Thank you Hector and Carlos for the information. I had completely forgotten, if I ever knew, of this tradition. I will, however, ring a bell a noon (MDT) today.
The cops have to play by the rules. Video everything you can and keep a log of incidents. When you talk to the cops, record the date, time, what happened and get the officer’s names. You might get enough data to give to your local TV investigative reporter.
Actually it was John Adams who said that bells would ring and fireworks set off on July 2 – yes July 2, the day the Declaration was passed in Congress. July 4 was the ceremonial signature of John Hancock. The other members (and John Hancock again) signed the formal copy in August over several days.
Templo S.U.D. over 10 years ago
Feliz Día de la Independencia estadounidense.
ninjanick101 over 10 years ago
Let freedom ring!
TymmeRMortis over 10 years ago
Oh the world turned upside down!
Tue Elung-Jensen over 10 years ago
What freedom?
Reality,really? over 10 years ago
Religion,speech,assembly,thought,association, bear arms.
We may not perfect but the alternatives seem much less appealing.
Mneedle over 10 years ago
But we are losing more of it every day.
bryan42 over 10 years ago
Thank you Hector and Carlos for the information. I had completely forgotten, if I ever knew, of this tradition. I will, however, ring a bell a noon (MDT) today.
Comic Minister Premium Member over 10 years ago
Agreed Sergio.
potrerokid over 10 years ago
Does it ever? So much for “protect & serve”!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Gokie5 over 10 years ago
At 2:00 p. m. I dingled on an Old-Fashioned-type glass with a heavy spoon. Worked fine.
dzw3030 over 10 years ago
The cops have to play by the rules. Video everything you can and keep a log of incidents. When you talk to the cops, record the date, time, what happened and get the officer’s names. You might get enough data to give to your local TV investigative reporter.
mafastore over 10 years ago
Actually it was John Adams who said that bells would ring and fireworks set off on July 2 – yes July 2, the day the Declaration was passed in Congress. July 4 was the ceremonial signature of John Hancock. The other members (and John Hancock again) signed the formal copy in August over several days.
Guns can be fired blank – no bullet to come down.