tagged w/ Jackson
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I produced this all by myself except for the shooting of it. My nephew Jason did that part. This was actually suppose to be a youtube video saying who we were. We were going to make a whole channel out of this as the Sally and Pippy Films. I decided to produce some rap dance music. I made it into a rap video instead combining different takes. Enjoy!I produced this all by myself except for the shooting of it. My nephew Jason did that... more
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Yes, its time I think for another little history lesson courtesy of our friends at New deal 2.0 A project of the Franklin & Eleanor Roosevelt institute the link to original article at http://www.newdeal20.org/2011/05/09/economic-conflicts-of-the-founding-era-dispel-tea-party-mythsand-liberal-ones-too-44251/
and lots more at the above link...
William Hogeland: Economic Conflicts of the Founding Era Dispel Tea Party Myths…and Liberal Ones, Too
Posted: 10 May 2011 01:16 AM PDT
By William Hogeland, the author of the narrative histories Declaration and The Whiskey Rebellion and a collection of essays, Inventing American History who blogs at http://www.williamhogeland.com. Cross posted from New Deal 2.0
Looking closely at founding-era struggles over finance challenges Tea Party history — and some liberal preconceptions too.
Anything but a lost, halcyon epoch of unity and consensus, our founding era saw deep, harsh oppositions among Americans over what kind of society our independence from England was meant to bring about. Like today, the direst political oppositions devolved on the economy, and on proper uses of public and private finance. From the North Carolina Regulation of the 1760s to the Whiskey Rebellion of the 1790s, Americans struggled mightily with other Americans over economic issues.
Though little-known, those struggles had decisive impacts on all of the famous moments in founding history. The Continental Congress’s adopting the Declaration of Independence occurred in the summer of 1776 only because those among the financial and political elites who wanted American liberty made secret, common cause with radical populists who wanted American equality. The Constitutional Convention’s proposing a national government in 1787 came in direct opposition to progress made by the radical democrats who promoted ordinary, working Americans over the high-finance investing class.
So it’s hardly surprising that those same struggles have critically important echoes and resonances — if sometimes painfully dissonant ones — for our bitterly divided politics and disastrous financial crises today.
Yet despite constant appeals to founding values by politicians and pundits across the political spectrum, a perennial American eagerness to avoid framing our founding period in economic terms can make it strangely difficult to keep those all-important 18th-century finance issues in historical focus. The Tea Party movement, for example, has laid its claim on the founding period, and to a great extent that claim is indeed an economic and financial one. Casting the modern welfare state as a form of tyranny, in large part because of what they see as its excessive taxation, Tea Partiers invoke the famous American resistance to Parliament’s efforts to raise a revenue in the colonies without the consent traditionally given by representation. Seeing founding-generation American patriots as unified against British taxation (and frequently misrepresenting the politics even of the elites they invoke), the Tea Party defines its own anti-government, anti-tax values as essential to American identity.
The Tea Party thus edits out an alternative view of government that prevailed among the ordinary 18th-century Americans who were all-important to achieving independence. Those Americans opposed elites epitomized by the Boston merchant class, which the Tea Party, perhaps appropriately enough, so strongly identifies with. The internal struggle for American equality was as important to the founding as the high-Whig resistance to England, but the Tea Party can’t deal with the populist leaders and militia rank-and-file who wrote the socially radical 1776 Pennsylvania Constitution, or the Shaysites of Massachusetts who marched on the state armory, or the so-called whiskey rebels who inspired federal occupation of western Pennsylvania. American Revolutionary patriots all, those democratic-finance leaders had ideas about government’s role in ensuring economic equality that prefigured programs of the 19th-century Populists and the 20th-century New Dealers, the very programs the Tea Party wants to dismantle. Tea Party history therefore has to expunge the welfare state’s roots in America’s founding.
Liberals, too, can have a problem with the economic conflicts of the founding period. Alexander Hamilton’s national finance program, which Madison and Jefferson opposed with such intensity, was economically regressive. Under the influence of the founding financier Robert Morris, Hamilton made a stunningly successful effort to yoke American wealth to great national projects by beating down the popular-finance movement and promoting the interest (in both senses!) of the high-finance elites. Yet when some of today’s liberals look to Madison for support in critiquing Hamiltonian finance, they come up empty. Madison’s attacks on central banking represented anything but an argument for democracy and economic equality.
In fact, the activist governing philosophy of national power that Hamilton espoused and Madison opposed gave precedent to modern liberal ideas about an energetic federal role in achieving social ends. Hamilton, not Madison, was in that sense the modern liberal, and the Hamiltonian influence on today’s liberal establishment can be seen in the Brookings Institution’s “Hamilton Project” and Peter Orszag’s hanging of a National Gallery portrait of Hamilton in his office. That kind of liberalism makes Hamilton the author of using fervent support for Wall Street in hopes of benefiting Main Street.
There’s another kind of liberal history, leaning economically left, that prefers to trace a pretty straight line from Thomas Paine to Thomas Jefferson to Andrew Jackson to FDR, incorporating the labor movement along the way. It thus sees democratic, labor-oriented populism as essential to American founding values and coming to fruition throughout American history. In this view, the Declaration’s “all men are created equal” prophesied social progressivism (even if that’s not what the signers meant by it) and the Constitution’s “we the people” prophesied democracy (even if the document was specifically intended to prevent democracy). The Revolution is defined not by the split between, say, Hamilton and Madison but by the emergence of Jeffersonian and then, even more fully, Jacksonian democracy. The American people become in essence social radicals, and the development of social democracy, while embattled, becomes a natural project of America.
One problem with that view lies in its reliance on Jefferson and Jackson as socially progressive. The New Dealers did an amazing job of reinventing Jefferson as one of their own — they built him a monument and carved his face on the nickel and on a mountain; they put a statue of his Treasury Secretary Albert Gallatin at the front door of the Treasury (Hamilton, the department’s inventor, stands around out back). But it’s pretty funny to think of Jefferson as a patron saint of federal-government, welfare-state activism, and Jefferson’s attitudes about democracy are notoriously slippery and problematic. The sage of Monticello could wax romantic about small farmers, and he could get excited about radical uprisings (in Paris), but he wasn’t about to invite small farmers up his hill, and giving the proletariat of the American cities access to political power — what Paine actually helped bring about in 1776 — filled him with disgust and horror.Yes, its time I think for another little history lesson courtesy of our friends at New... more
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I had a flashback to being a kid this week. I was down in the Mission and happened to be walking by Lucca’s Delicatessen when I saw in the window a box of Bugia cookies. I had totally forgotten about these cookies of my youth and I had to buy a box.I had a flashback to being a kid this week. I was down in the Mission and happened to... more
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Latest News Updates The official website for The Sunset Limited on HBO, featuring videos, images, synopsis, and schedule information.Strong reveiws for tonight’s HBO premiere of Cormac McCarthy’s Sunset Limited starring Tommy Lee Jones and Samuel L.Latest News Updates The official website for The Sunset Limited on HBO, featuring... more
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David Spates shows and talks about Taxi driver who sounds like he could be Michael Jackson back from the grave.David Spates shows and talks about Taxi driver who sounds like he could be Michael... more
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Filming of the widely-anticipated "Hobbit" movies will be delayed because director Peter Jackson is recovering from surgery for a perforated ulcer, a spokeswoman said on Thursday.Filming of the widely-anticipated "Hobbit" movies will be delayed because... more
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"By applause, who's for Team Jacob? By applause, who's for Team Edward? By applause, who's on Team I don't give a rat's ass." Stand-up comedian Chris Martin sucks the life out of the audience by talking Twilight July 15, 2010 at Cozzy's Comedy Club's open mic in Newport News, VA. Slim Bloodworth is the MC.
http://www.ChrisMartinComedy.com"By applause, who's for Team Jacob? By applause, who's for Team Edward?... more
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"We've made a lot of progress since 1776. Back then, Thomas Jefferson owned black women. Today, Eliot Spitzer just rents them." Stand-up comedian Chris Martin emcees the 9:55 Comedy Club's open mic July12, 2010 in Richmond, VA.
http://www.ChrisMartinComedy.com"We've made a lot of progress since 1776. Back then, Thomas Jefferson owned... more
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"Thailand is cool. At a Family Dollars Store in Thailand you can actually buy a family for a dollar." Stand-up comedian Chris Martin gets all up in your grill July 7, 2010 at Refried Comedy @ Aztek Grill in Richmond, VA. MC is Odyssey Michaels.
http://www.chrismartincomedy.com"Thailand is cool. At a Family Dollars Store in Thailand you can actually buy a... more
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A coroners investigator testified Friday that she found 12 bottles of a powerful anesthetic that contributed to the death of Michael Jackson in the singers bedroom and closet after he died...
http://www.indiareport.com/India-usa-uk-news/ap/National/77947A coroners investigator testified Friday that she found 12 bottles of a powerful... more
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As Michael Jacksons lifeless body lay on a bed in his palatial mansion, a bodyguard obeyed a frantic doctors instructions to bag up medicine bottles and intravenous bags and shield the Jackson children from seeing their father - all before being told to call 911, court testimony revealed Wednesday...
http://www.indiareport.com/India-usa-uk-news/ap/Entertainment/76855As Michael Jacksons lifeless body lay on a bed in his palatial mansion, a bodyguard... more
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Go-Kart Ice Racing at Jackson Optimist Sports Arena
Jackson, Michigan USA
January 2, 2011
Watch for the #8 kart as the "Gods of Sod" race team takes the win.Go-Kart Ice Racing at Jackson Optimist Sports Arena
Jackson, Michigan USA
January 2,... more
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