Posted on 02/18/2005 11:27:18 PM PST by churchillbuff
The key to understanding Lincoln's philosophy of statesmanship is that he always sought the meeting point between what was right in theory and what could be achieved in practice. By Dinesh D'Souza
Most Americans -- including most historians -- regard Abraham Lincoln as the nation's greatest president. But in recent years powerful movements have gathered, both on the political right and the left, to condemn Lincoln as a flawed and even wicked man.
For both camps, the debunking of Lincoln usually begins with an exposé of the "Lincoln myth," which is well described in William Lee Miller's 2002 book Lincoln's Virtues: An Ethical Biography. How odd it is, Miller writes, that an "unschooled" politician "from the raw frontier villages of Illinois and Indiana" could become such a great president. "He was the myth made real," Miller writes, "rising from an actual Kentucky cabin made of actual Kentucky logs all the way to the actual White House."
Lincoln's critics have done us all a service by showing that the actual author of the myth is Abraham Lincoln himself. It was Lincoln who, over the years, carefully crafted the public image of himself as Log Cabin Lincoln, Honest Abe and the rest of it. Asked to describe his early life, Lincoln answered, "the short and simple annals of the poor," referring to Thomas Gray's poem "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard." Lincoln disclaimed great aspirations for himself, noting that if people did not vote for him, he would return to obscurity, for he was, after all, used to disappointments.
These pieties, however, are inconsistent with what Lincoln's law partner, William Herndon, said about him: "His ambition was a little engine that knew no rest." Admittedly in the ancient world ambition was often viewed as a great vice. In Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, Brutus submits his reason for joining the conspiracy against Caesar: his fear that Caesar had grown too ambitious. But as founding father and future president James Madison noted in The Federalist, the American system was consciously designed to attract ambitious men. Such ambition was presumed natural to a politician and favorable to democracy as long as it sought personal distinction by promoting the public good through constitutional means.
What unites the right-wing and left-wing attacks on Lincoln, of course, is that they deny that Lincoln respected the law and that he was concerned with the welfare of all. The right-wing school -- made up largely of Southerners and some libertarians -- holds that Lincoln was a self-serving tyrant who rode roughshod over civil liberties, such as the right to habeas corpus. Lincoln is also accused of greatly expanding the size of the federal government. Some libertarians even charge -- and this is not intended as a compliment -- that Lincoln was the true founder of the welfare state. His right-wing critics say that despite his show of humility, Lincoln was a megalomaniacal man who was willing to destroy half the country to serve his Caesarian ambitions. In an influential essay, the late Melvin E. Bradford, an outspoken conservative, excoriated Lincoln as a moral fanatic who, determined to enforce his Manichaean vision -- one that sees a cosmic struggle between good and evil -- on the country as a whole, ended up corrupting American politics and thus left a "lasting and terrible impact on the nation's destiny."
Although Bradford viewed Lincoln as a kind of manic abolitionist, many in the right-wing camp deny that the slavery issue was central to the Civil War. Rather, they insist, the war was driven primarily by economic motives. Essentially, the industrial North wanted to destroy the economic base of the South. Historian Charles Adams, in When in the Course of Human Events: Arguing the Case for Southern Secession, published in 2000, contends that the causes leading up to the Civil War had virtually nothing to do with slavery.
This approach to rewriting history has been going on for more than a century. Alexander Stephens, former vice president of the Confederacy, published a two-volume history of the Civil War between 1868 and 1870 in which he hardly mentioned slavery, insisting that the war was an attempt to preserve constitutional government from the tyranny of the majority. But this is not what Stephens said in the great debates leading up to the war. In his "Cornerstone" speech, delivered in Savannah, Ga., on March 21, 1861, at the same time that the South was in the process of seceding, Stephens said that the American Revolution had been based on a premise that was "fundamentally wrong." That premise was, as Stephens defined it, "the assumption of equality of the races." Stephens insisted that instead: "Our new [Confederate] government is founded upon exactly the opposite idea. Its foundations are laid, its cornerstone rests upon the great truth that the Negro is not equal to the white man. Slavery -- subordination to the superior race -- is his natural and normal condition. This, our new government, is the first, in the history of the world, based upon this great and moral truth."
This speech is conspicuously absent from the right's revisionist history. And so are the countless affirmations of black inferiority and the "positive good" of slavery -- from John C. Calhoun's attacks on the Declaration of Independence to South Carolina Senator James H. Hammond's insistence that "the rock of Gibraltar does not stand so firm on its basis as our slave system." It is true, of course, that many whites who fought on the Southern side in the Civil War did not own slaves. But, as Calhoun himself pointed out in one speech, they too derived an important benefit from slavery: "With us the two great divisions of society are not the rich and the poor, but white and black; and all the former, the poor as well as the rich, belong to the upper class, and are respected and treated as equals." Calhoun's point is that the South had conferred on all whites a kind of aristocracy of birth, so that even the most wretched and degenerate white man was determined in advance to be better and more socially elevated than the most intelligent and capable black man. That's why the poor whites fought -- to protect that privilege.
Contrary to Bradford's high-pitched accusations, Lincoln approached the issue of slavery with prudence and moderation. This is not to say that he waffled on the morality of slavery. "You think slavery is right, and ought to be extended," Lincoln wrote Stephens on the eve of the war, "while we think it is wrong, and ought to be restricted." As Lincoln clearly asserts, it was not his intention to get rid of slavery in the Southern states. Lincoln conceded that the American founders had agreed to tolerate slavery in the Southern states, and he confessed that he had no wish and no power to interfere with it there. The only issue -- and it was an issue on which Lincoln would not bend -- was whether the federal government could restrict slavery in the new territories. This was the issue of the presidential campaign of 1860; this was the issue that determined secession and war.
Lincoln argued that the South had no right to secede -- that the Southern states had entered the Union as the result of a permanent compact with the Northern states. That Union was based on the principle of majority rule, with constitutional rights carefully delineated for the minority. Lincoln insisted that since he had been legitimately elected, and since the power to regulate slavery in the territories was nowhere proscribed in the Constitution, Southern secession amounted to nothing more than one group's decision to leave the country because it did not like the results of a presidential election, and no constitutional democracy could function under such an absurd rule. Of course the Southerners objected that they should not be forced to live under a regime that they considered tyrannical, but Lincoln countered that any decision to dissolve the original compact could only occur with the consent of all the parties involved. Once again, it makes no sense to have such agreements when any group can unilaterally withdraw from them and go its own way.
The rest of the libertarian and right-wing case against Lincoln is equally without merit. Yes, Lincoln suspended habeas corpus and arrested Southern sympathizers, but let us not forget that the nation was in a desperate war in which its very survival was at stake. Discussing habeas corpus, Lincoln insisted that it made no sense for him to protect this one constitutional right and allow the very Union established by the Constitution, the very framework for the protection of all rights, to be obliterated. Of course the federal government expanded during the Civil War, as it expanded during the Revolutionary War, and during World War II. Governments need to be strong to fight wars. The evidence for the right-wing insistence that Lincoln was the founder of the modern welfare state stems from the establishment, begun during his administration, of a pension program for Union veterans and support for their widows and orphans. Those were, however, programs aimed at a specific, albeit large, part of the population. The welfare state came to America in the 20th century. Franklin Roosevelt should be credited, or blamed, for that. He institutionalized it, and Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon expanded it.
The left-wing group of Lincoln critics, composed of liberal scholars and social activists, is harshly critical of Lincoln on the grounds that he was a racist who did not really care about ending slavery. Their indictment of Lincoln is that he did not oppose slavery outright, only the extension of it, that he opposed laws permitting intermarriage and even opposed social and political equality between the races. If the right-wingers disdain Lincoln for being too aggressively antislavery, the left-wingers scorn him for not being antislavery enough. Both groups, however, agree that Lincoln was a self-promoting hypocrite who said one thing while doing another.
Some of Lincoln's defenders have sought to vindicate him from these attacks by contending that he was a "man of his time." This will not do, because there were several persons of that time, notably the social-reformer Grimké sisters, Angelina and Sarah, and Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts, who forthrightly and unambiguously attacked slavery and called for immediate and complete abolition. In one of his speeches, Sumner said that while there are many issues on which political men can and should compromise, slavery is not such an issue: "This will not admit of compromise. To be wrong on this is to be wholly wrong. It is our duty to defend freedom, unreservedly, and careless of the consequences."
Lincoln's modern liberal critics are, whether they know it or not, the philosophical descendants of Sumner. One cannot understand Lincoln without understanding why he agreed with Sumner's goals while consistently opposing the strategy of the abolitionists. The abolitionists, Lincoln thought, approached the restricting or ending of slavery with self-righteous moral display. They wanted to be in the right and -- as Sumner himself says -- damn the consequences. In Lincoln's view, abolition was a noble sentiment, but abolitionist tactics, such as burning the Constitution and advocating violence, were not the way to reach their goal.
We can answer the liberal critics by showing them why Lincoln's understanding of slavery, and his strategy for defeating it, was superior to that of Sumner and his modern-day followers. Lincoln knew that the statesman, unlike the moralist, cannot be content with making the case against slavery. He must find a way to implement his principles to the degree that circumstances permit. The key to understanding Lincoln is that he always sought the meeting point between what was right in theory and what could be achieved in practice. He always sought the common denominator between what was good to do and what the people would go along with. In a democratic society this is the only legitimate way to advance a moral agenda.
Consider the consummate skill with which Lincoln deflected the prejudices of his supporters without yielding to them. In the Lincoln-Douglas debates during the race for the Illinois Senate, Stephen Douglas repeatedly accused Lincoln of believing that blacks and whites were intellectually equal, of endorsing full political rights for blacks, and of supporting "amalgamation" or intermarriage between the races. If these charges could be sustained, or if large numbers of people believed them to be true, then Lincoln's career was over. Even in the free state of Illinois -- as throughout the North -- there was widespread opposition to full political and social equality for blacks.
Lincoln handled this difficult situation by using a series of artfully conditional responses. "Certainly the Negro is not our equal in color -- perhaps not in many other respects; still, in the right to put into his mouth the bread that his own hands have earned, he is the equal of every other man. In pointing out that more has been given to you, you cannot be justified in taking away the little which has been given to him. If God gave him but little, that little let him enjoy." Notice that Lincoln only barely recognizes the prevailing prejudice. He never acknowledges black inferiority; he merely concedes the possibility. And the thrust of his argument is that even if blacks were inferior, that is not a warrant for taking away their rights.
Facing the charge of racial amalgamation, Lincoln said, "I protest against that counterfeit logic which concludes that because I do not want a black woman for a slave, I must necessarily want her for a wife." Lincoln is not saying that he wants, or does not want, a black woman for his wife. He is neither supporting nor opposing racial intermarriage. He is simply saying that from his antislavery position it does not follow that he endorses racial amalgamation. Elsewhere Lincoln turned antiblack prejudices against Douglas by saying that slavery was the institution that had produced the greatest racial intermixing and the largest number of mulattoes.
Lincoln was exercising the same prudent statesmanship when he wrote to New York newspaper publisher Horace Greeley asserting: "My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves, I would do it; and if I could do it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would also do that." The letter was written on August 22, 1862, almost a year and a half after the Civil War broke out, when the South was gaining momentum and the outcome was far from certain. From the time of secession, Lincoln was desperately eager to prevent border states such as Maryland, Delaware, Kentucky and Missouri from seceding. These states had slavery, and Lincoln knew that if the issue of the war was cast openly as the issue of slavery, his chances of keeping the border states in the Union were slim. And if all the border states seceded, Lincoln was convinced, and rightly so, that the cause of the Union was gravely imperiled.
Moreover, Lincoln was acutely aware that many people in the North were vehemently antiblack and saw themselves as fighting to save their country rather than to free slaves. Lincoln framed the case against the Confederacy in terms of saving the Union in order to maintain his coalition -- a coalition whose victory was essential to the antislavery cause. And ultimately it was because of Lincoln that slavery came to an end. That is why the right wing can never forgive him.
In my view, Lincoln was the true "philosophical statesman," one who was truly good and truly wise. Standing in front of his critics, Lincoln is a colossus, and all of the Lilliputian arrows hurled at him bounce harmlessly to the ground. It is hard to put any other president -- not even George Washington -- in the same category as Abraham Lincoln. He is simply the greatest practitioner of democratic statesmanship that America and the world have yet produced.
Different matters. In the earlier case the property had not been used in a rebellion against the government.
If you care to continue this tack, I'll state that unilateral secession was legal BEFORE the war, and only declared illegal AFTER the war. Thus secession, was not illegal before or during the war.
You would be wrong.
Besides, the 5th Amendment says that you cannot be deprived of property without due process. Well, Miller's property was seized on order of the court after the government presented its evidence that Miller did actively support the rebellion.
BUT IT DOES give instructions on how to treat slaves.
Most experts agree that slavery would have gone the way of the Dodo by 1880 or so. It wouldn't have remained economically feasible after the industrial revolution.
The that gives me a few questions.
Does that make slavery defensible?
Did the Confederate government or any of the Slave state governments codify the Biblical instructions on slavery?
Was Biblical slavery racially based?
Do the terms Old Covenant and New Covenant mean anything to you?
And finally, is there any feature of the Confederacy that you would not defend to the point of absurdity?
Most experts? I'd be interested in hearing about them. And I wouldn't include stand watie in that category.
It wouldn't have remained economically feasible after the industrial revolution.
The Industrial Revolution had been ongoing for decades before the rebellion, and with the exception of the cotton gin had left plantation agriculture untouched. Cotton harvesting was a complex process, dealing with open cotton bolls and closed bolls, separating the stems and leaves from the cotton bolls, and separating the cotton itself from the boll. True mechanization of cotton harvesting would not become common until the 1940's.
And that doesn't include the slaves that weren't in the field. The millions of slaves that were domestic help. How would the industrial revolution impact them?
Name some experts from say 1860 who said that. Or even some from 1880 who said that.
It wouldn't have remained economically feasible after the industrial revolution.
The industrial revolution didn't hit most of the south, at least the prediminant crops of the agricultural south, until well into the 20th century.
You haven't heard of US Steel, in Birmingham, Al. or the textile mills in North Carolina, or the Cigarette factories? All those were before the 1900's if memory serves.
1. Yes and No....Yes, if you go strictly by the scripture.
No...if you go by standards of morality. You were saying the Bible was opposed to slavery. It isn't.
2. Not that I know of, but a good source of how they were treated can be found in "Gone with the Wind" by Margaret Mitchell.....Plantation owners who mistreated slaves were shunned and ostracized by their peers. In some states, if a slave was killed due to maltreatment, it was a criminal offense.
3. No, but that has nothing to do with it.
4.They mean plenty, but St. Paul was under the "New Covenant", and he was the one who wrote of treatment of slaves.
5. Last question is totally ludicrous. Not everything the Confedracy did was perfect. And I don't nor ever have stated such.
I will state again: The losses of our Republic, and to our freedom, and the amount of lives, do not justify what was done by Lincoln and company.
Like always, you simply ignore what I wrote. The words "most" and "agricultural" mean things. I'm even old enough to remember seeing cotton being harvested by hand yet I don't recall ever seeing anyone harvest wheat by hand. You look for the exceptions to deny the fact that the south lagged far behind in terms of industrialization and significant portions of the region's agriculture relying on unskilled, mostly "share-cropper" labor.
It took the REA, TVA, and WWII followed by the Cold War Military Industrial Complex (big Federal Government) to bring serious levels of industry into the south.
It also brought a hell of a lot of "damn yankee carpetbagers."
And the courts FORCED us to have legalized abortion, and gave us legal separatism, struck down state laws on sodomy. Your heros? I think they are just a bunch of old men and women, not gods.
Well, I certainly agree with your last statement :)
It has been said that one of the most certain condemnations of Lincoln is the character of many of those who so absolutely defend him. I suspect you'll find that to also be the case with many or most of the Dixie-haters and other antiSouth bigots you encounter.
Actually, slavery DID go the way of the DODO bird in the 1880s.
The Confederados, a group of Confederates who moved to Brazil when the South's loss was imminent, took the institution of slavery with them, and Brazil welcomed it.
But the Confederados ended the institution less than 30 years later.
Hatred of the South and southerners is illogical. The north had slaves also. Grant and Sherman were both slaveowners. In fact, the US government itself OWNED SLAVES the entire course of the war, which they used for construction projects in downtown DC.
Pasting the South alone with the slavery moniker has NO LOGIC. The north was just as 'guilty', if anyone want to use that term...
I'm sorry, your contentention that "Lincoln sent armies to free the slaves" has NO basis in history.
Give me just ONE example of where he did that. It does NOT exist.
The Emancipation Proclamation freed NO ONE. Neither did it order "the armies to free the slaves". It, in effect, told people in another country, where Lincoln had no authority, what to do. He could just as well tolk the French to stop drinking wine, while distributing it to his own troops. This is actually a fairly accurate statement, since Union troops raped, murdered, and took blacks as their own slaves which they came to "emancipate".
Your version of 'history' has no basis in fact, whatsoever.
While you sit on your throne of moral superiority, please explain to the rest of us why Grant and Sherman owned slaves the entire war; indeed, why the US government ITSELF OWNED SLAVES THE ENTIRE WAR, which it used for construction projects in downtown Washington, DC???
Concerning the secession of West Virginia, I'll have to check the Confederate constitution to see what it says.
But according to Lincoln's own logic, and the US Constitution, it was CLEARLY unconstitutional-- yet Lincoln supported it.
Do you need me to look it up for you, or are you capable?
And the Declaration of Independence:
"When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation."
Maybe there's something about the right of self-determination you don't understand.
Or maybe you wish the 13 British colonies would re-join the Kingdom.
I don't know which.
But if you believe 13 British colonies had the right to secede, then you must believe that 13 sovereign Southern States, which granted a few, delegated powers to a federal union (and 3 of them clearly stated when they joined that they retained the right to reclaim the powers given the federal government when they joined), and that federal government was based on the power of self-determination, then those 11 Southern states CLEARLY had the power to secede.
Admit it. Lincoln destroyed the very thing the founding fathers fought for.
Or maybe you think ALL tyrant rulers have the power to use military force to force governments on people who want independence.....
Actually, the Supreme Court has NEVER ruled that 'unilateral secession' is unconstitutional.
First, you need to describe "unilateral secession". Do you mean the secession of groups of states? If so, then you have no knowledge of what happened. Each state seceded in it's own independent nature, NOT unilaterally.
Second, since it is not mentioned in the Constitution, it is a power reserved to the States; therefor, the Supreme (sic) court has no POWER to rule on it, at all. The job of the Supreme Court is to act as part of a system of checks and balances against the President and the Congress, NOT the States. This is a very basic concept of the federated government.
Jefferson clearly believed in, and spoke on, the issue of secession when the northeastern states threated it. Madison, the father of the Constitution, not only said that secession was allowed, he furthermore said that the federal government could NEVER be the final judge of its' own powers; in fact, the States were the final judge of the powers of the federal government.
Your views, while mainline today, simply do not square with what the founding fathers believed AT ALL. You have been misled, my friend....
As to the "lot of bad things" you'd care to attribute to Lincoln's choices you can't add up enough of them to amount to a significant fraction of the good that occurred by the elimination of slavery and the maintenance of the Union. Remember that both Britain and France supported the Confederacy because they feared a strong America. Fortunately for them both they lost that fight so we could bail their butts out of two deep holes in the 20th Century.
Yes they did. Texas v White (74 US 700) 1868.
First, you need to describe "unilateral secession". Do you mean the secession of groups of states? If so, then you have no knowledge of what happened. Each state seceded in it's own independent nature, NOT unilaterally.
I would define unilateral secession is secession performed without the consent of a majority of the states, as expressed through a vote in Congress. Same way the Supreme Court defined it.
Jefferson clearly believed in, and spoke on, the issue of secession when the northeastern states threated it. Madison, the father of the Constitution, not only said that secession was allowed, he furthermore said that the federal government could NEVER be the final judge of its' own powers; in fact, the States were the final judge of the powers of the federal government.
And I too believe that there is no reason why a state should not be allowed to withdraw from the Union. But the withdrawl of a state or states from the Union could have a negative impact on the remaining states, and their interests deserve to be protected, too. That's why secession should be done only with the consent of a majority of the states. That would mean that all concerns are addressed and everybody's interests are protected.
Your views, while mainline today, simply do not square with what the founding fathers believed AT ALL. You have been misled, my friend....
On the contrary, Jefferson spoke against the idea of secession in his inaugural address, and Madison made clear that he did not agree with unilateral secession.
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