- Banned
- #61
Yours is an extremely hostile, partisan view. While I can agree on some particulars, I believe your premises are often faulty which leads to faulty conclusions.But criticism of the myths are all welcome to seeking a sense of truthYeah. France was just the place to go whoring and mis-behave for any genuine Englishman of the times. And who did the Cont. Congress SEND to France to beg for support? And what did he ACTUALLY spend his time doing there?
Hypocrite.. That's just Euro-envy and their regional conflicts. Not a concern about race.
That is funny, but I believe the Francophile interests of Franklin's (and Jefferson's) went beyond the prurient. By all accounts Franklin charmed the pants off (eek: pun!) of his hosts and cemented relations. He was the Jobs/Hawking/Sagan/Musk of his day, all rolled into one. Without France, and later the Dutch loans (Adams?), the founding generation would have resembled what are now the Canadians. that is my opinion.
The Euro envy was there on some level, but Europe envied the British their history of liberties, which extended into the colonies.
There is also the fact that the 'Americans' had a substantial lobby in Parliament behind them and against King George as well; no small part of the 'Revolution's' eventual success, either. But yes, the 'Revolution' at first was made up of wealthy pirates sniveling about a decrease in the tariffs cutting into their smuggling biz, and assorted aristocrats, like Washington for instance, facing expensive suits in England over his land swindles of British officers under his command, suits he would have lost and then had to give up a lot of his choice real estate along with financial penalties. It was only after King George sent over some truly stupid and arrogant cronies who managed to alienate almost an entire country already 90% for the Crown or neutral that 'The Cause' gained any popularity.
Actually it's all documented, if not part of the great Founding propaganda mythology. Nothing 'hostile' about facts. The 'Revolution' wasn't started because 'the little people' wanted one, it was a middle and upper class one. After a long period of benign neglect, the Crown had suffered a financial setback and decided that the colonies ought to pay for their own expenses, a complete outrage to those with taxable businesses and assets, and others had problems with suits before the English courts, over how land was distributed among officers after military actions, as in Washington's case.