| John Stilwell Jenkins - 1857 - 464 páginas
...have great fears that it will be found hostile to liberty and the advance of civilization—fatally hostile to liberty in our country, where the system...most important of any in the whole range of political economy—the banking institution has, if not the greatest, one of the greatest, and, I fear, most... | |
| John Caldwell Calhoun - 1864 - 674 páginas
...one of the first magnitude ; and, with my present impressions, long entertained and daily deepening, I would hesitate — long hesitate — before I would...the banking institution has, if not the greatest, one of the greatest, and, I fear, most pernicious influences. Were the question really before us, I... | |
| Catherine Nugent - 1896 - 416 páginas
...system of state banks of issue, and in a great speech stated his opinion in the following language: "Of all institutions affecting the great question...the banking institution has, if not the greatest, one of the greatest and I fear most pernicious influences." This institution which in Mr. Calhoun's... | |
| Gustavus M. Pinckney - 1903 - 272 páginas
...depositary, while in his possession. All this is changed when applied to a deposit in a bank. * * *"M "Of all institutions affecting the great question...the banking institution has, if not the greatest, one of the greatest, and, I fear, most pernicious, influences. * * *"55 "I shall oppose, strenuously,... | |
| John Caldwell Calhoun, Clyde Norman Wilson - 1959 - 998 páginas
...beneficial, or more constitutional with or without the United States Bank?" "If," said Mr. C[alhoun], "this was a question of 'Bank or no Bank'— if it...the banking institution has, if not the greatest, one of the greatest, and, I fear, most pernicious influences on the mode of distribution. Were the... | |
| John Ashworth - 1987 - 342 páginas
...also had detrimental effects not merely upon liberty but upon the distribution of wealth in society: I have great fears that it will be found hostile to...the banking institution has, if not the greatest, one of the greatest, and, 1 fear, most pernicious influences. Other Calhounites voiced this orthodox... | |
| Thomas L. Haskell, Richard F. Teichgraeber, III - 1996 - 564 páginas
...serious if selective student of politics, called "the great question of the distribution of wealth [the] least explored, and the most important of any in the whole range of political economy." 4 Scholarly and public neglect of distributional issues can be attributed in good part to the pervasiveness... | |
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