eftychia: Me in kilt and poofy shirt, facing away, playing acoustic guitar behind head (Default)
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posted by [personal profile] eftychia at 05:26am on 2009-03-04

"I am a citizen of the greatest Republic of Mankind. I see the human race united like a huge family by brotherly ties. We have made a sowing of liberty which will, little by little, spring up across the whole world. One day, on the model of the United States of America, a United States of Europe will come into being. The United States will legislate for all its nationalities." -- George Wasington (b. 1732-02-22[*], d. 1799-12-14; President of the US 1789-1797), writing to Marquis de La Fayette

[*] Recorded as 11 Feb. 1731-32 in the Julian calendar, which England and her colonies used at that time; retconned to the equivalent Gregorian date, 22 Feb. 1732, when the Gregorian calendar was adopted in 1752. See a calendar for September 1752 for the changeover (on a Unix/Linux computer, type "cal 9 1752"). Note that different countries adopted the Gregorian calendar in different years.

There are 3 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by (anonymous) at 09:00am on 2009-03-04
I often wonder whether our Founding Fathers would be more
horrified, or sanguine, about the way the world is, now.
 
posted by (anonymous) at 09:42am on 2009-03-04
I think it would depend on what they were looking at. Foreign politics would probably delight them. US domestic politics, they'd be horrified. Probably the biggest single thing they'd be horrified by would be the stranglehold large corporations have over the government and the culture. #2 on the list would be the issues with the separation of church and state.

'Course, if you explained to them about the World Wars, they'd probably keel over...

--?!
 
posted by (anonymous) at 01:08pm on 2009-03-04
The question presupposes a common fallacy: That the founding fathers would be of one opinion. I seriously doubt you could find many issues that they all were in agreement on.

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