I live in Texas and it is celebrated on march 2. The first Independence day was March 2, 1836. I am disappointed so few people that answered this question do not realze Texas was an independent nation.
2006-09-03 01:38:18
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answer #1
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answered by mary texas 4
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Yes we celebrate Independence Day. We do this because we are celebrating the birth of the nation that we are a part of. It is just a great big party for all of the United States. Even those that were not states at the time that the Declaration of Independence was signed.
2006-09-03 01:24:21
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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hi from France,
all the American states are united now.
I think that you don't have to ask a such question ,
well i mean when they got united they all accept the American history like the Independence day.
And now they are a Nation
I thing that why is the only thing you must see now
and youmust be proud of it.
It's the same thing when you want to live in other country, you accept those rules and those history
2006-09-03 01:35:27
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answer #3
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answered by glooby 3
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People live in 50 different states that are part of a country, called the United States of America. Do you know what a country is? Good.
It is not a celebration limited to the original 13 colonies. There are other states, and if you want to be truthful, people were living there thousands of years before any Spanish people showed up.
I wonder why you ask this entirely stupid question.
2006-09-03 01:31:19
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answer #4
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answered by Zelda Hunter 7
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I moved to FL mutually as i became nevertheless donning mail for the placed up workplace. not extra ice & snow; hills & steps. It gets fairly warm interior the summertime, even nonetheless that's all flat. i've got continuously been a nature lover. right here I see all varieties of animals & flora all 3 hundred and sixty 5 days around. It became very depressing up north interior the iciness while each little thing looked ineffective. yet another element approximately Florida: there is a few thing occurring right here each weekend. track fairs, plant fairs, cultural fairs, Renaissance, Scottish video games, etc. there is often some thing to do on the weekends.
2016-11-06 08:13:20
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Independence Day is a NATIONAL holiday, and unless these states are no longer part of the U.S., why wouldn't they celebrate it on the same day as everyone else?
2006-09-03 01:22:21
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answer #6
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answered by WC 7
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good question stickyricky, there is little reason for florida etc to celebrate independence day on july 4th seeing as they didn't gain their independence then! duh. I guess yanks need to celebrate on the same day to bolster the idea of unity in this case by rebelling against Britain, when in fact its was not just britain that was being rebelled against. In fact 'americans' didn't even defeat the british on their own but with other nationalities help.
2006-09-03 01:28:19
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answer #7
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answered by wave 5
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the states in question have been part of the nation for more than 100 years far long enough for the norms of the country to influence the norms of the state, so yes, although I wonder if Hawaii does
2006-09-03 01:24:42
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Doesn't matter what or who the independence was from? It is the independence of the nation. And they all celebrate it.
According to your logic no one in the US should celebrate it because no one was alive then.
2006-09-03 01:24:40
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answer #9
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answered by P P 5
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If every single state celebrated it on their own particular day it would cause mayhem for the rest of the world because we wouldn't know which days to do business etc... with America, one day is fine.
2006-09-04 05:03:35
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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