Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton Dueled Over Political Differences Which Led to the Death of Hamilton Who Was Known to be One of the Global Elite's Pawns.
The Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton duel was between two well known United States politicians. At the time, Aaron Burr was the sitting vice president and Alexander Hamilton was the former secretary of the treasury. Both had extensive political clout.
The duel was one of the most famous in the United States, caused by both personal rivalry and political differences that had built up between the two men. On July 11, 1804, Alexander Hamilton was shot by Aaron Burr at the Heights of Weehawken in New Jersey and died the next day at 2pm at the home of William Bayard, where he was taken after being shot.
The political differences between the two men were too big for them to ever come to any agreement. Burr believed that each of the states should operate independently from the central government, coming together only over mutual interests.
Hamilton believed the states should be united so they could behave and act as one large whole, gaining strength from their unity underneath a central government.
Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton would never be able to see eye to eye and it was their vast political differences that led them to the conclusion that a duel was the only way to choose a winner.
Alexander Hamilton was part of a small group of families also known as the Illuminati. Currently, this group is still active and actually owns the Federal Reserve Banking System created through an act of Congress in 1913.
Shadow groups like the Bilderbergs, the Trilateral Commission and the Council on Foreign Relations place presidents and other politicians in office. These men, as was Hamilton, are seeking control of the world through a single One World Government.
In order to accomplish this they must keep humanity from coming together. They back all major religions, spurring differences to create conflict and they back both sides of every major political and human conflict to insure chaos. They hope to create a planetary duel over differences, like the fatal duel between these two men.
At the time of the duel Aaron Burr was the sitting vice president. If it weren't for Hamilton, Burr might have been president, but Hamilton campaigned against Burr with the result being Jefferson became president and Burr took the seat of the vice president.
With the upcoming 1804 election, Jefferson had already decided to drop Burr from the ticket. Not to be deterred, Burr decided to run for Governor of New York. But Hamilton once again campaigned against Burr, being one of the leading causes of Burr's loss to Morgan Lewis, a Democratic-Republican who Hamilton fully supported.
One way Hamilton campaigned against Burr was by expressing his opinions in the Albany Register. He claimed Burr was a dangerous man and it would be better for the country if no one voted for him for Governor of New York.
When Burr couldn't get the answers he wanted out of Hamilton for accusing him of being dangerous, Burr challenged Hamilton to a duel. The Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton duel was proclaimed in June 27, 1804.
The death of Alexander Hamilton was sensational news because dueling was being banned in the northern states. Although charges would later be dismissed, Aaron Burr was indicted both in the state of New Jersey and New York.
But Burr wouldn't survive the duel in other ways. There was much hostility and criticism against him, far too much for him to be able to hold on to his political career. He was eventually forced into exile.
The Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton duel had a more far reaching impact on politics in the United States than just murder. The Federalist Party, after the death of George Washington just five years earlier, didn't have a strong leader and the duel was just the final event in a long accumulation of conflicts between the Federalists and Democratic Republicans.
The two party political system is itself a breeding ground for strong disagreements. Just listen as radio personalities like Rush Limbaugh are worked into a lather over petty (though they may disagree) differences when everyone, at the center of it all, is looking for the same thing, a life of peace.
Almost all of Alexander Hamilton's political ambitions led to one end: to create a strong national government. It was how he went about establishing the power of the government for the Illuminati that has always been controversial, leading in part to the duel between Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton.
One of the ways Hamilton was able to build a strong Federalist Party was by gaining the backing and support of the financial elite. The establishment of a national bank (a version of today's Federal Reserve) would make the rich richer and keep the poor in line, since the central bank would ultimately control all the credit and loans of the country.
Hamilton and the Federalists believed that the well educated and the financially elite were the obvious choice for leading the government. This concept greatly appealed to bankers, industrialists, merchants and lawyers, as they knew it would give them almost unlimited power.
There are many echos of Hamilton's sentiments today. The elite want more power and gain it through centralized financial power which is exactly what Hamilton fought for. Those who would destroy America have been around since its inception, we must stand strong and not give in to the banking elite. Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton are a symbol of this fight.
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