Image of the American Patriot
Image of the American Patriot
https://archive.schillerinstitute.com/educ/hist/patriot_image_toc.html
What Is An American Patriot?
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=eir+larouche+What+Is+an+American+Patriot%3F&t=h_&ia=web
The American Almanac
https://members.tripod.com/~american_almanac/contents.htm
The American Patriot History Project
https://patriot-project.weebly.com/anton-chaitkin.html
The American System’s Battle Against British Free Trade
‘The Olive Branch’: How A Book Saved the Nation
https://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2007/eirv34n44-20071109/56-71_744.pdf
http://r.schillerinstitute.org/educ/hist/american_patriot_mcarey.pdf
The Patriot File, Unearthed
https://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2007/eirv34n43-20071102/06-16_743.pdf
James Fenimore Cooper and The Society of the Cincinnati
https://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2007/eirv34n42-20071026/62-71_742.pdf
How Andrew Jackson Destroyed the United States
https://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2012/eirv39n49-20121214/04-45_3949.pdf
Andrew Jackson as A Treason Project
https://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2007/eirv34n50-20071221/50-63_750.pdf
The American Industrial Revolution That Andrew Jackson Sought To Destroy
John Quincy Adams Battles For the American System
https://archive.schillerinstitute.com/educ/hist/american_patriot_jqa.pdf
The American System of Political-Economy
A Step Toward Reviving The American Intellectual Tradition
The Historic Mission of the United States
https://archive.schillerinstitute.com/economy/phys_econ/2009/pacific_shift.html
The American System of Political Economy that was devised by Alexander Hamilton was based upon a National Credit System (same as Lincoln’s Greenbacks) and Tariffs to protect the fledgling new nation’s nascent industrial development from being crushed by the “free trade” scam system of the British Oligarchy.
Alexander Hamilton, Founder of the American System
https://www.emergingamerica.org/blog/alexander-hamilton-founder-american-system
Alexander Hamilton Vs. Wall Street
https://duckduckgo.com/?t=h_&q=Nancy+Spannaus+Alexander+Hamilton&ia=web
Jean-Baptiste Colbert (1619-1683)
https://risingtidefoundation.net/jean-baptiste-colbert-1619-1683/
Colbert’s bequest to the founding fathers
How Ben Franklin Organized Our Economic Independence
An extraordinary meeting was held at Benjamin Franklin’s home on Friday, May 11, 1787, to hear an outline for the economic policy and national mission that the United States Constitution should be designed to carry out.
The tight-knit grouping of American nationalists who had directed the Revolutionary War would use this policy paper to instruct the delegates to the Constitutional Convention, scheduled to open three days later…..
https://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2011/eirv38n41-20111021/56-65_3841.pdf
The Franklin School Starts Modern England
http://the-ultimate-frontier.org/history/Franklin%20School%20Starts%20Modern%20England.htm
Who Was Benjamin Franklin?
The life of Boston-born Benjamin Franklin is generally the leading example historians offer, in arguing that America’s Founding Fathers owed nothing to the nation-building conspiracy begun before 1630 by John Winthrop’s Massachusetts Bay Colony. According to this typical historical fraud, Franklin rejected his own Puritan past, and modeled himself after eighteenth-century British liberalism and French Enlightenment radicalism. Centuries of lying must again be swept aside.
Benjamin Franklin was Cotton Mather’s most gifted protégé. When he moved to Pennsylvania, Franklin also raised the political banner of Jonathan Swift. In 1737, Alexander Spotswood appointed him postmaster of Philadelphia. Franklin became the crucial link between the in-depth republican citizenry of New England, and the strategically placed, republican elite fostered by Spotswood in Virginia. That combination won the American Revolution; but until now, the real story has never been told…..
Nicholas Biddle and the 2nd Bank of the United States
https://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/2012/eirv39n28-20120720/46-68_3928.pdf
How The Nation Was Won
by H. Graham Lowry
This is a book about how men move mountains. The description is not simply metaphorical, concerning America's astonishing feat of forging a superpower out of a continental wilderness. It also applies to an extraordinary political fight, waged for nearly a century before the outbreak of the American Revolution: the battle to break beyond the long barrier of the eastern Appalachian Mountain chain, in order to colonize and develop the vast territories to the west. The vision of developing a continental republic in the New World guided America's colonists as far back as John Winthrop's founding of Massachusetts in 1630. With benefit from the experiences of Captain John Smith, whose similar hopes for such a project in Virginia had failed, Winthrop organized the Massachusetts Bay expedition as a first-stage, space colony might be organized today. He recruited all the skilled persons he could muster, in engineering, toolmaking, construction, and agriculture, to the limits of early seventeenth century technology. His small ships also brought hundreds of dedicated colonists and their families, to undertake a nation-building mission that 'official' opinion of the time considered impossible. Under self-governing powers of independence, the Massachusetts colony established an indepth, republican citizenry and considerable economic power, during its first half-century of existence. Its influence was spread in varying degrees throughout New England, and even into the Mid-Atlantic colonies. As colonial potentials increased for development beyond the mountain barriers, the obstacles became less the mountains themselves, and more the combined political and military opposition of forces in both Britain and France. The story of how those obstacles were overcome is the subject of this work. A small group of colonial leaders in America, working both openly and behind the scenes, began implementing a strategy in 1710 for an American 'breakout' beyond the Appalachian and Allegheny mountains. What they accomplished was indispensable to American independence. What they inspired was the mission of nation-building, for which Americans would fight a war to ensure its being fulfilled. In the long struggle between the founding of Massachusetts and "the shot heard 'round the world" at Concord Bridge, that sense of moral purpose was repeatedly tested, yet sustained. The bold and hazardous goal of positioning the colonies to develop the West was attained during the French and Indian War, whose veterans provided much of the leadership for the American Revolution. It may seem presumptuous to describe this account as "America's Untold Story." To the author's knowledge, however, the record of the continuous effort to build a continental republic, from the Puritan founders to the Founding Fathers, has never before been presented, as a coherent, ongoing strategic battle. Yet the evidence is there, that the leading figures who brought America to the point it could successfully assert its independence, had worked to establish the necessary preconditions all along. The evidence is similarly abundant, that a great many Americans —long before the Revolution—thoroughly detested British rule, on precisely the issue of Britain's refusal to permit any real development of the continent. In the colonists' minds, Britain's oppression was underscored by its open collusion with France to destroy colonial attempts to develop the interior. Westward colonization efforts, from New England to the Carolinas, were instant targets for Indian massacres, typically directed by French Jesuit 'missionaries' operating from Canada or, on the southern flank, from French outposts in Louisiana. American efforts to remove such threats—through appeals to the monarchy for assistance, or by military measures of their own—were repeatedly betrayed by Britain's ruling circles. These political facts of life were known to generations of Americans before the Revolution.