JOHN QUINCY ADAMS - TOP 20 PRESIDENTS USA

 

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John Quincy Adams (July 11, 1767 – February 23, 1848) was an American statesman, politician, diplomat, lawyer, and diarist who served as the sixth president of the United States, from 1825 to 1829. He previously served as the eighth United States secretary of state from 1817 to 1825. During his long diplomatic and political career, Adams served as an ambassador and also as a member of the United States Congress representing Massachusetts in both chambers. He was the eldest son of John Adams, who served as the second president of the United States from 1797 to 1801, and First Lady Abigail Adams. Initially a Federalist like his father, he won election to the presidency as a member of the Democratic-Republican Party, and later, in the mid-1830s, became affiliated with the Whig Party.

 

 

John Quincy Adams - 6th US President

 

 

 

 

John Quincy Adams, also known as JQA (July 11, 1767 – February 23, 1848) was an American statesman, politician, diplomat, lawyer, and diarist who served as the sixth president of the United States, from 1825 to 1829. He previously served as the eighth United States secretary of state from 1817 to 1825. During his long diplomatic and political career, Adams served as an ambassador and also as a member of the United States Congress representing Massachusetts in both chambers. He was the eldest son of John Adams, who served as the second president of the United States from 1797 to 1801, and First Lady Abigail Adams. Initially a Federalist like his father, he won election to the presidency as a member of the Democratic-Republican Party, and later, in the mid-1830s, became affiliated with the Whig Party.

Born in Braintree, Massachusetts, Adams spent much of his youth in Europe, where his father served as a diplomat. After returning to the United States, Adams established a successful legal practice in Boston. In 1794, President George Washington appointed Adams as the U.S. ambassador to the Netherlands, and Adams would serve in high-ranking diplomatic posts until 1801, when Thomas Jefferson took office as president. Federalist leaders in Massachusetts arranged for Adams's election to the United States Senate in 1802, but Adams broke with the Federalist Party over foreign policy and was denied re-election. In 1809, President James Madison, a member of the Democratic-Republican Party, appointed Adams as the U.S. ambassador to Russia. Multilingual, Adams held diplomatic posts for the duration of Madison's presidency, and he served as part of the American delegation that negotiated an end to the War of 1812. In 1817, President James Monroe selected Adams as his secretary of state. In that role, Adams negotiated the Adams–Onís Treaty, which provided for the American acquisition of Florida. He also helped formulate the Monroe Doctrine, which became a key tenet of U.S. foreign policy. In 1818, Adams was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia.

Adams, Andrew Jackson, William H. Crawford, and Henry Clay - all members of the Democratic-Republican Party - competed in the 1824 presidential election. Because no candidate won a majority of electoral votes, the House of Representatives held a contingent election, which Adams won with the support of Speaker of the House Henry Clay, whom Adams would controversially appoint as his secretary of state. As president, Adams called for an ambitious agenda that included federally funded infrastructure projects, the establishment of a national university, and engagement with the countries of Latin America, but Congress refused to pass many of his initiatives. During Adams's presidency, the Democratic-Republican Party split into two major camps: the National Republican Party, which supported Adams, and Andrew Jackson's Democratic Party. The Democrats proved to be more effective political organizers than Adams and his National Republican supporters, and Jackson soundly defeated Adams in the 1828 presidential election, making Adams the second president to fail to win re-election (his father being the first).

Rather than retiring from public service, Adams won election to the House of Representatives, where he would serve from 1831 until his death in 1848. He remains the only former president to be elected to the chamber. After narrowly losing his bids for Governor of Massachusetts and Senate re-election, Adams joined the Anti-Masonic Party in the early 1830s before joining the Whig Party, which united those opposed to President Jackson. During his time in Congress, Adams became increasingly critical of slavery and of the Southern leaders whom he believed controlled the Democratic Party. He was particularly opposed to the annexation of Texas and the Mexican–American War, which he saw as a war to extend slavery and its political grip on Congress. He also led the repeal of the "gag rule", which had prevented the House of Representatives from debating petitions to abolish slavery. Historians concur that Adams was one of the greatest diplomats and secretaries of state in American history; they typically rank him as an average president, as he had an ambitious agenda but could not get it passed by Congress. By contrast, historians also view Adams in a more positive light during his post-presidency because of his vehement stance against slavery, as well as his fight for the rights of women and Native Americans.

 

 

 

 

 

Letter from John Quincy Adams to Roger Baldwin, November 1840, reference the slave ship La Amistad              Film poster for La Amistad, a movie about the slave ship and the US Supreme court case that ended slavery in the deep South

 

 

I have received your obliging Letters of the 2d. and 4th: inst[an]t together with the narrative of the case to be tried before the Supreme Court of the United States, at their next January session, of the Captives of the Amistad.

I consented with extreme reluctance at the urgent request of Mr. Lewis Tappan and Mr. Ellis Gray Loring, to appear before the Court as one of the Counsel for these unfortunate men. My reluctance was founded entirely and exclusively upon the consciousness of my own incompetency to do justice to their cause. In every other point of view there is in my estimation no higher object upon earth of ambition than to occupy that position.

 

 

 

 

LA AMISTAD CASE 1841

 

On July 1, 1839, fifty-three Africans, recently kidnapped into slavery in Sierra Leone and sold at a Havana slave market, revolted on board the schooner Amistad. They killed the captain and other crew and ordered the two Spaniards who had purchased them to sail them back to Africa. Instead, the ship was seized off Long Island by a US revenue cutter on August 24, 1839. The Amistad was then landed in New London, Connecticut, where the American revenue cutter’s captain filed for salvage rights to the Amistad’s cargo of Africans. The two Spaniards claimed ownership themselves, while Spanish authorities demanded the Africans be extradited to Cuba and tried for murder.

Connecticut jailed the Africans and charged them with murder. The slave trade had been outlawed in the United States since 1808, but the institution of slavery itself thrived in the South. The Amistad case entered the federal courts and caught the nation’s attention. The murder charges against the Amistad captives were quickly dropped, but they remained in custody as the legal focus turned to the property rights claimed by various parties. President Martin Van Buren issued an order of extradition, per Spain’s wishes, but the New Haven federal court’s decision preempted the return of the captives to Cuba. The court ruled that no one owned the Africans because they had been illegally enslaved and transported to the New World. The Van Buren administration appealed the decision, and the case came before the US Supreme Court in January 1841.

Abolitionists enlisted former US president John Quincy Adams to represent the Amistad captives’ petition for freedom before the Supreme Court. Adams, then a 73-year-old US congressman from Massachusetts, had in recent years fought tirelessly against Congress’s “gag rule” banning anti-slavery petitions. Here, Adams accepted the job of representing the Amistad captives, hoping he would “do justice to their cause.” Adams spoke before the Court for nine hours and succeeded in moving the majority to decide in favor of freeing the captives once and for all. The Court ordered the thirty surviving captives (the others had died at sea or in jail) returned to their home in Sierra Leone.

 

The case effectively ended slavery in the deep south.

 

 

WHO ARE THE MOST POPULAR?

 

Who are the most popular United States presidents, the best known and most hated world leaders from the USA. And how many have been assassinated, or the subject of shooting attempts. The most famous of which must surely be a toss up between Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy in 1963.

 

Then, who is the best looking, most charismatic, handsome and sexiest, to garner voter appeal. And that may include manner of speaking as well as athletic physique. We'd vote for Arnold Schwarzenegger in a flash, and he did make it to Governor of California. Probably one of the most charismatic Presidents was Barack Obama, he could talk the hind leg off a Donkey. Why Henry Cavill does not run for President, beats us. He'd do well, so long as he joins the right party and their politics work. And he wears body armour in case of slip ups by his administration.

 

Alternatively, politicians could start telling the truth. It could be law that politicians who lie will be prosecuted for fraud. How about lie detectors live during political rallies. So the public can see if they are telling the truth when asked certain baseline questions. It might save a few bullets in the long run.

 

 

 

 

 

Former US President Donald Trump, running for office again in 2024 against the incumbent Joe Biden.

 

 

 

 



Four American Presidents have been assassinated so far, with two more shot. The electorate voting with a rifle or pistol. Maybe. Except the shooting of Ronald Reagan was due to the shooter, John Warnock Hinckley Jr., being infatuated with the actress Jodie Foster. Nothing at all to do with politics, apparently.

 

In 1968 Senator Robert F. Kennedy was shot at the Ambassador Hotel. Like his brothers John F. Kennedy and Ted Kennedy, he was a prominent member of the Democratic Party and is an icon of modern American liberalism. He was assassinated as he was running for president, much the same as Donald Trump being shot in 2024.

 

Russian President Vladimir Putin has also been targeted, also his nemesis Volodymyr Zelenskyy. As was Sir Winston Churchill, and Adolf Hitler in World War Two. But these were not members of the public, these appear to have been military operations.

 

 

 

 

 

Robert F. Kennedy (RFK) shot dead in 1968; JFK's brother.

 

 

 

 

 

 

In many countries citizens have been far from satisfied with the lackluster performances of their elected leaders. The latest being the landslide victory of the British Labour party ousting the incompetent Conservative self-servers. According to many media reports. In the UK there is no right to bear arms. Meaning firearms are harder to source. Leaving the discontented with rotten eggs, or in days of old, bows and arrows (Robin Hood). Even so, police in the United Kingdom have armed response units. One of which shot a Brazilian student, Jean Charles de Menezes in 2005, in London, and another shot James Ashley while he was naked in St Leonards, Sussex in 1998.

 

With local authority corruption at high levels in Britain, the nation waits to see how Kier Starmer and his administration copes. So far in 2024 he has leapt into action with a proposed 35 Bills heading to Parliament. Many of which are to protect the less well off in society. With plans to create a new national energy grid, to get away from reliance on fossil fuels. We hope the PM's advisors have the vision to incorporate hydrogen in their plans. We also hope that affordable/sustainable housing gets a look in, perhaps as zero carbon timber framed flat-packs. Other issues include over development of conventional housing estates without improving the roadways leading to recurring potholes. And a water neutral and sewage system, to stop the at present dumping of raw waste into the sea. Prosecutions of water companies and large fines with improvement Order/Notices should do the trick. The lack of suitable water treatment and road infrastructure should be material planning considerations. Total blockers to development, unless the infrastructure improvements are put in place well ahead of the start of development, by way of a 106 Agreement. Proposed new development should not harm heritage assets, associated views, or pollute wetlands, SSSIs and Ramsar sites.

 

To help build a sustainable and circular economy, both the UK and US have serious creative talent in the film and music industries, a unique export to the rest of the world - as great movies and recording artists. This is termed Orange Growth. As manufacturing is on the decline, IP and green tourism (hydrogen powered aircraft, ferries, river cruises) could perhaps fill that void, helping to balance trade deficits.


 

 

 

 

 

 

Stop the bullets being loaded by working toward sustainable development, and world peace

 

 

 



THE TELEGRAPH 15 JULY 2024 - WHAT WOULD HAVE HAPPENED IF TRUMP HAD BEEN ASSASSINATED?

“I’m supposed to be dead,” said Donald Trump, and it’s incredible how close he came. The bullet fired by Thomas Matthew Crooks from a roof in Pennsylvania grazed the former president’s ear. Video suggests he was saved by a head tilt seconds before.

America, warn pundits, was “one inch away from civil war”. Call this distasteful speculation if you wish, but it’s not hyperbolic. It summarises the mood on the ground and the popular memory of past catastrophes.

When people say “civil war”, they don’t mean the 1860s, when North vs South had alternative governments and armies of thousands, but rather the 1960s – when civil unrest was triggered by assassinations and armed extremists lurked in the shadows.
Riots in the wake of the shooting of Martin Luther King Jnr, in April 1968, left 43 dead, 3,500 injured and 27,000 arrested. Liberals demanded reform; conservatives, law and order.

Trump and Biden are old enough to remember those days, and their world-views are shaped by them. Mr Biden sees himself as the heir to Bobby Kennedy, himself assassinated in June 1968. Trump is likened to Richard Nixon.

Today, if either man were to die, or be killed, prior to their formal nomination at a convention, their delegates would be free to pick an alternative via a series of floor votes. Were tragedy to strike after the convention, the nominee would likely be chosen by party officials (with no guarantee that the vice presidential candidate would fill the gap).

The Democrats last held such a brokered convention in 1968, and it descended into a battle between protesters and cops. Institutional memory of that fateful year is precisely why the current Democrat elite is reluctant to drop Mr Biden, to take us back to an age of anarchic politics, mob rule and lone shooters.

Outside of a coal mine, the presidency has proved to be the most dangerous job in US history. Four presidents have been murdered; there were two attempts to kill Gerald Ford alone (heaven knows why). Though the culprits have often been unhinged – Reagan’s would-be assassin wanted to impress Jodie Foster – partisanship provides motive. Lincoln was shot by a confederate actor; William McKinley by an anarchist at a time when that movement was as lethal as al-Qaeda .

Conspiracy theories always follow.

Supporters of Huey Long, a Trump-like populist murdered by a man with a personal grudge in 1935, dubbed their opponents the “Assassination Party”.

The precise effect of political violence depends upon the psychology of society at the time it occurs. By 1981, America wanted to move on from the radicalism of ’68, and Congress became more determinedly collegial. Reagan, recovering in hospital, was visited by Tip O’Neill, the Democrat speaker of the House – and in the most extraordinary scene, Tip fell to his knees in prayer and kissed Ronald on the forehead – rivals, yes, but also friends.

In 2024, partisanship is back in style. Both sides believe the other threatens their liberty, or that they would use unconstitutional means to stay in power.

Violence percolates to the extremes. In 2011, Democrat Gabby Giffords was shot by a constituent; in 2017, Republican Steve Scalise was shot by a Bernie Sanders supporter at a baseball game. White supremacists marched at Charlottesville in 2017 and riots followed the murder of George Floyd in 2020. Then there was Jan 6 2021 and the storming of the Capitol.

Madness is stoked by disinformation: conspiracy theories around the Trump shooting now rival JFK or the Moon landings. Some say the Trump shooting was staged by the candidate himself. Others say the security was deliberately cut back to put him at risk – or the ability of the shooter to get so close indicates an inside job. Why, ask chauvinists, was he protected by a detail of women who looked overweight and unable to holster a gun?

A more compelling story is that the Democrats effectively put a target on Trump’s back by demonising him. “Joe Biden sent the orders,” Representative Mike Collins posted on X – although Trump has maligned his opponents plenty, too, and the political sympathies of the shooter remain unclear.

“Democrats and their allies in the media have recklessly stoked fears,” opined Senator Tim Scott. “Their inflammatory rhetoric puts lives at risk.” If what he says is true – and if Trump had been killed – it’s easy to see how some of his supporters would feel justified in turning to violence.

Imagine a series of Jan 6-ers, a trail of sporadic mob violence targeting officials, journalists, election stations and perhaps the conventions. Again, it’s happened before. The 1995 Oklahoma bombing was carried out by a far-Right activist who believed the US government was at war with its own citizens. A revolutionary situation develops when people think the state is against them and cannot be changed through the ballot box, and the killing of a presidential candidate would, to those of extremist temperament, be final proof.

Oklahoma was inspired by the federal siege at a religious compound in Waco in 1993 – and Trump chose to hold a 2024 rally at Waco airport. He defended the January 6-ers and attacked the “abuses of power” that made this one of the most “corrupt, depraved chapters in all of American history”.

In short, Trump’s death would have pushed his country even further down a road it was already going. Many Americans hope that, having glimpsed over the cliff edge into disorder, people will now step back. 

The early signs are encouraging. Condemnation of the shooting and sympathy for the Trump family has been universal. Nikki Haley, his rival in the primaries, has agreed to speak at the Republican convention. And Trump revealed that though his original speech attacking Mr Biden was scheduled to be another “humdinger”, he has since rewritten it with a view to national reconciliation.

“It is a chance to bring the country together,” he said. “I was given that chance.”

 

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/what-would-have-happened-if-trump-had-been-assassinated/ar-BB1q2aI2

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/what-would-have-happened-if-trump-had-been-assassinated/ar-BB1q2aI2

 

 

"We have gold because we cannot trust governments," President Herbert Hoover famously said in 1933 in his statement to Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Emergency Banking Act, forced all Americans to convert their gold coins, bullion, and certificates into U.S. dollars, to stop the outflow of gold reserves during the Great Depression. The writing was on the wall, but nobody could read it.    

 

 

[LEFT] "We have gold because we cannot trust governments," President Herbert Hoover famously said in 1933 in his statement to Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Emergency Banking Act, forced all Americans to convert their gold coins, bullion, and certificates into U.S. dollars, to stop the outflow of gold reserves during the Great Depression. The writing was on the wall, but nobody could read it. [RIGHT] A $20 dollar bill showing the White House on the reverse

 



No.

President

Dates

Political party

-

-

-

-

1

George Washington

1789 to 1797

Independent

2

John Adams

1797 to 1801

Federalist

3

Thomas Jefferson

1801 to 1809

Democratic-Republican

4

James Madison

1809 to 1817

Democratic-Republican

5

James Monroe

1817 to 1825

Democratic-Republican

6

John Quincy Adams

1825 to 1829

Democratic-Republican

7

Andrew Jackson

1829 to 1837 (attempted assas.)

Democratic

8

Martin Van Buren

1837 to 1841

Democratic

9

William H. Harrison

March 4 to April 4 1841

Whig

10

John Tyler

1841 to 1845

Independent

11

James K. Polk

1845 to 1849

Democratic

12

Zachary Taylor

1849 to 1850

Whig

13

Millard Fillmore

1850 to 1853

Whig

14

Franklin Pierce

1853 to 1857

Democratic

15

James Buchanan

1857 to 1861

Democratic

16

Abraham Lincoln

1861 to 1865 (assassinated)

Republican

17

Andrew Johnson

1865 to 1869

National Union

18

Ulysses S. Grant

1869 to 1877

Republican

19

Rutherford B. Hayes

1877 to 1881

Republican

20

James A. Garfield

1881 (assassinated)

Republican

21

Chester A. Arthur

1881 to 1885

Republican

22

Grover Cleveland

1885 to 1889

Democratic

23

Benjamin Harrison

1889 to 1893

Republican

24

Grover Cleveland

1893 to 1897

Democratic

25

William McKinley

1897 to 1901 (assassinated)

Republican

26

Theodore Roosevelt

1901 to 1909

Republican

27

William H. Taft

1909 to 1913

Republican

28

Woodrow Wilson

1913 to 1921

Democratic

29

Warren G. Harding

1921 to 1923

Republican

30

Calvin Coolidge

1923 to 1929

Republican

31

Herbert Hoover

1929 to 1933

Republican

32

Franklin D. Roosevelt

1933 to 1945

Democratic

33

Harry S. Truman

1945 to 1953

Democratic

34

Dwight D. Eisenhower

1953 to 1961

Republican

35

John F. Kennedy

1961 to 1963 (assassinated)

Democratic

36

Lyndon B. Johnson

1963 to 1969

Democratic

37

Richard Nixon

1969 to 1974

Republican

38

Gerald Ford

1974 to 1977

Republican

39

Jimmy Carter

1977 to 1981

Democratic

40

Ronald Reagan

1981 to 1989 (shot rib)

Republican

41

George H. W. Bush

1989 to 1993

Republican

42

Bill Clinton

1993 to 2001

Democratic

43

George W. Bush

2001 to 2009

Republican

44

Barack Obama

2009 to 2017

Democratic

45

Donald Trump

2017 to 2021 (shot ear)

Republican

46

Joe Biden

2021 - 2024

Democratic

47

Election due (Harris v Trump)

2024 - November

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WORLD WAR THREE

 

In the event of an international nuclear holocaust, World War Three will wipe out the White House and most of Washington DC. All that history gone. Unless, we do something to encapsulate and preserve that heritage. Just in case a madman somewhere on planet earth loses it, and pushes his big red button.

 

 

 

CHAPTERS | CHARACTERS | MEDIA | MOVIE REF | SCREENPLAYS

 

 

 

 

 

 

WWIII3 Cyber Nuclear Holocaust is an original John Storm political thriller.

 

 

 

 

 

  JOHN QUINCY ADAMS 6TH ANTI SLAVERY CAMPAIGNER - LA AMISTAD SLAVE SHIP CASE 1841 - WHO ARE THE TOP TEN (10) BEST AND WORST PRESIDENTS OF THE USA - MOST LOVED, HANDSOME & GOOD LOOKING WORLD LEADERS OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

 

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This website is Copyright © 2024 Cleaner Ocean Foundation and Jameson Hunter Ltd.

Copyright is asserted as per sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988.

This is a work of fiction. Names and Characters are the product of the authors' imaginations, 

and any resemblance to any person, living or deceased, is entirely coincidental, save for reference to heads of state, whose dialogue, actions and thoughts do not represent those of the actual persons. Being entirely fictional. All rights reserved.