The Jeffersonian and Hamiltonian Traditions in American Politics: A Documentary HistoryAlbert Fried Anchor Books, 1968 - 581 pages |
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Page 289
... social ac- tivity , regulates the bonds of our social relations , determines our conceptions of good and evil , suggests our life - philosophy , molds our inherited political institutions , and reforms the oldest and toughest customs ...
... social ac- tivity , regulates the bonds of our social relations , determines our conceptions of good and evil , suggests our life - philosophy , molds our inherited political institutions , and reforms the oldest and toughest customs ...
Page 290
... social organization is what gives us greater social power . It is to it that we owe our in- creased comfort and abundance . We are none of us ready to sacrifice this . On the contrary , we want more of it . We would not return to the ...
... social organization is what gives us greater social power . It is to it that we owe our in- creased comfort and abundance . We are none of us ready to sacrifice this . On the contrary , we want more of it . We would not return to the ...
Page 292
... social affairs , put to a mischievous use . This cannot be shown beyond the very slightest degree , if at all .. • The question , therefore , arises , if it is proposed to reor- ganize the social system on the principles of American de ...
... social affairs , put to a mischievous use . This cannot be shown beyond the very slightest degree , if at all .. • The question , therefore , arises , if it is proposed to reor- ganize the social system on the principles of American de ...
Contents
GENERAL INTRODUCTION | 1 |
HAMILTON AND THE FEDERALISTS | 12 |
Alexander Hamilton to Robert Morris April 15 1781 | 21 |
Copyright | |
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abolitionists administration American authority Bank believe bill candidate citizens civil commerce Communist condition Congress conservative Constitution convention corporations danger declared defendants democracy Democratic party duty economic Eisenhower election equal ernment established executive existing fact farmers favor federal government Federalists force Fourteenth Amendment Franklin D freedom Hamilton Hamiltonian individual industrial institutions insurgents interests issue Jefferson Jeffersonian justice labor LaFollette legislation legislatures liberty Liberty party Lincoln majority means ment millions Missouri Compromise moral Negroes object opinion organization peace platform political President principle privileges progressivism prosperity protection purpose question race radical reform regulate Republican party revolution Roosevelt Senate Share Our Wealth slave slavery Smith Act social South South Carolina Southern speech statute Supreme Court tariff Territories tion Union United United States Senate violation vote wealth Whig