Via Matthew
Every so often some clown decides to call Thomas Jefferson a
“racist,” and other clowns let him publish the charge. The most recent
clown is
Paul Finkelman, a professor at Albany Law School, and the accessory clowns are
The New York Times.
Prof. Finkelman is shocked to find that Jefferson thought blacks were
less intelligent than whites. And since Jefferson wrote the words “all
men are created equal” but bought and sold slaves, that makes him “a
creepy, brutal hypocrite.” Like all clowns of his kind, Prof. Finkelmen
tells us Jefferson fathered children with his black slave, Sally
Hemings.
In other words, it’s the usual rubbish.
James Callender, a transplanted Scotsman, started the Hemings rumor in
September 1802 after Jefferson turned him down for a patronage job.
Callender claimed the president was sporting with “dusky Sally,” a
“wooly-headed concubine,” who was part of his “Congo harem.”
“By the wench Sally our president has had several children,” he
wrote, later claiming that the total was five. Callender called Sally a
“slut common as the pavement” who was “romping with half a dozen black
fellows.”
“Jefferson’s reputation will survive, but that of The New York Times may not.”
Callender never claimed he met “dusky Sally” or explained how he got
the dope on her rompings. The next year, Callender drowned in two or
three feet of water in the James River, reportedly too drunk to fish
himself out, but Jefferson’s Federalist enemies never stopped whooping
up the Hemings story. Callender may have been right to claim he had done
more damage to Jefferson’s reputation in five months than all his other
critics had done in ten years. Deviants have cackled with joy ever
since at the thought that Monticello was a love nest of miscegenation.
DNA testing on Sally Hemings’s descendants in 1998 proved that Jefferson was
not
the father of one of her older children, but that someone who had the
Jefferson Y chromosome fathered her youngest child, Eston.
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