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The Litmus Test for American Conservatism (The paloeconservative view of Abe Lincoln.)
Chronicles Magazine ^ | January 2001 | Donald W. Livingston

Posted on 09/06/2003 9:14:08 AM PDT by quidnunc

Abraham Lincoln is thought of by many as not only the greatest American statesman but as a great conservative. He was neither. Understanding this is a necessary condition for any genuinely American conservatism. When Lincoln took office, the American polity was regarded as a compact between sovereign states which had created a central government as their agent, hedging it in by a doctrine of enumerated powers. Since the compact between the states was voluntary, secession was considered an option by public leaders in every section of the Union during the antebellum period. Given this tradition — deeply rooted in the Declaration of Independence — a great statesman in 1860 would have negotiated a settlement with the disaffected states, even if it meant the withdrawal of some from the Union. But Lincoln refused even to accept Confederate commissioners, much less negotiate with them. Most of the Union could have been kept together. Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas voted to remain in the Union even after the Confederacy was formed; they reversed themselves only when Lincoln decided on a war of coercion. A great statesman does not seduce his people into a needless war; he keeps them out of it.

When the Soviet Union dissolved by peaceful secession, it was only 70 years old — the same age as the United States when it dissolved in 1860. Did Gorbachev fail as a statesman because he negotiated a peaceful dissolution of the U.S.S.R.? Likewise, if all states west of the Mississippi were to secede tomorrow, would we praise, as a great statesman, a president who refused to negotiate and launched total war against the civilian population merely to preserve the Union? The number of Southerners who died as a result of Lincoln’s invasion was greater than the total of all Americans killed by Hitler and Tojo. By the end of the war, nearly one half of the white male population of military age was either dead or mutilated. No country in World War II suffered casualties of that magnitude.

Not only would Lincoln not receive Confederate commissioners, he refused, for three crucial months, to call Congress. Alone, he illegally raised money, illegally raised troops, and started the war. To crush Northern opposition, he suspended the writ of habeas corpus for the duration of the war and rounded up some 20,000 political prisoners. (Mussolini arrested some 12,000 but convicted only 1,624.) When the chief justice of the Supreme Court declared the suspension blatantly unconstitutional and ordered the prisoners released, Lincoln ordered his arrest. This American Caesar shut down over 300 newspapers, arrested editors, and smashed presses. He broke up state legislatures; arrested Democratic candidates who urged an armistice; and used the military to elect Republicans (including himself, in 1864, by a margin of around 38,000 popular votes). He illegally created a “state” in West Virginia and imported a large army of foreign mercenaries. B.H. Liddell Hart traces the origin of modern total war to Lincoln’s decision to direct war against the civilian population. Sherman acknowledged that, by the rules of war taught at West Point, he was guilty of war crimes punishable by death. But who was to enforce those rules?

These actions are justified by nationalist historians as the energetic and extraordinary efforts of a great helmsman rising to the painful duty of preserving an indivisible Union. But Lincoln had inherited no such Union from the Framers. Rather, like Bismarck, he created one with a policy of blood and iron. What we call the “Civil War” was in fact America’s French Revolution, and Lincoln was the first Jacobin president. He claimed legitimacy for his actions with a “conservative” rhetoric, rooted in an historically false theory of the Constitution which held that the states had never been sovereign. The Union created the states, he said, not the states the Union. In time, this corrupt and corrupting doctrine would suck nearly every reserved power of the states into the central government. Lincoln seared into the American mind an ideological style of politics which, through a sort of alchemy, transmuted a federative “union” of states into a French revolutionary “nation” launched on an unending global mission of achieving equality. Lincoln’s corrupt constitutionalism and his ideological style of politics have, over time, led to the hollowing out of traditional American society and the obscene concentration of power in the central government that the Constitution was explicitly designed to prevent.

A genuinely American conservatism, then, must adopt the project of preserving and restoring the decentralized federative polity of the Framers rooted in state and local sovereignty. The central government has no constitutional authority to do most of what it does today. The first question posed by an authentic American conservative politics is not whether a policy is good or bad, but what agency (the states or the central government — if either) has the authority to enact it. This is the principle of subsidiarity: that as much as possible should be done by the smallest political unit.

The Democratic and Republican parties are Lincolnian parties. Neither honestly questions the limits of federal authority to do this or that. In 1861, the central government broke free from what Jefferson called “the chains of the Constitution,” and we have, consequently, inherited a fractured historical memory. There are now two Americanisms: pre-Lincolnian and post-Lincolnian. The latter is Jacobinism by other means. Only the former can lay claim to being the primordial American conservatism.

David W. Livingston is a professor of philosophy at Emory University and the author of Philosophical Melancholy and Delirium (University of Chicago Press).


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: dixie; dixielist; history; lincoln; litmustest; paleoconartists; paleocons
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To: donmeaker
once agin you're WRONG according to the curator of Arlington House.

as i said before call him and ask. you'll find you've been lied to & made a fool of.

free dixie,sw

981 posted on 10/26/2003 9:33:16 AM PST by stand watie (Resistence to tyrants is obedience to God. -Thomas Jefferson)
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To: donmeaker
as the slaveholders never comprised more than 6% of southerners and their documents were NOT official documents, hardly anyone, north or south,either read them or cared what they said, an intelligent person must conclude that the cited documents were UNimportant to the causes of the war for dixie freedom. may i suggest that you do a search of my previous posts last year, to see the comments of academics, who are experts in this particuliar field.

i'm not inclined to retype all that data again.

in point of fact, the so-called "causes of secession" were "discovered" in the 1960s by the most hatefilled, arrogant & south-HATING revisionists out of the poison-ivy league.

in TRUTH, there was no discovery, as knowledgeable scholars had known about the documents for 130 years and DISMISSED them as the rantings of a few slaveholders.

such dismissal by scholars was CORRECT, imVho. had the few slavers published "mary had a little lamb", it would have been just as important to an understanding of the causes of TWBTS.

free dixie,sw

982 posted on 10/26/2003 9:42:38 AM PST by stand watie (Resistence to tyrants is obedience to God. -Thomas Jefferson)
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To: donmeaker
since i regard you as both a remoseless liar, revisionist HATER & fool, i wouldn't hold your breath if i were you.

you'll turn blue.

free dixie,sw

983 posted on 10/26/2003 9:48:56 AM PST by stand watie (Resistence to tyrants is obedience to God. -Thomas Jefferson)
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To: stand watie
reference 983,remind self to not be so quick to hit post button. such speed isn't good for detecting spelling errors.

free dixie,sw

984 posted on 10/26/2003 9:51:00 AM PST by stand watie (Resistence to tyrants is obedience to God. -Thomas Jefferson)
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To: donmeaker
the DAY BOOK of Arlington House lists every freeperson by each day, who was present on the estate & frequently datails of whatr they did each day.

sadly for you, it proves you are a LIAR and/or a FOOL. are you BOTH?

free dixie,sw

985 posted on 10/26/2003 10:00:16 AM PST by stand watie (Resistence to tyrants is obedience to God. -Thomas Jefferson)
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To: stand watie
The Pareto Principle has a significant few, and an insignificant many. The Declaration of Independence is, I suppose to your mind the ravings of an insignificant few. I hold it is not so. I hold that the representitive governments of the south had been hijacked by the slave holders. I hold that the representative governments of the south wrote those documents as the best face they could put on their actions. I hold that those same slave holders drafted the non-slave holders into the militia, and called out the militia to defend their plutocracy.

Again, I have alwasy been surprised that R.E. Lee would have anything to do with the anti-democratic (small d) plutocrats, but then again, he was married to one.

I don't call you a liar, just sadly misled.
986 posted on 10/26/2003 10:20:13 AM PST by donmeaker (Bigamy is one wife too many. So is monogamy.)
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To: donmeaker
i hold you to be a south-HATING liar & fool of the first order.

sadly for you, intelligent freepers are on to your game. they are laughing AT you.

free dixie,sw

987 posted on 10/26/2003 10:52:43 AM PST by stand watie (Resistence to tyrants is obedience to God. -Thomas Jefferson)
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To: stand watie
Fine. the intellectual quality of your comments has never been high. It is funny that you call me south hating, particularly since I lived in Texas for 4 years, and enjoyed it a great deal.

Liar, that is interesting. I have backed up my statements with quotes from the "official documents" of the time. My comments have been moderate. You, on the other hand, have never risen above the ad homiem attack. Your loss.
988 posted on 10/26/2003 5:38:01 PM PST by donmeaker (Bigamy is one wife too many. So is monogamy.)
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To: donmeaker
coming from you, i'm pleased.

as i've said before, intelligent FReepers laugh AT you.

PLEASE continue to run off at the mouth, with your incoherent rantings,lies & foolishness.

YOU TOO serve the southron cause,thereby.

free the southland,sw

989 posted on 10/27/2003 10:10:59 AM PST by stand watie (Resistence to tyrants is obedience to God. -Thomas Jefferson)
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To: donmeaker
coming from you, i'm pleased.

as i've said before, intelligent FReepers laugh AT you.

PLEASE continue to run off at the mouth, with your incoherent rantings,lies & foolishness.

YOU, TOO, serve the southron cause,thereby.

free the southland,sw

990 posted on 10/27/2003 10:11:18 AM PST by stand watie (Resistence to tyrants is obedience to God. -Thomas Jefferson)
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To: Paul C. Jesup
1859
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/grant/timeline/

I figure that Grant and Lee both got slaves from their wife's family. Grant got one, and set him free in 1859. Lee got 250, and set them free in 1864. Arlington was controlled by the federal forces at that time.

One interesting thing about Lee and Grant is the parallelisms. Both were poor, but such a difference in their poverty. Both were that inexplicable source of genius for their army. Grant never lost a battle. Lee never lost his dignity.

I quote from the above link:

"January (1859): Grant moves into a back room in St. Louis rented from his business partner, while his family temporarily remains at White Haven. In March, his family joins him in a rented cottage in St. Louis.

March 29: Despite the financial troubles of the Grant family, there is one remedy Grant refuses to consider. He sets free his slave, William Jones, who had come to him through his wife's family."

991 posted on 11/02/2003 7:58:00 PM PST by donmeaker (Bigamy is one wife too many. So is monogamy.)
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To: donmeaker
Interesting.
992 posted on 11/02/2003 8:52:47 PM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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