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American history’s ‘conspiracy theorists’ were true heroes.

These Heroes ​from American History⁢ Were ‘Conspiracy‌ Theorists’

The establishment media marginalizes dissenting voices ⁤by dismissing them as “conspiracy theorists.”

Tucker Carlson ​has received this treatment. So has Democratic presidential candidate Robert​ F.‍ Kennedy Jr. They are crazy, the establishment media assures us. Ignore them.

In fact, we all know the template. Nonconformists, ⁢the establishment scribes and talking heads will⁣ say, peddle “debunked” and “dangerous” theories‌ based on “disinformation.” Often, the “disinformation”​ originates in ‍Russia. The⁣ stories write themselves.

Those who understand U.S. history, however, should wear the ‌“conspiracy theorist” label as a badge of ​honor.

Indeed,⁢ three of ‌America’s Pantheon-level icons — John Adams, Thomas Jefferson and ⁢Abraham Lincoln — described‍ the⁤ political events of their day ‍in conspiratorial terms.

John Adams and ⁤Thomas Jefferson

Each year, schoolchildren learn ‌that the American Revolution began as a dispute‍ over “taxation ‌without⁣ representation.” Like most partial truths, this dry phrase strips the matter of its ⁤vibrancy and urgency.

Adams and Jefferson did ⁢not regard the Revolution as the ‌result of ‍a dispute over government‍ representation. They considered it ⁣a consequence of‍ a ‌decade-long ⁢British conspiracy.

For instance, in 1765, the British Parliament tried to impose the infamous Stamp Act ⁣on the American colonies. ‍This ⁣ill-conceived measure would have taxed printed materials such as newspapers, almanacs and college ⁢diplomas.

Here, the cry “taxation without representation” did indeed rally many Americans in opposition to the tax. Adams, however, saw the tax⁢ in‌ a different light.

In⁣ response to the Stamp Act, Adams penned a ⁢lengthy essay entitled “A Dissertation on ⁣the Canon and the Feudal Law,” which appeared in the Boston Gazette in ‍four parts. The final paragraph of the fourth installment, published⁢ on Oct.‌ 21, 1765, featured an ​astonishing accusation‌ against England.

“There seems ​to be a direct and formal design on ‌foot, to enslave‌ all America,” Adams wrote.

“It seems very manifest from the ‌ [Stamp Act] ⁣ itself, that⁣ a design ⁤is form’d to strip us in a great measure of the means of knowledge, by loading the Press, the Colleges, ⁤and even an Almanack ‍and a ⁤News-Paper, with restraints and duties; and to‍ introduce the inequalities and dependances of the feudal system, by taking from the poorer⁤ sort of ‌people all their little subsistance, and conferring it on a set of stamp officers, distributors and their deputies.”

Thus, according to Adams, the Stamp Act was more than a tax. Sinister British officials, he​ argued, hoped⁣ to keep Americans ⁢ignorant, ‍all while funneling wealth upward into the pockets⁢ of ⁣government agents.

Nine years later,‌ Thomas Jefferson described the Anglo-American crisis in similar terms.

In ⁢“A Summary View of the Rights of British America,” a pamphlet written in⁤ 1774 as a⁢ set of informal instructions for delegates ⁣to the First Continental Congress, Jefferson argued that the events⁢ of the previous ‌decade ​revealed a⁢ vast ⁤British conspiracy. ⁣Adams had perceived only its beginnings.

“Scarcely have our minds been able to emerge from the astonishment into which⁤ one stroke of parliamentary thunder has involved us, before another more heavy, and more alarming, is fallen​ on‍ us,” Jefferson wrote.

“Single acts of tyranny may be ascribed ⁣to the accidental opinion of‌ a day; but a series of oppressions, ⁢begun at a distinguished period, and ‍pursued unalterably through⁢ every change of ministers, too⁤ plainly prove‍ a deliberate and‌ systematical plan of reducing us to slavery,” he added.

Two years later, Jefferson and Adams sat on the five-man committee charged with drafting the Declaration of Independence. Jefferson, of course, wrote the first draft. ⁢Adams contributed edits.

One famous line reflecting the Adams​ and Jefferson conspiracy theory appears in the final version:

“But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a ⁢design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty,‌ to ⁣throw off such Government, and to provide new ‍Guards for their future security.”

In short, only “a long ⁢train⁢ of abuses and usurpations” as part of a “design” to ​impose “absolute Despotism” could justify independence.

Hence, a conspiracy theory gave birth ⁤to the United States.

This pattern ⁢of viewing political developments in conspiratorial terms did not end with​ the American Revolution.

Abraham Lincoln

In the 1850s, Southern‍ Democrats wanted ⁤to expand slavery into the Western territories. Meanwhile, Northern Democrats aided their ⁤Southern allies by arguing that the⁤ people of the territories should decide on the​ slavery question. In other words, slavery ‍should ⁣be subject to ‌a democratic vote.

In 1854, ⁣the ⁢Republican Party ⁣was formed for​ the sole‌ purpose of ‍preventing this expansion. Abraham Lincoln soon emerged as‍ a leader of the new Republican Party.

During ⁢the 1858 campaign⁤ for a U.S. Senate seat in Illinois, which⁣ featured his celebrated debates with⁣ incumbent ⁣Democrat Stephen ⁣A.⁣ Douglas, ⁢Lincoln ‌delivered an address that became known​ as his “House Divided” speech.

Here, Lincoln accused Northern ⁢Democrats of secretly favoring slavery while only pretending to care about democracy. ​Furthermore, he argued that Northern⁣ Democrats ​actually conspired with their Southern counterparts⁣ to expand slavery regardless of the popular‌ will.

“We can not absolutely⁣ know that all these exact​ adaptations are the result⁤ of preconcert,” ‌Lincoln ‌wrote.

“But when we ⁤see a lot of ⁣framed timbers, different portions of which⁢ we know have been ⁢gotten out at ‌different times and places and by different workmen — Stephen, Franklin, Roger, ‍and James, for instance —⁢ and when we see these timbers⁤ joined together, and ‍see they exactly ‍make the frame of ⁢a house or a mill … we ‍find it impossible not ⁤to believe that Stephen and Franklin and ‍Roger‍ and James all understood one⁤ another from the beginning, and all worked upon ‍a ‍common plan or draft drawn up ​before the first lick was struck.”

The italicized words “plan” and ‌“draft” ‍only emphasize Lincoln’s conspiratorial argument.

In short, according to Lincoln, the Democrats⁤ were conspiring ⁤to expand slavery. They had to‌ be stopped.

Thus, Adams, Jefferson and Lincoln pushed “conspiracy theories” ⁤in the service⁤ of freedom. History proved them correct.

In⁣ light of all this, if the​ establishment ‍media ‍or anyone labels you a “conspiracy theorist,” ⁣the proper ‌response is confident ⁣gratitude.

The post These⁢ Heroes from American History Were ‘Conspiracy ⁢Theorists’ appeared first on The Western Journal.



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