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The Great Divide by Thomas Fleming
The Great Divide by Thomas  Fleming











As president, he downsized the government, eliminating all internal taxes and crippling the Army and Navy, which were unable to resist the increasing British depredations that led to the War of 1812.Īmong historians, Jefferson’s star has been falling for 50 years. Fleming portrays Jefferson as a disloyal secretary of state to President Washington and an equally disloyal vice president to John Adams, working behind the scenes to defeat their policies and lying to their faces. This utopian faith included passionate support of the French Revolution, during which he defended the Terror and mass executions. Described by Fleming as “that most troublesome of politicians-an ideologue,” Jefferson believed that humans in their natural state-i.e., virtuous American farmers-did not require government. In France as America’s ambassador, Jefferson took no part in the debates and was lukewarm to the outcome. Fleming begins with the Constitutional Convention, chaired by Washington, whose eight years of failure to persuade the Continental Congress to support his Revolutionary army convinced him that the United States needed a strong central government.

The Great Divide by Thomas Fleming

The author clearly favors George Washington’s famous practicality over Thomas Jefferson’s fiery revolutionary fervor. Prolific historian Fleming ( A Disease in the Public Mind: A New Understanding of Why We Fought the Civil War, 2013, etc.) delivers a vivid, opinionated history of this conflict.

The Great Divide by Thomas Fleming The Great Divide by Thomas Fleming

Disagreement over the role of government grew into virulent antagonism, and that acrimony persists today. The camaraderie among America’s Founding Fathers did not survive independence in 1783.













The Great Divide by Thomas  Fleming