This is the
most important question of our lives: Will the elites steal everything and declare national bankruptcy, or will they race away with their stolen money before that happens?
The Whiskey Rebellion
was a success.
"The
most hated tax imposed by the British had been the Stamp Tax
of 1765, on all internal documents and transactions; if the
British had kept this detested tax, the American Revolution
would have occurred a decade earlier, and enjoyed far greater
support than it eventually received.
Americans,
furthermore, had inherited hatred of the excise tax from the
British opposition; for two centuries, excise taxes in Britain,
in particular the hated tax on cider, had provoked riots and
demonstrations upholding the slogan, "liberty, property, and
no excise!" To the average American, the federal government's
assumption of the power to impose excise taxes did not look
very different from the levies of the British crown.
The
main distortion of the Official View of the Whiskey Rebellion was
its alleged confinement to four counties of western Pennsylvania.
From recent research, we now know that no one paid the tax
on whiskey throughout the American "back-country": that is, the
frontier areas of Maryland, Virginia, North and South Carolina,
Georgia, and the entire state of Kentucky."
"Western
Pennsylvania, then, was only the tip of the iceberg. The point
is that, in all the other back-country areas, the whiskey tax
was never paid. Opposition to the federal excise tax program
was one of the causes of the emerging Democrat-Republican Party,
and of the Jeffersonian "Revolution" of 1800. Indeed, one of
the accomplishments of the first Jefferson term as president
was to repeal the entire Federalist excise tax program. In Kentucky,
whiskey tax delinquents only paid up when it was clear that
the tax itself was going to be repealed.
Rather
than the whiskey tax rebellion being localized and swiftly put down,
the true story turns out to be very different. The entire American
back-country was gripped by a non-violent, civil disobedient refusal
to pay the hated tax on whiskey. No local juries could be found
to convict tax delinquents. The Whiskey Rebellion was actually widespread
and successful, for it eventually forced the federal government
to repeal the excise tax."
It's unbelievable what we put up with today.
"Washington,
Hamilton, and the Cabinet covered up the extent of the revolution
because they didn't want to advertise the extent of their failure.
They knew very well that if they tried to enforce, or send an
army into, the rest of the back-country, they would have failed.
Kentucky and perhaps the other areas would have seceded from
the Union then and there. Both contemporary sides were happy
to cover up the truth, and historians fell for the deception."
Historians, like scientists, are motivated by individual goals.
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