"The off-ramp is still there"

America just turned 250, and I'll be honest: I wasn't sure how I'd feel about it. The birthday arrived during a weird, unsettled stretch of national life — the kind where saying you love your country can feel like picking a side in an argument you never wanted to join. I spent the weekend reading Eric Berger's essay on Ars Technica about finding hope at the semiquincentennial, and it landed harder than I expected.

Berger writes from the perspective of someone who was three years old during the 1976 bicentennial — just young enough to remember the parade, the cannon, his dad speaking about democracy, but not old enough to grasp the fraught context. That's the thing about big anniversaries: they feel clean in retrospect even when the moment itself was messy. The bicentennial happened two years after Nixon resigned and one year after Saigon fell. America was reeling. But we threw a party anyway, and somehow it helped.

I wasn't alive in 1976, but I grew up in the afterglow. The bicentennial wasn't just a weekend of fireworks — it was a five-year cultural project that included a traveling museum on rails called the American Freedom Train, a visit from Queen Elizabeth, and a restaging of the Boston Tea Party where activists called for environmental protection instead of lower tea taxes. The bicentennial was, in its way, a national attempt to remind ourselves who we were after a decade of institutional collapse. And it sort of worked.

What Berger gets right — and what I think gets missed in a lot of anniversary coverage — is that hope isn't found in grand national gestures. It's found in the weirdly specific, stubbornly local things people build when no one's watching. His example is Space City Weather, the no-hype Houston weather site he started a decade ago. "Boring is our brand," he jokes. But during hurricanes, millions of people turn to it because they trust it. Trust doesn't scale the way outrage does, but it lasts longer.

This connects to something the Ars essay only glances at: the collapse of what sociologists call "third places." Robert Putnam made this argument in Bowling Alone twenty-five years ago — Americans stopped joining things. Churches, unions, bowling leagues, neighborhood associations. We retreated into screens and suburbs, and we lost the muscle memory of collective action. Berger's weather site is, in a weird way, a digital third place. It's not just information; it's a community organized around a shared value — accuracy over sensation. These things are small. They don't make headlines. But they're the off-ramps Berger is talking about.

Another thing worth saying that the essay doesn't dig into: the people who feel most hopeless right now are often the ones paying the most attention to national politics. I don't think that's a coincidence. National politics is designed to make you feel powerless — that's how it mobilizes donations and votes. But the people I know who are happiest and most effective are the ones who've shrunk their radius of concern. They're running food banks, coaching kids' teams, coordinating neighborhood cleanup days. They're not ignoring the country's problems — they're just not waiting for Washington to fix them.

Berger points out that science is now global in a way it wasn't during the last big anniversary. "No single government or religion can halt its progress," he writes. That's true, and it matters more than most people realize. In 1976, if the U.S. government decided not to fund something, it probably didn't happen. Today, researchers in Shanghai, Bangalore, and Berlin are pushing forward regardless of what happens in D.C. The center of gravity has shifted. That's not a loss of American leadership — it's a diffusion of human capability, and it's genuinely good news.

There's also the uncomfortable-but-true observation Berger makes about reality itself: badly built rockets explode, false medical claims don't cure, corrupt companies eventually fail. "Truth will out," he quotes. It takes longer than you'd like — Enron took years to unravel, and the tobacco industry's lies took decades — but gravity is patient. I'd add that this is why propaganda eventually loses: not because people get smarter, but because the physical world doesn't negotiate. A bridge built with substandard materials falls down whether you believe in it or not.

I think what I'm circling around is that hope at 250 isn't about ignoring the mess. It's about noticing that the mess has always been there, and people have always found ways through it. The centennial in 1876 happened during Reconstruction, with the country still bleeding from a civil war that had ended barely a decade earlier. Susan B. Anthony and her fellow suffragists crashed the stage in Philadelphia to read their Declaration of Rights — and it would be another 44 years before women got the vote. Anniversaries don't mark perfection. They mark persistence.

The semiquincentennial celebrations are, by design, bigger and more ambitious than anything we've done before. The America250 Commission is planning events across all 50 states, a Great American State Fair, Sail250, and what organizers promise will be the largest fireworks display in history. Whether you find that inspiring or a bit much probably says something about your disposition. I find myself somewhere in the middle: skeptical of the branding, moved by the impulse.

Here's what I'm taking from Berger's essay into the rest of this year: the off-ramp is real. Every time someone builds something useful instead of something addictive, every time a journalist chooses accuracy over outrage, every time a community shows up for itself instead of waiting for permission — that's a vehicle changing lanes. None of it makes the evening news. But 250 years of it got us here, and I'm not ready to bet against it yet.

Further reading: What to expect from the America250 celebrations (NPR)

Comments

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Coffee_Black_42July 5, 2026 · 5:20 pm

Twenty years in, and I can tell you Berger is right about one thing: hope isn't a strategy. It's a byproduct of doing the work. The units with the best morale weren't the ones getting medals. They were the ones with a clear mission and competent people executing it. That's what Space City Weather is. A clear mission. No hype. Just the facts.

@Retired_Chief_Mike, you've seen this from the other end of the hose. The people who run toward the problem while everyone else is arguing about jurisdiction. That's the off-ramp right there.

The part about third places hits hard too. Best conversations I ever had were in the chow hall, not the briefing room. Those informal spaces build the trust that holds a unit together. We've paved over most of them in civilian life and wonder why nobody believes in anything anymore.

The centennial in 1876 happened during Reconstruction. The bicentennial in 1976 happened two years after Nixon resigned. Anniversaries don't mark perfection. They mark persistence. That's worth remembering.

Show up. Do the job. Everything else is noise.

B
Bartender_Bert_99July 5, 2026 · 9:08 pm

@Coffee_Black_42, the third places thing is what I live every shift. My bar is exactly that — a spot where the suit next to the work boots ends up talking fishing after a couple beers. Friendships start over a shared pint. Job offers get handed across the counter. People celebrate and mourn at the same barstool.

The chow hall comparison is dead on. I’ve had vets in here say the real bonds form when the rank comes off, over a meal or a drink. Same thing I see every night — the formality drops and suddenly people are human with each other.

You’re right that we’ve paved over most of those spaces. But the ones still standing — corner bars, diners, coffee shops — they’re carrying more weight than people realize. Show up somewhere consistently and the community part happens on its own. Twelve years in and I still watch it happen every week.

Persistence over perfection. That’s worth a toast. 🍺

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