250 Years – By Enrique Pepén
As 2026 takes course, our nation begins preparing to honor a milestone unlike any other: the 250th anniversary of American independence. For most places, this is a moment of reflection. For Boston, it is something far more personal, and far more demanding.

Today, I’ll be honest. It is difficult for many of us to feel proud of our country in the way we might want to. Across the nation, people feel unheard, unsafe, unprotected, and disconnected from leadership that seems increasingly distant from their daily realities. Institutions meant to serve the public feel unaccountable. The gap between power and people feels wider by the day.
Recent events have only intensified that reckoning. This past week alone, Americans have watched disturbing examples of state power exercised without transparency, without compassion, and without restraint. The killing of Renee Good by ICE in Minnesota continues to weigh heavily on our national conscience, emblematic of a broader pattern that raises urgent questions about whose lives are valued and whose suffering is dismissed. At the same time, we are seeing peaceful dissent met with force, communities living in fear of enforcement actions, and democratic norms strained in ways that would have been unthinkable not long ago.
These are not isolated moments. They are warning signs.
They force us to confront a hard truth, systems created to protect life and liberty can drift slowly or suddenly toward cruelty when left unchecked. And they leave us with a choice. We can avert our eyes, retreat to the sidelines, and hope someone else speaks up. Or we can remember who we are, and act.
This is precisely why our history matters now.
The American Revolution was born from dissatisfaction with leadership that no longer reflected the will of the people. It was fueled by citizens who understood that democracy is not something granted from above; it is something demanded, defended, and renewed by each generation. As we approach this 250th anniversary, the question before us is not simply how we commemorate the past, but whether we are willing to live up to it.
What kind of country do we want to become? And what are we willing to do, and risk, to shape it?
History teaches us that progress has never come from silence or complacency. It comes from courage. From people willing to raise their voices, challenge injustice, and confront power when it drifts toward abuse. That kind of moral clarity is uncomfortable. It is inconvenient. But it is essential if freedom is to be more than a slogan.
Boston has answered that call before. I believe we can, and must, do it again.
Honoring 250 years of independence cannot stop at parades, reenactments, or speeches. It must mean tending to the democracy we have right now. From Charlestown to Hyde Park, and every neighborhood in between, that means refusing to look away when injustice shows up at our doorstep. It means checking in on our neighbors, no matter what language they speak or what God they pray to. It means showing up to community meetings, to mutual aid efforts, to the ballot box, and to the moments when our voices are most needed.
This is how our country was built. Not through grand gestures alone, but through ordinary people choosing engagement over apathy and courage over comfort.
As the nation looks toward Boston during this historic anniversary, let us remind America what liberty looks like in practice. Let us reject silence in the face of injustice. Let us stand firm in the principles that sparked a revolution 250 years ago.
And let us show, once again, that when democracy is tested, Boston does not sit on the sidelines, we lead.
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