America at 250: A Salute to the Workers Who Keep Freedom Moving

By Scott A. Angelle

On July 4, 2026, America will mark 250 years since a bold generation signed the Declaration of Independence and launched the greatest experiment in liberty the world has ever known. For two and a half centuries, our country has been tested by war and want, depression and disaster, division and doubt. Yet generation after generation, Americans have answered the call. They have built, planted, drilled, welded, farmed, taught, served, prayed, and sacrificed so that the promise of 1776 endured.

As founder of USA Energy Workers, I believe this anniversary is more than a celebration of dates and documents. It is a tribute to the people who made America work. It is a moment to recognize the men and women whose names may never appear in a history book, but whose labor powers the homes, hospitals, churches, schools, factories, farms, bases, and small businesses that form our nation’s backbone.

Among them are America’s energy workers.

From the Gulf of America to the Permian Basin, from Appalachia’s natural gas fields to the Bakken, from refineries and pipelines to power plants, ports, wind farms, solar fields, nuclear facilities and service yards, USA energy workers have helped transform a young republic into the world’s foremost economic power. They wear steel-toe boots, hard hats, safety glasses and work gloves. They rise before daylight, miss birthdays, brave storms, and work 24/7/365 because America cannot run on wishes. America runs on reliable energy, delivered by skilled American workers.

When we flip a switch, fill a tank, cool a home, heat a church, refrigerate medicine, manufacture food, move freight, or connect by phone to someone we love, we are receiving the benefits of their labor. Energy is not an abstract policy debate to the people who produce it. It is a calling, a craft, and a contribution to the common good.

America’s founders understood that freedom requires more than words. It requires the capacity to act, to defend ourselves, to feed our people, to build our own future, and to remain independent from those who do not share our values. In the 21st century, energy security is national security. A nation that cannot power itself cannot fully govern itself.

That is why this America 250 celebration should include a salute to the Americans who have kept our country moving through every season. Energy workers helped fuel victory in war, prosperity in peace, and innovation in every generation. Today, they are powering a new era of opportunity—from advanced manufacturing and agriculture to data centers, artificial intelligence, space exploration, and the daily life of every community.

At USA Energy Workers, our purpose is to elevate and celebrate the contributions of these men and women. We should honor the electrician and the roughneck, the welder and the engineer, the offshore worker and the lineworker, the refinery operator and the technician maintaining tomorrow’s energy technologies. The strength of America has always come from people who build.

We also reject the false choice that says America must choose between energy and conservation. The American energy worker loves the outdoors, too. We hunt, fish, boat, hike, camp, birdwatch, gather at the lake, and take our families to the beach. We want clean air, clean water, healthy marshes, abundant wildlife, and protected public lands. Conservation is not the enemy of energy. It is part of our duty as Americans.

The right path is balance: energy, environment, and economy working together. We can produce energy here at home under strong safety and environmental standards. We can invest in innovation that reduces emissions, improves efficiency, restores coastlines, protects habitats, and supports parks and public lands. We can strengthen families and communities without surrendering our energy future to nations that do not share our commitment to worker safety, environmental stewardship, or human freedom.

America has never advanced by retreating from its own strengths. We advanced because free people, blessed by God-given rights and abundant natural resources, had the courage to work, create, conserve, and build. The same spirit that carried pioneers across rivers and mountains lives today in the crews who head offshore before sunrise, the workers who maintain pipelines in winter cold, the technicians who keep the grid reliable, and the innovators developing dependable energy for the next 250 years.

As fireworks light the sky for America’s 250th birthday, let us remember that freedom has always required work. It required the courage of the founders, the sacrifice of soldiers, the wisdom of statesmen, the faith of families, and the sweat of workers whose hands turned promise into prosperity.

To America’s energy workers: thank you. You have helped power the American story. You have made our nation stronger, safer, more prosperous, and more free.

And to our beloved country: Happy 250th birthday. May we honor our past, protect the land and waters we love, celebrate the workers who keep America strong, and pass to the next generation a nation still worthy of the Declaration’s promise—life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

Scott A. Angelle is Founder, USA Energy Workers.

This article was originally published by RealClearEnergy and made available via RealClearWire.

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12 Comments
July 5, 2026 10:12 pm

 It is a moment to recognize the men and women whose names may never appear in a history book, but whose labor powers the homes, hospitals, churches, schools, factories, farms, bases, and small businesses that form our nation’s backbone.

Did he not include Data Centers on purpose?

Scissor
Reply to  Steve Case
July 6, 2026 4:24 am

Good question. Data centers, it would seem, are apparently not part of the backbone.

On the other hand, the list seems reasonable, and flowery, but certainly not comprehensive. Why include farms but not grocery stores, shops and restaurants? What is the word “bases” intended to mean and encompass?

July 6, 2026 3:56 am

“We can invest in innovation that reduces emissions…”

Just please stop giving any credit to the misconception that emissions (presumably referring here to CO2) have any harmful influence at all.

“From the Gulf of America to the Permian Basin, from Appalachia’s natural gas fields to the Bakken, from refineries and pipelines to power plants, ports, wind farms, solar fields, nuclear facilities and service yards, USA energy workers have helped transform a young republic into the world’s foremost economic power.”

And please stop listing wind and solar power as sources for grid-delivered energy – which are intermittent and therefore parasitic to the system and to the reliable sources – as though they are equivalent choices on the menu.

Don’t get me wrong. Reliable, abundant energy is good and necessary, so advancing this message is right to do. But stop promoting any of the wrong stuff to get the job done.

That is all for now.

Reply to  David Dibbell
July 6, 2026 5:45 am

I missed those. Duh!

Bruce Cobb
July 6, 2026 4:45 am

Mindless pap.

July 6, 2026 5:59 am

Perusing usaenergyworkers.com –
1- I was pleasantly surprised that nowhere could I find any reference to unions, wind or solar
2- They prominently lauded Trump’s Jan 20, 2025 EO “Unleashing American Energy” and included the entire EO wording.
3- Their petition (that you could sign) included:
* America’s energy policy should encourage an “all of the above” approach, which includes traditional and renewable resource.
*Oil and natural gas are forecasted to remain a foundational energy source in our nation’s energy complex. It is important that our nation’s energy policies recognize this long-range forecast.
4- They promoted the “3E’s”: Energy, Environment & Economy.
Hard to disagree with any of it. I am neutral concerning “renewable” since hydroelectric is included in that category.

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  B Zipperer
July 6, 2026 10:05 am

I am neutral on bank robbing because it involves banks, which I am in favor of.

Sparta Nova 4
July 6, 2026 7:20 am

Salute!

July 6, 2026 7:35 am

Geologist here. 55+ years in the mining industry. Providing the USA (and World) with the raw materials and natural resources to power countries and economies…and proud of it.

Bryan A
Reply to  rocdoctom
July 6, 2026 3:22 pm

Utility worker…42 years of making sure the lights stay on…or are restored ASAP…for over 10,000,000 people and businesses.

rbcherba
July 6, 2026 10:59 am

Thank you. I spent 33 yrs in and around power plants — 3y with coal-fired units, 30 in nuclear. Workers in all phases of our electrical power production, transmission and distribution are part of the millions of the ‘forgotten’ 24/7 workers that keep the economy working and supply our daily needs, including police, fire, medical, power, telephone, food, military, transportation, and many others. Shift work, on-call duty and response to weather or equipment emergencies involves missed holidays, family celebrations, sleep-disrupting schedules and middle of the night call-outs. We especially need to recognize the challenges of the family farmers whose lives are largely dictated by livestock and weather.

Phillip Chalmers
July 6, 2026 3:26 pm

Please! Amongst all people doing all the things that put food on tables, clothes on backs, places to live and shelter and who by enterprise generate wealth there are the productive folk and there the drones.
Studies are clear that 20% of them do 80% of the work and 80% do the rest, 20%. (Pareto distribution – look it up)
The thing to greatly admire is that those who do the most work continue to do so while knowing full well they are bearing much of the load.