Gosh a ruddies there is reason that educated people ask for citations. To check on statements. To see if they reflect the context, if they reflect other statements made by the person quoted and even more basically if they are not a complete lie. So let us just take the first quote used by Cleveland Buck.
“
A democracy is nothing more than mob rule, where fifty-one percent of the people may take away the rights of the other forty-nine.” - Thomas Jefferson”
Does not seem to exist, not in the most extensive list of Tjs quotes at the University of Virginia.
http://guides.lib.virginia.edu/TJ
http://www.cronaca.com/archives/003038.html
“Needless to say, the denigration of democracy as mob rule would not be a sentiment to be expected from the likes of Jefferson. And sure enough, the passage is nowhere to be found on the site, striking though it is -- striking enough to demand inclusion (if genuine) if only to be placed in context”
 
Lets go for Jefferson’s opinion about rule by people,
Democracy
"The will of the people... is the only legitimate foundation of any government, and to protect its free expression should be our first object." --Thomas Jefferson to Benjamin Waring, 1801. ME 10:236
"The measures of the fair majority... ought always to be respected." --Thomas Jefferson to George Washington, 1792. ME 8:397
"[We acknowledge] the principle that the majority must give the law." --Thomas Jefferson to William Carmichael, 1788. ME 7:28
"This... [is] a country where the will of the majority is the law, and ought to be the law." --Thomas Jefferson: Answers to de Meusnier Questions, 1786. ME 17:85
"The fundamental principle of [a common government of associated States] is that the will of the majority is to prevail." --Thomas Jefferson to William Eustis, 1809.
"The voice of the majority decides. For the
lex majoris partis is the law of all councils, elections, etc., where not otherwise expressly provided." --Thomas Jefferson: Parliamentary Manual, 1800. ME 2:420
"It is the multitude which possess force, and wisdom must yield to that." --Thomas Jefferson to Pierre Samuel Dupont de Nemours, 1816. ME 14:492
"If the measures which have been pursued are approved by the majority, it is the duty of the minority to acquiesce and conform." --Thomas Jefferson to William Duane, 1811. ME 13:51
"Every man's reason [is] his own rightful umpire. This principle, with that of acquiescence in the will of the majority, will preserve us free and prosperous as they are sacredly observed." --Thomas Jefferson to John F. Watson, 1814. ME 14:136 \
"[With a majority] having declared against [our proposal], we must suppose we are wrong, according to the fundamental law of every society, the
lex majoris partis, to which we are bound to submit." --Thomas Jefferson to David Humphreys, 1789. ME 7:324
This is why we check citation, to catch liars, incompetents and the intellectually lazy