
The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie What We Get Wrong About the American Revolution
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Nov 26, 2025 In an engaging discussion, filmmaker Ken Burns, renowned for his historical documentaries, revisits the American Revolution. He critiques the sanitized narratives of the past, emphasizing the war's bloody reality and global context. Burns explores the contradictions of slavery and liberty during the revolution, urging for nuanced storytelling rather than ideological extremes. He discusses the role of Native nations and the unpredictable nature of historical events, highlighting how these lessons relate to today's political polarization. Additionally, he defends public broadcasting's role in fostering complex historical narratives.
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Revolution Was A Global War
- The American Revolution was a global, bloody conflict not just a tidy domestic founding story.
- Ken Burns stresses empires, naval power, and Caribbean theatres shaped the outcome and must be included.
Foreign Support Was Decisive
- European rivals (France, Spain) materially enabled American victory through money, army, and navy.
- Burns credits French naval power and supplies as decisive at Yorktown.
Demystify Founders Without Diminishing Them
- Burns avoids hagiography by 'removing the opacity' from famous founders and showing flaws.
- He balances reverence with complexity to make historical figures human and consequential.

