Photo: UniversalImagesGroup

How did you spend the Fourth of July this year? Perhaps you got very sunburned on a beach. Or ate too many hot dogs and drank too many IPAs. Or, maybe, if you own a MAGA hat and didn’t feel like going outside, you spent the day tied to your computer angrily replying to NPR’s Declaration of Independence tweets. (Okay, okay, to be fair, maybe you did this from your phone, while outside wearing your hat and drinking beer and eating hot dogs.)

In honor of America’s Independence Day, NPR tweeted the entire Declaration of Independence, in 140-character chunks. Parts of which, in case you’ve forgotten from high-school history class, remind the citizenry of its rights to alter and abolish any government that strays from the values and morals on which the country was founded. If you had forgotten learning this, don’t feel bad. You’re not alone. Plenty of people on Twitter seemed to think NPR was trying to incite a rebellion against the current administration, rather than just tweeting out an extremely apropos and historic document.

I can't get enough of people getting mad online because @NPR tweeted the Declaration of Independence pic.twitter.com/D7MpparS5g — Josh Billinson (@jbillinson) July 5, 2017

NPR tweeted out the entire Declaration of Independence, and wow... uh... the responses are... something. pic.twitter.com/KurdVurRgW — Parker Molloy (@ParkerMolloy) July 5, 2017

A Prince whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people. — NPR (@NPR) July 4, 2017

This woman thought someone hacked the NPR account. She eventually figured it out, though. pic.twitter.com/JjJ990rB4g — Parker Molloy (@ParkerMolloy) July 5, 2017

this is why you're going to get defunded — Darren Mills 🇺🇸 (@darren_mills) July 4, 2017

there's nothing more american than getting pissed because you think the declaration of independence is shitting on the president pic.twitter.com/gkWSTR8SIY — Goth Ms. Frizzle (@spookperson) July 4, 2017

Friendly reminder: Constitution Day is September 17. Just in case you feel like you might get mad if you start seeing tweets about how the House of Representatives has the “sole power of impeachment.”