The centralization of ownership of the private media in the United States and elsewhere has become increasingly pronounced, at the same time that its reporting has become increasingly one-sided and monolithic. My blog seeks to expose this lack of objectivity and present alternative ideas that point in the direction of much-needed fundamental change.
Sunday, December 29, 2019
Hamilton versus Jefferson: what was at stake?
Today, my wife Carmen and I toured the Grange, the home of Alexander
Hamilton, in Hamilton Heights on 141 Street, NYC. Hamilton's rise from being an
orphan as a child to fighting in the Revolutionary War and becoming a confidant
of George Washington and then Secretary of the Treasury was spectacular. But
with the election of his unyielding rival Thomas Jefferson as president in
1800, his fortune changed. As cabinet members in the 90s, the two men fought
bitterly, and Jefferson accused Hamilton of unethical conduct. Us progressives
tend to sympathize with Jefferson over Hamilton, who after all had been a
banker. But the fact is that Hamilton represented a nascent capitalism which in
the context of post-Revolutionary War USA was progressive, in contrast to the
system of slavery that Hamilton opposed and Jefferson, as a champion of states
rights and agrarian society, defended. The Grange in the largely unsettled
northern Manhattan, was a refuge for him together with his strong-willed wife
Elizabeth and their 8 children.
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