
250th Anniversary Time Travel: What Would the Founders Think About the USA Today?
When Benjamin Franklin emerged from the Constitutional Convention in 1787, a woman reportedly asked him what kind of government the delegates had created. “A republic,” he replied, “if you can keep it.” Two hundred and thirty-nine years later, if Franklin, Washington, and Jefferson were suddenly transported to 2026 America for our 250th anniversary, that conditional “if” would hang heavy in the air. Each man would arrive with different eyes, different fears, and radically different prescriptions for what has become of their experiment. Franklin: The Delighted Diagnostician Of the three, Benjamin Franklin would adjust fastest. This shouldn’t surprise us. The man who arrived in Philadelphia as a teenage runaway and left as the most famous American in the world was nothing if not adaptable. A printer who became a scientist, a scientist who became a diplomat, a diplomat who became a founding father—Franklin’s genius was his refusal to be confined by any single identity. Drop him into 2026, and within hours he’d have figured out how to unlock an iPhone.
250th Anniversary Time Travel: What Would the Founders Think About the USA Today?
View Trump Carved into Mt. Rushmore, Per His Wish
Trump Foreign Investment Claims Pierce Hyperbole Stratosphere
Jefferson and Adams: July 4th Marks 200th Anniversary of Their Deaths
It’s World UFO Day: Roswell Celebrates 79 Years Since the Famous Crash Landing

