorate it. By Patrick Seamus McGhee
The radical atheism of the American revolutions: interview with Matthew Stewart, by Daniel James Sharp
Donald Trump is an existential threat to American democracy, by Jonathan Church
Donald Trump, political violence, and the future of America, by Daniel James Sharp
White Christian Nationalism is rising in America. Separation of church and state is the antidote. By Rachel Laser
US Election 2024: Yet Another Farcical and Costly Contest, by Zwan Mahmod
US Election 2024: On ‘Lesser Evilism’, by Ralph Leonard
‘Project 2025 is about accelerating the demise of a functioning democracy’: interview with US Representative Jared Huffman, by Daniel James Sharp
Books from Bob’s Library #2: Thomas Paine’s ‘Rights of Man’, by Bob Forder
The rhythm of Tom Paine’s bones, by Eoin Carter
Faith Watch, February 2024, by Daniel James Sharp
Faith Watch, March 2024, by Daniel James Sharp
Christopher Hitchens and the long afterlife of Thomas Paine, by Daniel James Sharp
Introducing ‘Paine: A Fantastical Visual Biography’, by Polyp, by Paul Fitzgerald
Reproductive freedom is religious freedom, by Andrew Seidel and Rachel Laser
Secular conservatives? If only…, by Jacques Berlinerblau
The Antisemitism Awareness Act will mean the demise of free speech in America, by Kunwar Khuldune Shahid
Satan Will See You in Court: A Florida Battle for Religious Freedom, by T. ‘Chaz’ Stevens
Is Democracy Overrated? The Vacuity of Curtis Yarvin and His ‘Dark Elves’, by Jonathan Church
Against the ‘New Theism’, by Daniel James Sharp
Can the ‘New Theists’ save the West? by Matt Johnson
Two types of ‘assimilation’: the US and China, by Grayson Slover
What has Christianity to do with Western values? by Nick Cohen
Image of the week: ‘Trumpburster’, by Paul Fitzgerald
Image of the week: ‘Top Trumps’, by Paul Fitzgerald
Can Christianity Save Atheism? On Žižek’s Christian Atheism Cringe, by Ralph Leonard
Escaping Ideology with Jonathan Church: Freethinker editor Daniel James Sharp in conversation
Image of the week: The Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925, by Daniel James Sharp
Happy Independence Day, America.
Originally published in the Freethinker, 4 July 2025.