You ever notice how, whenever big-government conservatives trot out Thomas Jefferson to prove that big-daddy government is good when conservatives do it, they can talk for hours about the Louisiana Purchase but completely forget the Embargo Act of 1807?
Jefferson talked a great game of limiting government. He’s the most quotable of the founders. But whenever he was in actual power he never saw a limit he couldn’t find an excuse to sweep aside.

















































but he would only use the ring for good
’til he actually got his hands on it.
He was a politician.
I LOVE Jefferson! Having said that, he was a politician and a human being…
gfa
TJ is one of the people from history who I would love to have a few hours to talk to. His words, and the sentiments behind them will echo forever ‘We hold these truths to be self evident….’, but the actions when he had the ring (an incredibly apt analogy) firmly in his fist run counter to those words. He is a man of contradictions. Although it is tempting to dismiss him as just another hypocritical politician (redundancy), I don’t think it is quite that simple. I’d like to think he was conflicted, and tried to do what he thought was the best for the country. Guess I’ll never know.
I concluded a long time ago that TJ could really talk the talk, but failed miserably at walking the walk.
The failure was in the delusion that anyone or any group of people can actually know what is “best for the country,” let alone have any legitimate authority to do anything about it beyond their own life and property.
It was getting over TJ that was the final step in my own transition from minarchist to anarchist. If TJ–“even TJ”–could abuse the office, then anyone could.
As the saying goes, “I used to be a minarchist, but I ran out of excuses.” That was the moment it happened–my last excuse.
This all looks self-evidently obvious now, of course, but to someone trained and schooled in American Exceptionalism, and desperately clinging to the concept of minarchy as somehow preferable to–gasp–anarchy and chaos–it was a very difficult hurdle.
Still love TJ the revolutionary–not perfect by any means, but welcome in my house any time. It’s too bad that TJ the President killed him. (Politicians do that, you know.)
Great guy, unless you were one of his many slaves, which he refused every opportunity to set free.
I seem to recall that he admitted that the Louisiana Purchase was extra-constitutional. At least he wasn’t hypocritical about it. I’m hanging on to my affection for him. He wasn’t perfect, but then, who is? Bueller? He was good, though.