2013년 11월 17일 일요일

Yolande Vescio 's blog ::Roger Williams and the Legacy of Separation of Church and State: An Analysis of the Views of Religion in Politics by Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and Thomas Paine.







Yolande Vescio 's blog ::Roger Williams and the Legacy of Separation of Church and State: An Analysis of the Views of Religion in Politics by Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and Thomas Paine.








Often               referred               to               as               the               Father               of               the               Constitution,               James               Madison,               the               United               States               4th               president,               was               born               on               03/16/1751               to               parents               James               Madison               (1723-1801)               and               Eleanor,               or               "Nelly,"               Rose               Conway               (1731-1849)               in               Port               Conway,               Virginia.

Madison's               political               career               preceding               his               election               to               the               presidency               was               nothing               short               of               impressive.

He               was               a               Member               of               the               Virginia               Constitutional               Convention;               a               Continental               Congress               member;               a               member               of               the               Virginia               legislature;               a               member               of               the               Constitutional               Convention;               a               US               representative;               and               the               Secretary               of               State.

He               also               wielded               the               most               fluent               pens               drafting               the               United               States               Constitution               and               the               Bill               of               Rights               and               took               part               in               writing               29               of               the               85               Federalist               Papers.

But               2               things               would               forever               change               the               dynamic               of               his               otherwise               spotless               political               achievements.
               Despite               Madison's               designations               of               official               political               status,               the               2               aforementioned               things               the               would               greatly               taint               his               presidency               were               France               and               England.
               In               1807,               when               still               he               was               still               Secretary               of               State,               Madison               and               then-president               Thomas               Jefferson               pushed               to               end               all               American               trade               activity               in               what               became               known               as               the               Embargo               of               1807.

The               embargo               was               implemented               to               instill               tribulation               in               the               economies               of               France               and               England,               but               it               resulted               in               an               outcome               opposite               to               the               desired               effect,               and               the               American               economy               suffered               greatly               instead.

In               order               to               repair               the               situation,               Jefferson,               would               repeal               the               terms               of               the               embargo               in               1809.
               After               winning               the               presidential               election               of               1808,               Madison               was               sworn               into               on               March               4,1809.

In               1810               --               in               order               to               escape               the               inadequate               functioning               of               the               congressional               Nonintercourse               Act               passed               during               the               Jefferson               era,               which               allowed               trade               with               neither               France               nor               England               --               made               an               agreement               with               France's               emperor               Napoleon               Bonaparte               not               to               engage               in               trade               with               England               as               long               as               the               French               upheld               neutrality               toward               American               ships               Napoleon               acquiesced               with               this,               but               the               consequence               of               his               doing               so               would               be               major               for               Madison.
               On               June               12,               1812,               The               War               Hawks               representing               the               western               and               southern               states               in               Congress,               and               whose               wish               it               was               to               go               to               war               with               England               in               order               to               acquire               Canada               anyway,               were               asked               for               a               declaration               of               war               by               President               Madison.

The               declaration,               albeit               challenged               by               the               northeastern               states,               was               granted.

This               would               eventually               lead               to               the               War               of               1812,               in               which,               on               August               24,               1814,               British               troops               stormed               Washington               and               proceeded               to               burn               down               the               capitol,               the               President's               House               and               various               other               building               structures               residing               in               the               city.
               Madison               died               on               June               28,               1836               at               Montpelier,               Virginia.

Although               his               presidency               is               overshadowed               by               his               losing               the               War               of               1812,               he               is               otherwise               fondly               remembered               today               as               the               Father               of               the               Constitution,               as               well               as               for               his               other               numerous               contributions               to               the               formation               of               America,               and               is               widely               considered               to               be               one               of               the               most               important               of               its               founders.









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