Ever wondered why George Washington gets all the credit for founding the country and not the 15 Presidents before him? Washington was the first whore to the elite. The first one who would be completely controlled. Whatever wise he may have said, he has set the ground stone for a movement we are seeing now more than ever.
Peyton Randolph of Virginia was one of the most revered founders of the nation. But have you heard of him? Of course not. You don’t hear about the ones who didn’t play by their rules. They are the forgotten ones, yet they were the ones who added true greatness.
You don’t get educated in school. You get trained to repeat things. How many times do you hear someone mention “Marxism” or “Einstein’s theories” without understanding a lick of it? But it becomes socially acceptable to repeat what is considered common knowledge and it impresses people no matter how false.
More than ever we see it now. When Glenn Beck says something, it gets mindlessly repeated. When Obama says something, same thing.
Know your history before you use it to learn. You learn false history, you go blind into the future.
Know what happened and it will indicate to you what will come.
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[...] Cyrus Griffin (1736-1796) Like Peyton Randolph, he was trained in London’s Inner Temple to be a lawyer—and thus was counted among his nation’s legal elite. Like so many other Virginians, he was an anti-federalist, though he eventually accepted the new Constitution with the promise of the Bill of Rights as a hedge against the establishment of an American monarchy—which still had a good deal of currency. The Articles of Confederation afforded such freedoms that he had become convinced that even with the incumbent loss of liberty, some new form of government would be required. A protégé of George Washington—having worked with him on several speculative land deals in the West—he was a reluctant supporter of the Constitutional ratifying process. It was during his term in the office of the Presidency—the last before the new national compact went into effect—that ratification was formalized and finalized. He served as the nation’s chief executive from January 22, 1788 until George Washington’s inauguration on April 30, 1789. George Washington the Freemason [...]
I totally agree with your comments about education being where we are trained to repeat things. Same thing goes for parrots of Beck, Obama, etc. But… I read the article… I don’t dispute it… but your claim that the first real presidents are being ignored because they didn’t play by ‘their’ rules like George Washington is weak unless you can supply some supporting arguments.
Also, you mention George Washington is a Freemason. So? Could you elaborate on why this is significant? Please explain with as much evidence as you have to show us why this fact proves your point.