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Lessons from Lincoln
The American Enterprise Online ^ | January 18, 2006 | Joseph Knippenberg

Posted on 01/18/2006 1:03:24 PM PST by neverdem

Lessons from Lincoln


By Joseph Knippenberg


Last month, I made the argument that the debate over the Bush Administration’s use of warrantless wiretapping would ultimately be resolved politically, not legally or judicially. The question, I argued (following John Locke), was whether “the public good” was better served by a rapid and unencumbered response to new intelligence, or by strict adherence in all instances to legal procedures. When this occurs, the ultimate safeguards of our liberty reside in the character of those acting on our behalf, and in the capacity of our political system to rein them in—either through the legislative process or the electoral process.

 

Inspired by a piece by political scientist Benjamin Kleinerman, I wish to bring some additional considerations to the table. Kleinerman focuses on the paradigmatic case of civil liberties during wartime, evident during the Presidency of Abraham Lincoln. As you may know, Lincoln pulled out almost all the stops in defending the Union, suspending habeas corpus and imposing martial law. Because such actions weren’t uniformly popular, Lincoln was compelled to respond to his critics. It’s from these debates that Kleinerman extracts a series of lessons we can learn from Lincoln.

 

The first lesson:

 

First, action outside and sometimes against the Constitution is only Constitutional when the Constitutional union itself is at risk; a concern for the public good is insufficient grounds for the executive to exercise discretionary power.

 

Our general temptation, Kleinerman argues, is to be none too fastidious when it comes to procedure. We’re all inclined to be results-oriented, wanting our leaders to be problem-solvers first and Constitutionalists second (if at all). While this attitude might be defensible if our very survival is at stake, all too often it carries over into ordinary politics. What Lincoln’s example offers us, Kleinerman says, is a standard or principle on the basis of which we limit executive prerogative. With such a standard, we don’t have to choose between a government too limited to protect us and one too strong not to be a threat.

 

Kleinerman’s second lesson:

 

Second, the Constitution should be understood as different during extraordinary times than during ordinary times; thus discretionary action should take place only in extraordinary circumstances and should be understood as extraordinary. Since it is only necessitated by the crisis, the action should have no effect on the existing law. To preserve Constitutionalism after the crisis, the actions must not be regularized or institutionalized.

 

Lincoln was careful to claim a warrant of necessity, not mere legality, for his actions, asking, “Are all the laws, but one, to go unexecuted, and the government itself go to pieces, lest that one be violated?” He also insisted that “certain proceedings are Constitutional when, in cases of rebellion or invasion, the public safety requires them, which would not be Constitutional when, in absence of rebellion or invasion, the public safety does not require them.” Rather than weave the extraordinary measures into the fabric of our “normal” politics, Lincoln held them apart, preserving the possibility that, at the end of the crisis, our dependence upon and attachment to them would recede.

 

The novelty of our current situation is that our crisis seems to be open-ended. It will be hard for anyone to definitively declare victory in President Bush’s global war on terror. Given the decentralized nature of al-Qaeda, it won’t end with the capture of Osama bin Laden, Zawahiri, or Zarqawi. Stable political settlements—however you define them—in Iraq and Afghanistan most likely won’t prevent those housed within some other failed, ineffective, or tyrannical state from plotting mayhem against us, at home and abroad. An effectively endless string of “extraordinary” risks is becoming the new “ordinary.” Limits on our civil liberties, initially defended as circumscribed wartime measures, become part of our normal lives.

 

Kleinerman’s third lesson offers us some assistance here:

 

Third, a line must separate the executive’s personal feeling and his official duty. He should take only those actions that fulfill his official duty, the preservation of the Constitution, even, or especially, if the people want him to go further.

 

We and our political leaders must be able to distinguish between the merely desirable and the Constitutional, recognizing that the two are not identical, and that the former does not imply the latter. Not everything that is good is thereby Constitutional. An easy example comes from Lincoln’s case. His abhorrence of slavery knew only one bound—the Constitution, which did not give him the power, under ordinary circumstances, to abolish it. Hence he presented the Emancipation Proclamation as an exercise of his “extraordinary” war power, not as an exercise of a power normally available to the federal government. The Thirteenth Amendment, which was necessary to abolish slavery, followed from this understanding.

 

Adhering to this distinction between the good and the Constitutional requires exceptional self-discipline on the part of leaders and citizens alike. It requires a cultivated affection for the Constitution and for what some have called the forms and formalities of Constitutional government. If we are simply results-oriented, if we readily and unthinkingly acquiesce in the cynical view that “everything is political” and allegiance to the Constitution is naive or impossible, then we will lack the moral and intellectual resources required to defend our liberties.

 

I am far from conceding that all who rail against the Bush Administration’s “domestic spying” are justified in their complaints. There’s another element of civic education required as well. Just as we must be clear about the distinction between the Constitutional and the desirable, so also must we cultivate the capacity, as clear-sightedly as possible, to recognize the necessary. If sad necessity is to be the justification for the (limited) abrogation of our liberties, then we had better be able to understand it.

 

What this requires in our citizens and our leaders is a certain level of clear-sightedness or (dare I say it?) “realism” about the world. We have to be able to appreciate the threats we face and understand the appropriate means of dealing with them. We have to be able to conduct our debates, not simply on the basis of Constitutionalism, as if nothing else mattered, nor simply on the basis of national security, as if nothing else mattered. We have to be able to hold the two considerations in balance.

 

In his article, Kleinerman emphasizes public education in Constitutionalism, arguing that the major threat follows from our all-too-ready acquiescence in extraordinary security measures. I would argue that there’s an equally strong temptation to let our guard down, to regard temporarily successful avoidance as terminal success. More than ever, we depend upon the character of our leaders, upon their allegiance to both national security and the Constitution.

 

There is no institutional mechanism adequate to secure and assure these twin allegiances. But there are elections, where we can take the measure of a man’s—or a woman’s—character, asking if he—or she—has demonstrated adherence to Constitutional forms and formalities in ordinary times and if he—or she—has a clear sense of the scope and power of the threats we face.

 

I’d love to say that there’s a law that will make everything better. But there isn’t. All we have is our best assessment of the people upon whom we call to lead us. And we have their solemn vow to “faithfully execute the Office of the President of the United States, and…to the best of [their] Ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States.”

 

 

Joseph Knippenberg is a professor of politics and associate provost for student achievement at Oglethorpe University in Atlanta. He is a weekly columnist for The American Enterprise Online and a contributing blogger at No Left Turns.




TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: abelincoln; greatness; lessons; lincoln; presidents; union; victory; wiretapping
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To: TexConfederate1861

BTT...at least he didn't say they were Nazis....that's their new kool aid....CSA equals Nazi Germany

We have universities, cities and forts all over this nation named after nazis...imagine.


these idiots who lick Abe's toes are far worse than he was...at least he had a war for rationalizing...they just have a chip


21 posted on 01/18/2006 7:11:20 PM PST by wardaddy (Alito is Clapton)
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To: wardaddy

Yea...that says a lot for Northern education huh...:)


22 posted on 01/18/2006 7:26:07 PM PST by TexConfederate1861
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To: Irontank
Slavery was growing stronger with time, not weaker. It was more solidly entrenched in the Southern states in 1850 or 1860 than it was in 1830 or 1810 or 1850, and the comments of Southern politicians and editors confirm this.

Hummel's argument is based on hindsight, not on what reasonable and informed people had reason to believe at the time on the basis of the available evidence. It's one of the tricks historical writers play on the dead.

Whatever the reasons why war began, by its end it was certainly, whatever else it was, also a war to free the slaves, and Lincoln did much to make it so. It was Seward who brought up the pending 13th Amendment at Hampton Roads and said that the Southern states, if they reentered the union would be able to vote against it. That was only what was true. If the secessionists rejoined the union, they would be able to have some voice in the affairs of he nation. Hay and Nicolay say that Stephens and the other Confederates made more of this than the Unionists did.

But Lincoln made it clear that Emancipation was always his policy. Lincoln who made it clear that slavery was doomed. According to Hay and Nicolay, Lincoln wasn't a party to Seward's way of persuading the rebels, and expected the 13th Amendment to pass, with Southern support. That's one reason why peace efforts failed at Hampton Roads and on other occasions. Stephens by contrast, wanted war with the Mexican regime, as a way of getting cooperation between the two sections without giving up the Confederacy.

You apparently want to make the war into a conflict between the compromising Lincoln and the rebels who stood firm for their "freedom" and "independence." But observers, then or now, have to consider just what independence would have meant for the slave states and what the Confederacy would have done with it. It's not balanced to judge Lincoln on the practical means he undertook to pursue his ends and not consider the practical policies that the Confederates adopted or were likely to adopt.

Don't be deceived by the "everyone believed in secession before Lincoln came along argument." It's not true. Many, if not most Americans, believed unilateral secession to be unconstitutional -- a form of revolt or revolution that could only be justified as a rebellion against real tyranny and repression.

A state could still turn to Congress or the constitutional amendment process to win approval for its separation from the union, but for a state simply to declare its relationship with the union dissolved wouldn't have been accepted by many Americans as constitutional.

23 posted on 01/18/2006 7:49:28 PM PST by x
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To: Non-Sequitur; Ditto

More Civil War stuff.


24 posted on 01/18/2006 7:50:40 PM PST by x
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To: lentulusgracchus
I guess that whatever Lincoln did, then, is fair for Bush to do.

If you watch Fox News (drudgingly I do from time to time) and listen to some of the more ardent party supporters, I gather that's about the jist of it.

25 posted on 01/18/2006 8:17:32 PM PST by billbears (Deo Vindice)
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To: billbears
Lincoln had to deal with do-nothing generals, a hostile press, the death of a son and a crazy wife.

I'm willing to cut the guy a little slack for what he had to do to save the country.

26 posted on 01/19/2006 3:19:57 AM PST by WestVirginiaRebel (The Democratic Party-Jackass symbol, jackass leaders, jackass supporters.)
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To: Irontank
This is nonsense...respect for the Constitution would have ended slavery...and would have done so peacefully and without the abuse of the Constitutional limits on the power of the federal government that Lincoln engineered.

And just how would that have happened? If the southern states so valued their institution of slavery that they were willing to launch a rebellion to protect it then under what circumstances do you think they would they be willing to change their mind and allow the central government to outlaw it?

Of course, Abraham Lincoln supported the Fugitive Slave Act... an unconstitutional act of sweeping federal power designed to protect slavery in the southern states as an inducement to keep the southern states in the union.

As odious as it was, how was the Fugitive Slave Act unconsitutional in light of the Article IV, Section 2, Clause 3? Lincoln's reluctant support of the Fugitive Slave Act was based on a respect for the constitution not seen in most southern leaders.

At the Hampton Roads Peace Conference, Lincoln assured the Confederate representatives that, if they re-joined the union, the Emancipation Proclamation would become inoperative...

A bit of an exaggeration, but if your point is that Lincoln did not pursue the war that the south forced upon him in order to end slavery then I have no arguement with that. The end of slavery may have been a fortunate outcome of the war, but preservation of the Union was the reason for the struggle on the Union side. Always was.

Lincoln's countless unconstitutional actions...

How about naming a few?

27 posted on 01/19/2006 4:02:14 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: Irontank
One need not be a "Confederate apologist" to understand that Lincoln full well understood that slavery was a dying institution...the secession of the southern states would have expedited this.

You would need to be pretty naieve to believe it though. Considering that slavery was protected by every southern state constitution that I've seen, considering that slavery and slave imports were specifically protected by the confederate constitution, then it takes a pretty broad stretch of the imagination to think that southern independence would have hastened it's end. Just what do you base that on?

28 posted on 01/19/2006 4:06:07 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: wardaddy
this UNthinking/UNcritical, ARROGANTLY IGNORANT, WORSHIP of "DIShonest abe, the clay-footed secular saint of DAMEDyankeeland", makes any NORMAL person GAG!

it is a product of the "public screwl sistim", imVho, that turns out predominantly IDIOTS & blind FOOLS.

lincoln was about as moral as wee willie klintoon. NOTHING was important to him & his coven of thugs except POWER & $$$$$$$$$$$.

ALL of them would have done ANYTHING for either/both. ANYTHING!

free dixie,sw

29 posted on 01/19/2006 4:14:54 AM PST by stand watie (Resistance to tyrants is OBEDIENCE to GOD. Thomas Jefferson, 1804)
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To: Mrs. Darla Ruth Schwerin
Lincoln did a substantial amount of unconstitutional things...

For example?

How much sense does it make for a country to attack itself.

You would have to direct that question to the rebel forces in Charleston harbor.

And no...nobody was trying to install a new government...so no definitions of civil war, please

OK, how about rebellion? Would rebellion be more accurate?

I think immature, sounds like a good reason for what Lincoln did!

And what label would you place on the southern actions?

30 posted on 01/19/2006 4:27:09 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
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To: Irontank
One need not be a "Confederate apologist" to understand that Lincoln full well understood that slavery was a dying institution...the secession of the southern states would have expedited this.

That is simply not true. Stephens, who you refer to, called slavery the "Cornerstone" of the Confederacy. Confederate politicians often spoke of expanding their new nation to the south to Cuba, Mexico and Central America. Yancey and Butler argued for reopening of the Atlantic Slave trade to supply the labor needs for an expanding empire. Those men, at that time, saw slavery as the future, not a 'dieing institution.'

To say that industrialization and technology would have caused slavery to die under it's own inefficiency in the decades after the Civil War may or may not be accurate and can only be stated as hindsight. (From Hitler to Stalin to Mao, we know well that mines, mills and factories can employ slaves as well as freemen). The men of the Confederacy who lived through that time and made the decisions, saw slavery as integral to their future.

31 posted on 01/19/2006 4:46:58 AM PST by Ditto ( No trees were killed in sending this message, but billions of electrons were inconvenienced.)
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To: Irontank; x
At the Hampton Roads Peace Conference, Lincoln assured the Confederate representatives that, if they re-joined the union, the Emancipation Proclamation would become inoperative. Moreover, at that conference, Lincoln and Seward attempted to persuade the confederate states to re-join the Union by reminding them that they could defeat the pending 13th Amendment that would have ended slavery in the US...an amendment that was sure to pass unless the southern states re-joined the union.

My friend, your facts are clearly wrong. Lincoln, at Hampton Roads, told the Confederates that the Emancipation Proclamation Would Not Be Changed and that he intended to see the 13th Amendment enacted. His only concession was offering to compensate slave owners for their losses.

Look it up.

32 posted on 01/19/2006 4:56:55 AM PST by Ditto ( No trees were killed in sending this message, but billions of electrons were inconvenienced.)
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To: WestVirginiaRebel
to save the country

Yeah, save the country, that's what he did. Sure, whatever. Your first sentence sounds like that 'hard-hitting' three hour praise service the History Channel just ran..

33 posted on 01/19/2006 5:56:08 AM PST by billbears (Deo Vindice)
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To: Ditto
not surprisingly, the slave-OWNERS (about 5-6% of the population of BOTH north & south) were INTENSELY interested in preserving the "peculiar institution".

hardly anyone else cared a damn about either the "preservation of slavery" OR about "the plight of the slaves".

for the VAST majority of northerners the WBTS was ONLY about "preserving the union". for the great majority of southerners the war was ONLY about FREEDOM for dixie AND "getting the DAMNyankee boot off our necks".

150 years of elitist/leftist/socialist/PC/revisionist LIES does not change those simple FACTS. FACTS are FACTS!

the struggle against the DAMNyankee elites continues by other means than arms.

free dixie,sw

34 posted on 01/19/2006 6:23:36 AM PST by stand watie (Resistance to tyrants is OBEDIENCE to GOD. Thomas Jefferson, 1804)
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To: All
HAPPY BIRTHDAY to GENERAL ROBERT E LEE. (his 199th!)

free dixie,sw

35 posted on 01/19/2006 6:29:30 AM PST by stand watie (Resistance to tyrants is OBEDIENCE to GOD. Thomas Jefferson, 1804)
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To: TexConfederate1861

Thank you!


36 posted on 01/19/2006 6:51:29 AM PST by Mrs. Darla Ruth Schwerin
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To: stand watie

Yeah. I was thinking about him being 199 years old. Isn't that just an amazing thing to contemplate! Yes. He does get birthday wishes from me too!
***HAPPY BIRTHDAY to GENERAL ROBERT E. LEE***


37 posted on 01/19/2006 6:55:12 AM PST by Mrs. Darla Ruth Schwerin
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To: Mrs. Darla Ruth Schwerin
GM, Ma'am. (said with groundward sweep of ostrich-plumed, GRAY, slouch hat)

it's a GRAND day.

free dixie,sw

38 posted on 01/19/2006 7:03:54 AM PST by stand watie (Resistance to tyrants is OBEDIENCE to GOD. Thomas Jefferson, 1804)
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To: stand watie

Well, hello there... Bet there are many festivals and celebrations going on today for Lee. Anyway, this phrase;(said with groundward sweep of ostrich-plumed, GRAY, slouch hat), causes me to envision one of JEB Stuart's Cavalry officers getting off their horse to greet me.
And yes, it is a GRAND day!


39 posted on 01/19/2006 7:17:45 AM PST by Mrs. Darla Ruth Schwerin
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To: Non-Sequitur

No. I WILL not cite examples for you. If you are incredibly concerned about the matter, go find them in the research provided. The reason I will not cite examples, is because your words are quite antagonistic, which means you really don't want examples, you just want to argue your point and, "WIN". I'm not interested.


40 posted on 01/19/2006 7:28:30 AM PST by Mrs. Darla Ruth Schwerin
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