Rick Reuben wrote:alex maiolo wrote:Maybe I didn't read it right, but didn't you say, just a few posts back, that you were in Andrew Jackson's corner?
I said he would be a good candidate to be sent back in a time machine to slaughter Alexander Hamilton. I admire Jackson for his fury against the banks. I don't endorse everything he ever did, although he did make my list of 20 Greatest Americans. The way I look at the Indian slaughter and Jackson is kind of the way I look at the Bombing of Dresden and the allied commanders. If Eisenhower didn't carry out the orders to incinerate Dresden, some other General would have. If Jackson didn't lead the attack on the Seminoles, some other white guy would have.
So you believe that how he handled the banks is more important than how he handled the native americans? For me, his racism and treatment of the Indians is what defines him.
Meaning, in many ways, Nixon was a good president. He got us out of Vietnam and established relations with a Communist country, China.
But Watergate and Cambodia - those stick in my mind. That defines the Nixon presidency.
Jackson was known as a sexist and racist during a time when those things were acceptable. When racist sexists say "damn, that Old Hickory is one racist sexist dude," that means something.
Also, the man thought the earth was flat. 300 years after even the most simple people had changed their minds on that one, ol' Sun Revolves Around The Earth thought sailors were in jeapordy of navigating their way into space.
My guess is that Jackson hated banks and the establishment the way modern simpletons hate secular society, science, and all of the fancy pants things that leaves the simple people behind.
"All that fancy stuff ain't for us."
Perhaps he just got the banks thing right
by accident through reverse snobbery.
I really have no dog in this fight, but that's how I've always thought of Jackson - the redneck president of his day. I'm no presentist. I think he was a dick
in his day, unlike, say Jefferson, who may not stand up to modern scrutiny, but played by the rules of the time.
Also, Dresden was bombed because it was a railroad hub, our ally at the time, Stalin, was hot for that distribution post to get leveled, there were reserves of petrolium stored there, and, let's face it, there was the revenge issue. That's why we *kept* bombing it after the job was done, as tragic as that is in retrospect.
It was like Hiroshima: "ready to give up yet or do you want some more?"
It was an example - a way to show the Nazis that they didn't have a chance, and that example killed a lot of innocent people.
London was bombed for 220 nights straight, 100,000 Brits died, and no civilian was spared. War is hell, and the allies wanted to settle a score, no doubt. When Germans speak of the tragedy of Dresden, I hear them, I really do, but many people in London, Manchester, Liverpool and Coventry don't, and I understand why.
Dresden was a (very heavy handed) response.
The Trail of Tears was raw agression.
Your Dresden analogy might work better if some Indians had marched some whities across the country as revenge for the Trail Of Tears, but that didn't happen.
Basically, Jackson hated Indians. He thought they were dumb and didn't give one shit that no settlers would have lived to
form the US had they not helped us. There's no doubt that another president might have done the same. As I often quote, we get the governement we deserve, and Americans probably wanted an Indian killer.
Doesn't mean it was right though, and his triumphs don't excuse it.
Ignoring that is like saying George Bush was basically OK because he kept taxes down. The Iraq War? Erosion of Civil Liberties? No matter, my paycheck got a little bump.
-A
Itchy McGoo wrote:I would like to be a "shoop-shoop" girl in whatever band Alex Maiolo is in.