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The Real Abraham Lincoln
The Laissez Faire Electronic Times ^ | Tibor R. Machan

Posted on 04/12/2002 7:49:37 AM PDT by Sir Gawain

The Real Abraham Lincoln

by Tibor R. Machan

When I came to the USA, and even before when for a year or so I attended the American High School in Munich, Germany, Abraham Lincoln, America's 16th president, was treated by most of my teachers as the greatest and, more important, best US president. Everyone credited him with preserving this free country's union and freeing the slaves, for which, understandably, he was admired and all felt a debt of gratitude.

Then in college, too, I never heard a critical word about Lincoln. The Gettysburg address was always represented to me as perhaps America's greatest post-revolutionary political statement. Professor Harry V. Jaffa, a prominent teacher at my alma mater, Claremont McKenna College, wrote about Lincoln and depicted him as a man who is deeply committed to American political ideals. Judging by his selection of Lincoln quotes, for example in his How to think about the American Revolution (Carolina Academic Press, 1978), this seemed entirely justified. As an example, take the following remark by Lincoln in 1859:

Without the Constitution and the Union, we could not have attained the result, but even these, are not the primary cause of our great prosperity. There is something back of these, entwining itself more closely about the human heart. That something, is the principle of "Liberty to all" — the principle that clears the path to all — gives hope to all — and, by consequence, enterprise, and industry to all.

Based on statements such as this one, Jaffa maintained that Lincoln was a champion of the American political tradition. Consider, again, the following from Lincoln:

The expression of that principle ["the idea of political freedom"], in our Declaration of Independence, was most happy, and fortunate. Without this, as well as with it, we could have declared our independence of Great Britain; but without it, we could not, I think, have secured our free government, and consequent prosperity.

Jaffa's major defense of Lincoln comes in Crisis of The House Divided (Doubleday, 1959). He argues forcefully in favor of a very positive assessment of Lincoln, versus Stephen Douglas, as the most honorable statesman of American history. When challenged by others who would come up with a very different assessment of and supporting quotations for such an assessment from Lincoln, Professor Jaffa tells them that "Lincoln's disavowal of abolitionism was absolutely necessary to his political survival in the climate of opinion of Illinois voters in the 1850s. To have failed to make such disavowals would simply have disqualified him as a political leader of the antislavery cause." So, it was politically necessary for Lincoln to disavow his principled objection to slavery, based on his true regard for the meaning of the Declaration, so he could appear to be more moderate than the often violent abolitionists who were widely held in disfavor not just in the South but also in the North. So, all of what Lincoln says about blacks, including disparaging their intellect, must be taken as a political ploy rather than what he really thought.

In response to reading some critics of the Jaffa line, I've started to read up on Lincoln. For example, I've explored much of Edgar Lee Master's tome, Lincoln The Man (Dodd, Mead & Co., 1931) and Charles Adams' When in the Course of Human Events (Rowman & Littlefield, 2000). Some of what I have encountered paint Lincoln very differently from how he came across in my early education in America. Of course, there are always detractors and revisionists from the received view, about nearly everything of interest in human history. Heroes and villains are often identified based on the author's ethics, religion and politics, and given the diversity of these views among us, one would expect that the character and achievements of Lincoln, as those of others, are subject to intense debate.

However, there is a difference here, it seems to me. Hardly any dispute seems to be evident about Abraham Lincoln in mainstream or secondary educational forums, be it on PBS or C-Span, in either the class rooms or the text books, or anywhere in the prominent popular media. One exception is "Booknotes," on C-Span, hosted by Brian Lamb. Lamb does ask biographers or other authors of a Lincoln volumes about some of the more difficult aspects of Lincoln's legacy and has had some dissenters from Lincoln admirers on his program, such as Lerone Bennett, Jr., author of Forced into Glory: Abraham Lincoln's White Dream (Johnson Pub. Co., 2000).

Yet, most of the time the Lincoln critics are kept away from discussions and the major publishers seem to publish only laudatory works, as if there were no serious dissenting voice. Challengers are considered either non-existent or members of some lunatic fringe. This despite the fact that there can be perfectly sensible questions about whether Lincoln really followed the central elements of the American political tradition. Even his championing of political freedom raises some questions since political freedom may mean no more than the right to take part in politics. That is quite different from the right to individual freedom or liberty, which means the right to act on one's own judgment, even against the majority's will. Pure democracy was, after all, not what the Declaration of Independence announced to be the essence of this country. So a debate about Lincoln would be quite appropriate.

A very different atmosphere surrounds Thomas Jefferson, of course, and it suggests that the historians are embarking on some agenda, with ulterior motives, rather than on the disinterested study of American history. Several works impute to Jefferson dubious motives, not to mention conduct, and there is a lively debate about whether he was a great president, a good man or even a principled Founder of the republic.

The Attack on Free Society

From what I have managed to gather, just as the Jefferson critics are heard out, neither should the Lincoln critics be dismissed. There appears to be a rather peculiar reason why they are dismissed, having little or nothing to do with their scholarship or even relevance. It appears to do with a rather nuanced sort of political correctness, one directed against the nature of a bona fide, pure free society and its necessarily limited government.

To begin with, from the time of the American founding there has been a serious difference of opinion among the major figures as to the kind of government that America should have. This focused mainly on the priorities of our political institution. Should we be mainly concerned with the respect and protection of individual liberty or with making our country united and strong, indeed, so strong that individual liberty gets sacrificed to this strength? Alexander Hamilton, who supported a strong central government, argued about this with Thomas Jefferson who favored limiting government severely. The country's most renowned early supreme court justice, John Marshall, took the Hamiltonian line, favoring judicial as against legislative supremacy, as in Marbury v. Madison (1803).

Then came Lincoln who, contrary to received opinion, seemed less interested in carrying forward the ideals of the US Declaration, which he invoked only when it came to his later discussions of slavery, than in securing a united and thus very powerful American state (needed to keep the country united). And he appears to have believed that once the country was established, individual rights to resist state power had to go. (Professor Jaffa, too, argued that the idea of secession is misguided because democracy is supreme, as against the right to disconnect from the rest of the country. So his loyalty to Lincoln appears to be based more on his own belief that individual liberty is less important than a kind of "America first" stance, never mind its exact content.)

The works I've been reading lately, from various sides of the debate, tend to support a murky view of Lincoln. They suggest more of the ambitious, albeit impressive and even grand, political figure than of the devoted supporter of the unique high American ideals. Contrary to the impressions created by what has to be considered as more a myth or legend than historical reality, Lincoln comes off as a pragmatic, shrewd, but fundamentally not really principled politician. He had goals, yes, but these are not the ones for which he is commonly praised, namely, his devotion to liberty. Rather they were to head up a strong country, a world power, never mind its exact political character.

One way to come to appreciate this view of Lincoln is to consider how utterly unprincipled he sounded about slavery. In this regard Professor Thomas DiLorenzo's book, The Real Lincoln (Prima Publishing, 2002), is quite an eye opener, as is the aforementioned book by Adams, When in the Course of Human Events and, especially, Jeffrey Hummel's Emancipating Slaves, Enslaving Free Men (Open Court, 1997). So is the earlier mentioned Lincoln The Man. Not having ever been a scholar about Lincoln, I had been relying mainly on the common view of him, except for occasional skeptical notes from one or another historian or pundit, such as Doug Bandow and Joseph Sobran. So, I had thought that Lincoln always found slavery repulsive, a grievous assault upon blacks and an gross affront to the ideals of the US Declaration.

Slavery Not an Issue

Yet, consider, for example, this from our 16th president's 1860 inaugural address: "I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the states where it exists. I believe I have no lawful right to do so, and I have no inclination to do so." And two years later, as the sitting president, Lincoln wrote: "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 some and leaving others alone I would also do that. What I do about slavery, and the colored race, I do because I believe it helps to save the Union. (Letter to Horace Greeley, August 22, 1862)" And there is this, as well, from 1858: "I am not, nor ever have been, in favor of bringing about in any way the social and political equality of the white and black races. I am not, nor ever have been, in favor of making voters or jurors of Negroes, nor of qualifying them to hold office, nor to intermarry with white people. There is a physical difference between the white and black races, which I believe will forever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality."

One would suppose these remarks would generate a serious and very visible public debate about the man. Yet we have, instead, mostly laudatory works such as William Lee Miller's Lincoln's Virtues (Knopf, 2002) and Stephen B. Oates, With Malice Toward None (HarperTrade, 1993), not to mention Carl Sandberg's Abraham Lincoln, The Prairie Years and the War Years (Harcourt Brace, 1953). I have heard many of the disputes about whether Jefferson's declaration gave authentic expression to his ideals, but I have heard and read nothing like that about Lincoln in prominently published works and discussion forums, despite the pronouncements along lines I just quoted.

Consider, also, that nearly all societies with slavery managed to abolish the evil institution, at about the same time as the American Civil War commenced, without the immense loss of life and blood, presumably spent so as to abolish slavery. The war, then, seems to have been an anomaly in the history of abolition. Its enormous costs was, moreover, enough to have paid every master for all his slaves and made it possible to get rid of the system without any shed of blood whatsoever.

What about the issues of secession and economic protectionism, what role did they have in producing the war between the states? Broadly speaking it seems that various unfair national economic policies, favoring Northerners and imposed on Southerners, prompted the secession movement, not primarily the resistance to freeing slaves. Not that the bulk of the South didn't believe in slavery or that many in its white population didn't try to justify it on the most discredited grounds of white supremacy. They did, but this wasn't at all sufficient to bring them to armed conflict. And given Lincoln's recorded views about slavery, this looks quite plausible — enough so, in my view, that it should generate some kind of public debate, not unlike that conducted about Jefferson's recorded attitude toward slavery in light of his slave holdings and possible secret fraternization of a slave woman.

Lincoln Cared Little for Freedom

Even if we assume that the union was needed to preserve America's status of a free country, there are problems with this because Lincoln did not appear to care much about the quintessentially American kind of freedom, namely, the right of every individual to his or her life, liberty and property. Nor did he care about the most important legal freedom in America, the one still cherished even by many politicians, academics, and journalists, namely, freedom of the press. Here is some clearly damning evidence of this, in President Abraham Lincoln's order to General John Dix, issued on May 18, 1864:

You will take possession by military force, of the printing establishments of the New York World and Journal of Commerce . . . and prohibit any further publication thereof . . . You are therefore commanded forthwith to arrest and imprison . . . The editors, proprietors and publishers of the aforementioned newspapers.

Lincoln had ordered, as well, the suspension of a free society's most cherished legal principle, the writ of habeas corpus — which is to say, the requirement that those arrested be charged, put to trial and be otherwise accorded vigorous legal protection against arbitrary treatment by officials of governments. In the case of Lincoln, suspending the writ basically gave him the powers of an absolute ruler who need not contend with critics, opponents and such and has full legal authority to carry out whatever policy he wanted to. Even in war, a free society cannot tolerate such a policy and no champion of such a society, it seems clear to me, would ever ask for the powers Lincoln wanted for himself and the government he administered.

No, I am not an expert on the matter of Lincoln and his loyalty to American ideas but I can tell, as any reasonable person can, that with these and dozens and dozens of other pieces of evidence at hand, the moral and political merits of Abraham Lincoln need to be widely debated, not swept under the rug. Nor should school children be shielded from this debate, just as they should not about Jefferson's ideas and conduct. Just as the issue of whether Jefferson's words in the Declaration express his true character and ideas is of the utmost historical importance, so the same is true with Lincoln. For, as another aspect of the puzzle, Lincoln also said many things that would appear to support just exactly what most Southerners wanted to do. As he said, in January of 1848, "Any people anywhere, being inclined and having the power, have the right to rise up and shake off the existing government, and form a new one that suits them better." And there is, of course, the famous Gettysburg address the sentiments of which include the main principles of the Declaration.

So we seem to have here not a clean and simple Honest Abe at all, but a historical figure whose official representation, in our educational institutions and popular media, seems to conflict very seriously, once we look past the idolatry, with some very credible pieces of historical evidence. Isn't it time that the country abandon its silence on the subject of the true Abraham Lincoln? Isn't it time, also, to abandon the tactic, deployed, sadly, even by Professor Jaffa, of dismissing Lincoln critics as apologists for slavery, thus sparing oneself the trouble of coping with damning evidence?


Machan, who teaches at Chapman University in Orange, California, advises Freedom Communications, Inc., on public policy matters. His most recent book is Initiative — Human Agency and Society (Hoover Institution Press, 2000). His email address is Tibor_R._Machan@link.freedom.com.



TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS: dixielist
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To: billbears
No Supreme Court?

No Supreme Court was ever empanelled in the so-called CSA.

Walt

61 posted on 04/12/2002 10:37:58 AM PDT by WhiskeyPapa
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To: Sir Gawain
In his dalliance with history did Mr. Machan ever come across the fact that Jefferson Davis also suspended the writ of habeas corpus throughout the south? I didn't think so. Did he ever come across the fact that over 8,000 people were jailed without trial in the confederacy? That wouldn't fit into his agenda. While lamenting the intrusive government of Lincoln did Mr. Machan realize that the Davis government forced private farm owners to sell a percentage of their agricultural produce to the government at a set price to support the war effort? Or that the Davis government forced the owners of blockade runners to reserve a significant percentage of the cargo space for the government, at prices far below the fair market value? Or that the Davis government could conscript slave labor without compensation for military purposes? Not if he limits he reading to DiLorenzo or Adams he won't. It seems that we have yet another example of someone willing to parrot DiLorenzo without doing any research on their own. Over the last two weeks or so does anyone have any idea how many columnists have been spared the need to actually go out and work? They just spout out DiLorenzo-isms ad nauseum and call it journalism.
62 posted on 04/12/2002 10:41:00 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: Sir Gawain
Summary for those who don't have time to read the whole thing:

Lincoln, Lincoln
I've been thinkin'
What in the world
Have you been drinkin'?

Tastes like whisky
Smells like wine
Oh my gosh!
It's turpentine.

63 posted on 04/12/2002 10:41:00 AM PDT by jrherreid
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To: WhiskeyPapa
That doesn't mean it wasn't in the Constitution. Non implied that it wasn't when it was in the system. Even the colonies waited until after the Revolutionary War before they rolled out their full government. The CSA was being invaded illegally by the north unless you somehow forgot
64 posted on 04/12/2002 10:43:50 AM PDT by billbears
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To: billbears
No, no Supreme Court. The confederate government never established one. What, you think that Davis would let a Supreme Court stand in his way? "If the law works then it's constitutional," was his motto. Why take the chance that nine old men would interfere?
65 posted on 04/12/2002 10:44:05 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: billbears
The difference, dear billbears, was that the Declaration of Independence didn't require a Supreme Court while the confederate constitution did. The confederate govenment had time to establish a postal system, but no supreme court? They had time to vote tariffs and the means to collect them, but no supreme court? They had a state department, despite the fact that not a single foreign country recognized them, but no supreme court? They even had an attorney general, but no supreme court. What ever did the poor man do, other than roll over for Jefferson Davis?
66 posted on 04/12/2002 10:47:49 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: stainlessbanner
Wasn't Lincoln a butt plugger too?
67 posted on 04/12/2002 10:50:13 AM PDT by zarf
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To: billbears
The CSA was being invaded illegally by the north unless you somehow forgot

I know if you proclaim the Kingdon of Billbears, you'll have as much legitimacy as the so-called CSA.

The so-called CSA couldn't maintain itself for a single day --not one -- with its borders intact.

In the Kingdom of Billbears you might do better than that. If the feds don't find out.

And of course it ALMOST goes without saying that your posting that excerpt from the constitution of the so-called CSA was a blatant attempt to deceive; one that you SURELY had to know would exposed within ten minutes.

Walt

68 posted on 04/12/2002 10:53:43 AM PDT by WhiskeyPapa
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To: FirstFlaBn
He lost a close contest for the senate in 1858 (one in which he received more popular votes than his opponent).

Irrelevant at best, total ignorance of the Constitution at least. You really are an Al Gore supporter, aren't you? And a pretty stupid comment, even considering your track record.

I look at post # 16 and I almost wonder why you don't take anything else from it to reply to.

But I know the answer: Because you know better.

Walt

69 posted on 04/12/2002 10:59:43 AM PDT by WhiskeyPapa
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To: stainlessbanner
The diffrence is that southern slave owners preferred going to war over what they perceived as a threat to their institution of slavery, while the British slave owners did not. In fact, the south started the war 141 years ago today.
70 posted on 04/12/2002 11:02:09 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: Huck
Not one time someplace. Inumerable times right here at Fr. I am not trying to squelch debate. I'm trying to find debate. This article is rehash.

I see a lot of the articles but cetainly not all.

Maybe you could provide a couple of links to posts I missed that drew attention to the difference between the treatment of Jefferson and Lincoln and/or those who criticize either.

ML/NJ

71 posted on 04/12/2002 11:12:28 AM PDT by ml/nj
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To: WhiskeyPapa
the constitution of the so-called CSA was a blatant attempt to deceive; one that you SURELY had to know would exposed within ten minutes.

LOL!!! No Walt, I was just showing that the CSA had it in their Constitution like you were trying to cover up. And at least they weren't trying to circumvent the Constitution to start a war unlike some we could name

Kingdom of Billbears....I like it!! Has a ring to it. Sorry you wouldn't be able to live there Walt. You see it would be a Constitutional Republic, not a Socialist Democracy and you being an avid worshipper of lincoln I imagine you wouldn't like it too much

72 posted on 04/12/2002 11:15:57 AM PDT by billbears
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To: Sir Gawain
I would agree that freedom is a basic human right. However, the Union did not fight to free slaves. The article clearly points out Lincoln's goal of preserving the Union - not freeing slaves. Had the Union fought to free slaves, you could argue their case on the grounds of human rights and freedom.
73 posted on 04/12/2002 11:21:18 AM PDT by stainlessbanner
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To: billbears
LOL!!! No Walt, I was just showing that the CSA had it in their Constitution like you were trying to cover up.

All I said was that no SCOTCSA was empanelled. So I didn't try to cover up anything, liar.

Walt

74 posted on 04/12/2002 11:24:20 AM PDT by WhiskeyPapa
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To: humbletheFiend
If there was a violation, is it too late to seek compensation?

Yes, too late. I have friends that have records that show their ancestors owned slaves - it's not really something to be proud of. None of them would ever dream of asking for compensation for the slaves they never got to own. On the flip-side the advocates of slave reparations have no shame and they beg for government handouts.

75 posted on 04/12/2002 11:31:05 AM PDT by stainlessbanner
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To: stainlessbanner
Yes, too late. I have friends that have records that show their ancestors owned slaves - it's not really something to be proud of. None of them would ever dream of asking for compensation for the slaves they never got to own. On the flip-side the advocates of slave reparations have no shame and they beg for government handouts.

No harm, no foul?

Do you think that the Lincoln Administration wrought any damage to our constitutional structure that has been permanent and irreversible?

76 posted on 04/12/2002 11:42:22 AM PDT by humbletheFiend
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To: Huck
Maybe you could provide a couple of links to posts I missed ...

Stilllllllll ..... Waiting.

ML/NJ

77 posted on 04/12/2002 12:16:30 PM PDT by ml/nj
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To: ml/nj
Waiting for what? For me to use the FR search function, pick out the first ten threads that all use DiLorenzo's book to discount Jaffa and advance the same tired arguments about Lincoln? And then I am supposed to type in a bunch of a href tags so that you can conveniently click on them? Keep waiting. I stand by my remarks. I appreciate that the "still waiting" sarcastic post is a well-worn tactic around here, but I just ain't interested. A quick glance at the progress of this thread since my original post shows that I was correct in my prognosis.
78 posted on 04/12/2002 12:27:25 PM PDT by Huck
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To: billbears
And at least they weren't trying to circumvent the Constitution to start a war unlike some we could name.

But Davis did circumvent the confederate constitution by not naming a supreme court, didn't he? But hey, why did the confederacy need all those darned checks and balances that they talk about in civics class anyway? They just get in the way.

79 posted on 04/12/2002 1:05:49 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: Sir Gawain
Lincoln was a pragmatist he knew personal attacks by him on slavery would not speed up its abolition but he did want it abolished preferably by compensating the slave owners the hotheads in South Carolina screwed up everything by seceding the minute he was elected.
80 posted on 04/12/2002 1:29:11 PM PDT by weikel
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