Whiskey Rebellion
Whiskey Rebellion, thousands NOT killed. It was a rebellion started by the
Illuminati and Washington stopped them . The Founding Fathers sought to pay off
the massive debt from the War of Independence by imposing taxes on imports
(tariffs) as well as taxes on the sale of alcohol and tobacco (which are called
“excises”). The tax on alcohol prompted farmers in Western Pennsylvania to
start a tax revolt, now called the “Whiskey Rebellion,” as whiskey had come
into use among poor frontier traders as money in lieu of scarce gold and silver
coin. Faced with the rebellion, and several federal tax collectors being shot
at by the rebels (whom today would almost certainly be branded “terrorists”),
President George Washington put down the rebellion in a way that would have
enraged today’s neoconservatives who believe in a “unitary executive.”
Washington first asked permission of Congress to call up the state militia and
enforce the internal revenue laws. When congressional leaders agreed,
Washington marched out at the head of the Virginia and Pennsylvania militia and
negotiated with the “terrorists,” who agreed to put down their arms. And when
two civilians were shot accidentally by militiamen, Washington handed the
soldiers over to local prosecutors to be tried for murder charges. (Both were
exonerated after an investigation.) President Washington then pardoned most of
the rebels. Washington would today probably be branded by neocons as being a
weak executive who didn’t “support the troops.” Though unpopular in some parts
of the country, the tax on alcohol continued through the end of John Adams’
presidency.
Here is something to consider: Oxford
USA 1962 Federal Marshals and National Guard and States Rights.
https://vimeo.com/94714380
https://vimeo.com/94714380
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