MotownMadness wrote:Sedale Threatt wrote:MotownMadness wrote:"The whitest thing of all" yeah no radical agendas with this one.
If by "radical agenda" you mean citing a string of actual historical documents and accounts, then yes, it's extremely radical.
So what was the need to include the word whitest?
Ask him. In the meantime, since you got your little out so you can ignore facts, here's some spoon feeding for you.
A letter from Thomas Jefferson on vaccines:
I have received the copy of the Evidence at large respecting the discovery of the Vaccine inoculation, which you have been pleased to send me, and for which I return you my thanks. Having been among the early converts, in this part of the globe, to its efficacy, I took an early part in recommending it to my countrymen. I avail myself of this occasion of rendering you my portion of the tribute of gratitude due to you from the whole human family. Medecine has never before produced any single improvement of such utility. Harvey's discovery of the circulation of the blood was a beautiful addition to our knowledge of the animal economy, but on a review of the practice of medecine before and since that epoch, I do not see any great amelioration which has been derived from that discovery. You have erased from the calendar of human afflictions one of its greatest. Yours is the comfortable reflection that mankind can never forget that you have lived. Future nations will know by history only that the loathsome small-pox has existed and by you has been extirpated. Accept the most fervent wishes for your health and happiness and assurances of the greatest respect and consideration.
And a brief summary of the Yellow Fever epidemic:
By September 1794 the yellow fever lingered in Baltimore, where it had spread from Philadelphia. In 1795 it reached New York City.
One John Coverdale, from Henderskelfe, Yorkshire, England, wrote President Washington a long letter. He advocated more drastic measures, including three weeks of quarantine and policemen strategically placed in every corner to hinder people from passing from zone to zone; and he wanted people “to carry with them certificates either of their coming from places not infected or of their passing the line by permission.”
In other words, a quarantine, lockdown and vaccine passports.
No politician we know of at the time considered such measures un-American. In May of 1796, Congress adopted, and President Washington signed, the first federal quarantine law. There wasn’t much controversy. In 1799, Congress passed a second and more restrictive quarantine law. President Adams signed it without a flinch.
https://minnesotareformer.com/2021/10/27/the-founding-fathers-and-vaccine-mandates-opinion/
But yes, I want to hear more about how the Founding Fathers would have frowned on restrictions to stem a public health crisis.
EDIT: Did not see Bisme's note. Bowing out after this.