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Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Alan Sullivan, who is also a fan of the John Adams series on HBO says:

Episode five bears witness to the emergence of political parties in the United States, a development regarded with suspicion by both Washington and Adams. It came to me as I watched certain scenes how the two American parties remain imprinted to this day by the controversies of that time. Democrats from Jefferson to John Kerry have shared an affinity for revolutionary France; Republicans from Lincoln to Bush I & II have valued continuity and authority, following British precedent. Euro-blurred England and France today differ less from one another than do the followers of America's two parties, who continue to quarrel over the great issues of the Eighteenth Century.

I've always favored Jefferson's point of view, but that doesn't stop liberal/leftists from calling me a right-wing death beast. The people who call themselves 'liberals' (like Kerry) don't believe in any form of defense. They have very little in common with Jefferson.

From Thomas Jefferson and the Barbary Pirates:

Paying the ransom would only lead to further demands, Jefferson argued in letters to future presidents John Adams, then America's minister to Great Britain, and James Monroe, then a member of Congress. As Jefferson wrote to Adams in a July 11, 1786, letter, "I acknolege [sic] I very early thought it would be best to effect a peace thro' the medium of war."...Jefferson's plan for an international coalition foundered on the shoals of indifference and a belief that it was cheaper to pay the tribute than fight a war. The United States's relations with the Barbary states continued to revolve around negotiations for ransom of American ships and sailors and the payment of annual tributes or gifts...

..When Jefferson became president in 1801 he refused to accede to Tripoli's demands for an immediate payment of $225,000 and an annual payment of $25,000. The pasha of Tripoli then declared war on the United States. Although as secretary of state and vice president he had opposed developing an American navy capable of anything more than coastal defense, President Jefferson dispatched a squadron of naval vessels to the Mediterranean. As he declared in his first annual message to Congress: "To this state of general peace with which we have been blessed, one only exception exists. Tripoli, the least considerable of the Barbary States, had come forward with demands unfounded either in right or in compact, and had permitted itself to denounce war, on our failure to comply before a given day. The style of the demand admitted but one answer. I sent a small squadron of frigates into the Mediterranean. . . ."

..and Jefferson planted the first vineyards in America

Vive la revolution!

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