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Re: What if Jefferson had gotten the agrarian country he wanted?

Posted: Fri Jul 14, 2017 4:46 pm
by heydaralon
Okeefenokee wrote:This was in the crossover thread,
Okeefenokee wrote:
heydaralon wrote:Im just having a laugh. Hamilton did some cool stuff
i think that's what burr said at his funeral.

Image
I'm gonna check this one out when I get the time after semester ends. Burr is an interesting dude.

Re: What if Jefferson had gotten the agrarian country he wanted?

Posted: Fri Jul 14, 2017 4:47 pm
by Okeefenokee
More from the crossover thread,
Fife wrote:I like this one:

https://www.amazon.com/Whiskey-Rebellio ... 324&sr=1-2


I remember we had some discussion about it a few years ago on the DCF. It lead to one of DB's better catch-phrases: WHISKEEEEEYYYYYYYYY !!!!!
See what destruction you have wrought?

Re: What if Jefferson had gotten the agrarian country he wanted?

Posted: Fri Jul 14, 2017 4:58 pm
by Okeefenokee
Speaker posted this essay,
Speaker to Animals wrote:https://dailyreckoning.com/the-whiskey- ... eal-thing/


There's a good breakdown of how fucked up Hamilton really was, how incompetent, and what a shit show this federal government was from day one.

The only thing he left out was how Hamilton personally profited from the tax policies he implemented that he knew would destroy the economy of the frontier.

Re: What if Jefferson had gotten the agrarian country he wanted?

Posted: Fri Jul 14, 2017 5:32 pm
by Okeefenokee
anticlimactic as hell,
The Whiskey Rebellion: Ending the Rebellion

As Washington’s expedition approached its destination from the mountains to the east, another group of western Pennsylvania militia formed with the intent of attacking Pittsburgh and burning the city in advance of Washington’s arrival. The city fathers, who had made plans for a great civic celebration upon the arrival of Washington, heard of the threat. Thinking fast, they rode out to meet the militia at a place named Braddock Field, the site of a major engagement during the French & Indian War (and now the site of U.S. Steel’s Edgar Thomson Works). In tow, the Pittsburgh men brought many wagons filled with beef, beer, and other victuals that were originally intended for Washington and his army. The Pittsburghers offered the feast to the militia, who enjoyed it thoroughly and thereafter determined that they would not burn the city to the ground. A few days later, Washington’s army marched to the city line, but the militia had dispersed and, lo and behold…few people had any recollection of the identities of the offending rebels. Realizing that the nation was at a political crossroads, President Washington took a magnanimous route and granted a general amnesty to almost all of the insurrectionists.