My fascination with Thomas Jefferson crystallized recently.
I have been checking for him since last fall. I was researching
the subprime crisis and I came across the following quote,
- I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around [the banks] will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs.
Then I learned that he founded the University of Virginia.
U of V, the flagship state institution which, as of 2007, retained
and graduated a higher percentage of Black students than
all other high ranked state schools in the country.
In the conclusion of the book, Trapped, Daniel talks about
how conflicted Jefferson was over the enslaved Africans that
he owned. Some of which were the children that he had with
Ms. Sally Hemmings. The personal was always political for
Jefferson, no?
I am fascinated by the idea of being a more human human,
and reconciling that notion with the dark side the comes
with being a simply being alive.
One day while struggling with these ideas, I thought of
how having love for a dude that hustles is really no
different then having love for slave owning president.
We need to see the humanity in both individuals.
(Believe it or not, I ran this idea to by a few friends,
from the most radical to the politically neutral, and they were ALL kind
put off and intrigued by the connection that I was trying
to make).
I realize that the same way white folks have a
hard time seeing how folks in the hood could have love for d-boys,
i.e., Denzel in American Gangster. It is similar to how many
Americans employ patriotic deference towards Jefferson, but
many of us just see him as another slave owner who was a President.
In reading Daniel’s book, I came across some of Jefferson’s
thought’s on his critque of slavery, and his unwllingness
to free the enslaved people he possessed when he felt so
conflicted over it. Three natural, non-drug ways can decrease whole body acidity Poor eating habits for instance “eating on the go”, eating while watching television, driving, playing games, etc, irregular viagra for sale canada diets, dieting, fasting and wrong combinations of foods such as the combination of the fatty stuff and absorption it into the bloodstream. The exercise used during the recovery process is physiotherapy; it includes the treatment, mending, and the repugnance of wounds or handicaps. free get viagra It is manufactured and distributed by the pharmaceutical company Pfizer who were initially investigating and studying its use for hypertension and viagra shop online angina pectoris, a type of heart disease. It reduces the chance of impregnating your woman. buy cialis Daniel writes,
Jefferson was no Saint. When the rules of society are unjust, saints follow their own sets of rules. They answer to a higher authority. A Saint Thomas surley would have freed his slaves, martyring himself in the cause of equality, impoverishing himself and his family in order to do what was right. But Thomas Jefferson was unwilling to unilaterally free his slaves because it would put him and his family at an economic disadvantage relative to his contemporaries who would not free theirs. Instead he endorsed changing he rules to that no one could own slaves, setting a baseline of ethical behavior beneath which no one could sip, no matter how alluring the profits.
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Humanity for all?
D’boys, Slave owners, and everyone in between?
Have I been drinking some of that hope Kool-aid? Lil’ bit…
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I have been terribly under the weather this week blog fam.
It feels great to connect with you. I am locked out of AIM as well.
I dunno what happened. Whutareyougonnado?