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Examples
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Also, please read this article from Counterpunch about what Jeff Taylor calls "Jeffersonianism" -- the force in American politics that our 2-party system is designed to suppress.
OpEdNews - Diary: What To Fear Most: A McCain Presidency 2008
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Jimmy Carter tried to balance Wilsonianism and Jeffersonianism, which is similar to the tendencies of Barack Obama, whose foreign policy, you say, looks a little bit like that of Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger.
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Jimmy Carter tried to balance Wilsonianism and Jeffersonianism, which is similar to the tendencies of Barack Obama, whose foreign policy, you say, looks a little bit like that of Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger.
The Economist: Correspondent's diary blogs moderator 2010
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Jimmy Carter tried to balance Wilsonianism and Jeffersonianism, which is similar to the tendencies of Barack Obama, whose foreign policy, you say, looks a little bit like that of Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger.
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Jimmy Carter tried to balance Wilsonianism and Jeffersonianism, which is similar to the tendencies of Barack Obama, whose foreign policy, you say, looks a little bit like that of Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger.
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Jimmy Carter tried to balance Wilsonianism and Jeffersonianism, which is similar to the tendencies of Barack Obama, whose foreign policy, you say, looks a little bit like that of Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger.
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Chernow's account of Alexander Hamilton's struggle with Thomas Jefferson and James Madison naturally tilts toward Hamilton; more seriously, it doesn't capture the extent to which Jeffersonianism went far beyond Jefferson.
Ron Chernow's "Washington," reviewed by T.J. Stiles Post 2010
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Chernow's account of Alexander Hamilton's struggle with Thomas Jefferson and James Madison naturally tilts toward Hamilton; more seriously, it doesn't capture the extent to which Jeffersonianism went far beyond Jefferson.
Ron Chernow's "Washington," reviewed by T.J. Stiles T.J. Stiles 2010
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As a Jeffersonianism heir, "he decried paternalism of every kind."
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The American name for this is Jeffersonianism, and the failure of Distributism to attract much of a stateside following outside of those Mencken derided as "typewriter agrarians" owes in part to its Chesterbellocian tincture.
The Way Of Love/1 2008
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