Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

To: lentulusgracchus
My own immediate impression is of a tinfoil tablecloth stained with the juice of the grape.

Angry flamboyancy can often leave that impression. But Spooner was constantly flamboyent and often angry, so it must not be taken as anything out of the ordinary for him. He had his own share of crackpot ideas running all around him, but in his movement he was both influential and widespread.

Now, abolitionism itself was never anywhere near the size most make it out to be and was thoroughly a fringe movement, though one that lots of people paid attention to closely.

I think the center of Spooner's complaint is with what happened to the movement's name after the war. He saw a bunch of disingenuous yankee politicians who had advocated segregation and bigotry all their lives suddenly rallying around their victory in the war and pretending themselves to be abolitionists that they were not then and never had been.

The politicians seized his movement as their own after the fact and started using it to justify their own continued political gains. Spooner being a "true believer" was naturally repulsed (as was Garrison from time to time in his dealings with Lincoln). So in flamboyant Lysander Spooner style, he lashed out with this essay.

Many of its points are little different from what southerners argued, Spooner enjoys a position that is unique to only a few - he was a northerner lashing out at the northern radical "mainstream" from a side opposite of the south yet for many of the same reasons as the south.

30 posted on 08/17/2002 1:57:07 AM PDT by GOPcapitalist
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 27 | View Replies ]


To: GOPcapitalist
Hey here is something for those people over at the LIARS CLUB to chew on!

Who Cares about the Civil War?

by Harry Browne

July 31, 2002

I believe an understanding of the Civil War has great relevance to the future of liberty in America.

It may be the most misunderstood of all American wars. And so much of what we lament today government intrusions on civil liberties, unlimited taxation, corporate welfare, disregarding of the Constitution, funny money date back to programs started during the Civil War.

Although slavery was an ever-present political issue in the early 1800s, it wasn't the immediate cause of the war. In fact, Abraham Lincoln in his first inaugural address vowed that he wouldn't interfere with slavery. 

He also said the North wouldn't invade the South unless necessary to collect taxes.

Before the war, the main concern about slavery was whether new states and territories would come into the Union as free states or slave states. This affected the balance of power in Congress, and both Northerners and Southerners worried that the other region might dominate Congress.

Taxes

Why then was the Civil War fought?

As with most wars, there's no single answer. But the predominant cause was taxation.

Before his election, Lincoln had promoted very high tariffs (federal taxes on foreign imports), using the receipts to build railroads, canals, roads, and other federal pork-barrel projects.

The tariffs protected Northern manufacturers from foreign competition, and were paid mostly by the non-manufacturing South, while most of the proposed boondoggles were to be built in the North. Thus the South was being forced to subsidize Northern corporate welfare.

Certainly the Southerners were concerned about the future of slavery. But there was no threat in 1861 that the federal government would be able to outlaw it. 

Secession

When Lincoln was elected, South Carolina saw a grim future ahead and seceded. Other Southern states quickly followed suit. 

Lincoln asserted that no state had a right to secede from the Union even though several geographical regions had considered secession before. Few people thought the Union couldn't survive if some states decided to leave.

Upon seceding, the Confederates took over all federal forts and other facilities in the South, with no opposition from Lincoln. The last remaining federal facilities were Fort Pickens in Florida and Fort Sumter in South Carolina. Lincoln at first promised to let the South have Fort Sumter, but then tried to reinforce it. The South moved to confiscate it shelling the Fort for many hours. (No one was killed or even seriously injured.)

Why was Fort Sumter important? Because it was a major tariff-collecting facility in the harbor at Charleston. So long as the Union controlled it, the South would still have to pay Lincoln's oppressive tariffs.

Although there had been only scattered Northern opposition to the secessions, the shelling of Fort Sumter (like the bombing of Pearl Harbor almost a century later) incited many Northerners to call for war against the South. The South's seizure of Fort Sumter caused many Northerners to notice that the South would no longer be subsidizing Northern manufacturing.

As the war began, the sole issue was restoration of the Union not ending slavery. Only in 1863 did the Emancipation Proclamation go into effect, and it didn't actually free a single slave just like so many laws today that don't perform the purpose for which they were promoted. .

The Damage

The Lincoln Presidency imposed a police state upon America North and South. He shut down newspapers that disagreed with him, suspended habeas corpus, imprisoned civilians without trials, and went to war all without Congressional authority.

Just as future Presidents would do, he used the war as an excuse to increase government dramatically. He rewarded his political friends with pork-barrel projects, flooded the country with paper money, established a national banking system to finance a large federal debt, and imposed the first income tax. He also destroyed the balance between the executive and Congressional branches, and between the federal government and the states.

He set in motion many precedents we suffer from today. That's why it's important to understand the Civil War for what it was, not what the mythmakers want it to be.

Alternatives

Was slavery an evil? Of course.

Is it a blessing that it ended? Of course.

Was it necessary for 140,414 people to die in order to end slavery? Definitely not. The U.S. was the only western country that ended slavery through violence outside of Haiti (where it ended through a slave revolt). During the 19th century dozens of nations ended slavery peaceably.

What Was Lincoln?

Was Lincoln opposed to slavery? Yes, he became an abolitionist in the mid-1850s, although he said he didn't know how slavery could be ended.

Lincoln's fans have portrayed him as the Great Emancipator, Honest Abe, who with great courage and single-minded determination fought a Civil War to free the slaves. Many of his detractors have tried to show that he was actually a racist.

I think it's important to understand that, more than anything else, he was a politician. Throughout his career he shaded the truth for political advantage, he played both sides against the middle, he lied about his opponents, and he used government force to get what he wanted. Like so many politicians, he continually uttered platitudes about liberty while doing everything in his power to curtail it.

His idolaters applaud him for being a dictatorial politician, saying this was precisely what America needed in 1861. No historian believes he acted within the Constitution.

Importance of Studying the Civil War

I believe the study of the origins and conduct of the Civil War is an important part of a libertarian education.

Although the Progressive era, the New Deal, and the Great Society each caused government growth to accelerate, only the Civil War caused a complete break with the past. It transformed a federation of states into a national government. It introduced the elements of big government that later movements would build on. And it set in motion the disregard for the Constitution that's taken for granted today.

You'll also find parallels between the Civil War and today's War on Terrorism.

Lincoln and the Civil War are fascinating subjects. I've read numerous books about them, and I can highly recommend two recent books that provide an excellent introduction.

Jeffrey Hummel's book "Emancipating Slaves, Enslaving Free Men" (published in 1996) and Thomas DiLorenzo's "The Real Lincoln" (2002) are both well-documented and very well-written. You'll find reading either of them (or both) to be an adventure, rather than a task.

Hummel's book is longer, more complete, and perhaps more balanced. DiLorenzo's is faster reading. Both are well worth their inexpensive prices.

We're fortunate that Laissez Faire Books carries an enormous assortment of pro-liberty titles, and makes it easy to order books online. (You may want to bookmark the site for easy reference.)

Hummel's book is only $14.95, and DiLorenzo's book is only $17.50. 

Happy reading!

 

| Home | Radio Show | Article Index | Speaker | Investment Advice | Books
  | 
FreedomWire | 2000 Campaign Report | American Liberty Foundation
Repeal Campaign Laws | Libertarian Party | Friends of HB | About Harry |

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hit Counter


34 posted on 08/17/2002 9:25:49 AM PDT by one2many
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 30 | View Replies ]

To: GOPcapitalist
Now, abolitionism itself was never anywhere near the size most make it out to be and was thoroughly a fringe movement, though one that lots of people paid attention to closely.

Exactly correct. Abolitionism as it existed among the lunatics of New England was the movement which had coopted and rejected the basic thesis of the colonization movement, which had been popular even in the South. The New England radicals didn't simply want slavery abolished as it had been done in the British colonies, they wanted it accomplished by means of slave uprisings and the slaughter of all white people living in the states where slavery was legal, regardless of whether they owned slaves themselves or not. They were also adamantly opposed to returning Africans to Africa, even those who had recently been smuggled in here in defiance of the law.

These same lunatics wanted capitalism destroyed at a stroke. They were never a majority as you observed.

44 posted on 08/17/2002 2:34:00 PM PDT by Twodees
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 30 | View Replies ]

To: GOPcapitalist
The politicians seized his movement as their own after the fact and started using it to justify their own continued political gains. Spooner being a "true believer" was naturally repulsed (as was Garrison from time to time in his dealings with Lincoln). So in flamboyant Lysander Spooner style, he lashed out with this essay.

It would be interesting to see some of the things Garrison said about Lincoln.....and Wendell Phillips said....but then, Lincoln was a first-rate politician who wasn't letting much out of his hat, I don't think, about what he really intended to accomplish with the Civil War. I have posted that I suspect he always, from 1856 forward, intended to end slavery in the South, by securing the Presidency and then resorting either to constitutional crisis, or a constitutional novelty, or to allowing open conflict to arise.

I've been posting over on the other thread ("Area Confederate Soldiers") so I've been pretty busy.

50 posted on 08/18/2002 12:18:45 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 30 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson