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Will Trump Be An Andrew Jackson In The 21st Century?

Posted by freedomforall 1 month ago to Politics
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Excerpt:
"For an illuminating comparison, let’s return to the year 1824. Andrew Jackson ran for president and won a plurality of the popular and electoral votes. But he did not get the majority. The election was thrown to the House of Representatives, which produced a surprising result: John Quincy Adams became president thanks to the support of Henry Clay who was promised the position of Secretary of State.

That sense of being robbed of the presidency festered deeply among Jackson’s fan base and he came back four years later, more fired up than ever. The election of 1828 was utterly sweeping. He ran an unapologetic populist campaign against the national bank and corrupt insiders in Washington. The turnout broke all records, and so did the results. Jackson won by a landslide, securing 178 electoral votes against John Adams’ 83.

With this mandate, Jackson and his followers utterly destabilized Washington, firing vast numbers of executive bureaucrats who were considered disloyal, and fought the national bank while pushing for gold and silver as money. His hiring of loyalists to top positions was decried as the “spoils system” that was ended fully by the Progressive Era, which amounted to a revenge of the professional bureaucrats.

The policies he pursued–keeping the government mostly constrained by the Constitution, keeping the peoples’ interests front and center, and devolving power to the states–prepared the ground for the United States to rise from a small post-colonial outpost to the world’s greatest economic and military power by century’s end."
SOURCE URL: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/andrew-jackson-21st-century


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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 1 month ago
    Andrew Jackson had a lot of plusses that were mentioned in this thread and have been largely forgotten. He also had one major minus: The Trail of Tears, as well as the massacre in Alabama against Indians (Creek? Choctaw?) in the War of 1812 that alienated Davy Crockett.
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  • Posted by $ allosaur 1 month ago
    Me dino wrote the following here maybe a couple of years ago or maybe a bit longer.
    It is a fact that Andrew Jackson was steadfastly against the idea of paper money.
    So I speculated that those who put his image on the twenty dollar bill were laughing their butts off.
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    • Posted by tutor-turtle 1 month ago
      Andrew Jackson was adamant Congress and Congress alone mints our coin!

      It's the law, enshrined in our Constitution.
      Andrew Jackson was also adamant against a Central Bank!

      For that, he was targeted for assassination.

      Abraham Lincoln printed our our coin and was assassinated for it.

      John Kennedy printed silver certificates circumventing the FED, for that he was assassinated for it.

      Notice a pattern here?

      A Central Bank, run by foreigners, creating money out of nothing, is bleeding our nation to death by inflation.

      Anyone and everyone who has tried to stop them is targeted for death.

      End The FED Our very existence as a sovereign nation is at stake
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  • Posted by rhfinle 1 month ago
    I dunno, but I'll bet that if this country still exists a hundred years from now, Trump's will be the fifth head carved on Mt. Rushmore. Maybe the sixth if they do Reagan too.
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    • Posted by 1 month ago
      Maybe someone with a brain will remove the 2 tyrants on the right side of Rushmore. That will leave plenty of room for defenders of the Constitution to join Jefferson and Washington.
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      • Posted by rhfinle 4 weeks, 1 day ago
        Sadly, there is a fault line through Jefferson and he will probably be the first to disappear (that's why he appears to be leaning up and looking down his nose - so the nose wouldn't fall off.). I read somewhere that the whole mountain is riddled with cracks and faults, and will be pretty unrecognizable in ten thousand years. Thunderhead Mountain, a few miles away, is a solid granite monolith, and so Crazy Horse may remain recognizable for half a million years.
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  • Posted by JohnRandALL 1 month ago
    I attended Andrew Jackson High school. Despite the trail of tears, Andrew Jackson had more pluses than minuses, in my view. Big player in early Florida's history.
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  • Posted by Eyecu2 1 month ago
    Not sure if he will be an Andrew Jackson or maybe a bit of a Teddy Roosevelt. I have always liked this old quote from Teddy Roosevelt: “In the first place, we should insist that if the immigrant who comes here in good faith becomes an American and assimilates himself to us, he shall be treated on an exact equality with everyone else, for it is an outrage to discriminate against any such man because of creed, or birthplace, or origin. But this is predicated upon the person's becoming in every facet an American, and nothing but an American...There can be no divided allegiance here. Any man who says he is an American, but something else also, isn't an American at all. We have room for but one flag, the American flag... We have room for but one language here, and that is the English language... and we have room for but one sole loyalty and that is a loyalty to the American people.”
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      • Posted by Eyecu2 1 month ago
        I also do not like the whole dual citizen concept and as Roosevelt said, "There can be no divided allegiance here. Any man who says he is an American, but something else also, isn't an American at all."
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