I normally try not to get involved in stuff like this but my main man Tom is spinning in his Monticello grave so I gotta say something . . . .
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to take everything you have ... The course of history shows that as a government grows, liberty decreases.” – Thomas Jefferson
Originally Posted by KlassyKelliAnn
Uh . . . no.
The first part of this is a completely misattributed to Jefferson. It was actually said by Gerald Ford but is often assigned to Jefferson by conservatives trying to claim Jefferson as their own. AFAIK there is nothing in any of Jefferson's writings that even comes close to this. (You can find the text of Ford's speech with the original quotation here:
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=4694)
The second part is also not Jefferson. It's probably lifted from an actual Jefferson letter where he wrote: "The natural progress of things is for liberty to yield, & government to gain ground." What Jefferson actually wrote has, quite obviously, an entirely different meaning than what you're quoting. In fact, he wasn't even writing about the size of government in that letter. He was actually commenting on the lack of term limits for the President and the Senate in the original Constitution and his desire to see an amendment that would change that. (You can find the original text of the letter - along with nearly all of the original text of Jefferson's writings - published on the web here:
http://oll.libertyfund.org/index.php...1734&Itemid=27)
Unfortunately, conservatives and liberals alike love to claim Jefferson as their own and love to put words in his mouth like this. If you take the time to read his original writings you'll see that his political and moral philosophy was far more complex than what you're claiming. His actions as President were certainly no where near the philosophy your quotation suggests. He expanded the size and power of central government to new heights while he had the office. Not exactly the vision to claim for him.
Most of the other things you've written about him are also just a little naive. You're putting out what is known as the "apologist's view" of Jefferson which honestly doesn't do the man justice. This is the way America wants to remember Jefferson but he was far more interesting than that. Your vision of Jefferson was made popular by Dumas Malone's brilliant 6-volume biography. But while Malone deserved the Pulitzer he won for his writing, we now know that his scholarship was just plain wrong. Jefferson's own writings just don't mesh with what Malone wrote and Malone conveniently ignored nasty little bits of Jefferson's life like his relationships with Sally Hemmings and Maria Cosway while painting Jefferson as a pure moralist with few, if any, flaws.
Malone also put forth the view of Jefferson as a repressed anti-slaver that you posted. In fact, while you have Jefferson "shutting up" about slavery because of public pressure many, many others - most notable John Adams - were speaking up loud and strong against it. Jefferson was neither silent about it nor open in public about what he really thought. The actual words in his letters tell the real story - which is somewhere between your and Sa_artman's view.
If you're really interested in Jefferson then go to the link I posted above and read his original texts for yourself. You'll soon discover that 90% of what you think about him is wrong. He wasn't anything like the clear-cut philosophical visionary today's political factions make of him. He's just a convenient icon for modern politicians because he changed his mind so often over the years that you can make it seem like he supported anything.
Sorry to drone on like a librarian about this. It's just that Tom is my personal hero. The self-serving characterizations of him being put out by both sides of the political spectrum just make me sick. He deserves better than to have his legacy twisted to the whim of political bullshit.
Class Dismissed.
Excellent idea.
Cheers,
Mazo.