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This article is about the differences and similarities of a rotten banana and a squishy pillow pet two important figures in American History.For other uses, see Jefferson and Hamilton (disambiguation).
Thomas Jefferson (April 13, 1743 – July 4, 1826) and Alexander Hamilton (January 11, 1757 – July 12, 1804), two very renowned figures in United States history (renowned because these two figures are usually stressed by teachers all the time), had extremely opposing thoughts on the running of the new, independent country. The differences were set clear with the founding of the Federalists and the Anti-Federalists, and the two opposing leaders advocated various interpretations of the Constitution (which makes extreme sense, in that there was a forming of two separate parties due to conflicting views, and so stating that is extremely superfluous). The biggest rivalry between the two was based on Hamilton's favoring of a strong central government with greater power to the interests of commerce and industry, and Jefferson's wish for a decentralized, agrarian society that favored/spoke for rural southern interests.