Posted on 12/27/2002 6:50:38 AM PST by yankeedame
Friday, December 27, 2002
Lincoln statue won't be embraced by all
The Associated Press
RICHMOND, Va. - Abraham Lincoln is returning to the capital of the Confederacy, much to the chagrin of the Sons of Confederate Veterans.
Five days before the Civil War ended in April 1865, the president and his youngest child, Tad, traveled to still-smoldering Richmond soon after Southern forces abandoned the city in flames. On April 5, 2003, the 138th anniversary of that visit, a bronze statue of the pair commissioned by the United States Historical Society will be unveiled at the Civil War Visitor Center of the National Park Service.
"Here is a national hero, a small boy, and a beautiful city by the James River, all united again," said Robert Kline, chairman of the nonprofit group society, which works on behalf of museums and other groups on projects of historic and artistic value. "This time Lincoln's in Richmond for all time."
Richmond, home to towering statues of Confederacy figures including Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson and J.E.B. Stuart, was abandoned after Union forces led by Gen. Ulysses S. Grant attacked on April 2, 1965.
The Sons of Confederate Veterans view the Lincoln statue as "a slap in the face of a lot of brave men and women who went through four years of unbelievable hell fighting an invasion of Virginia led by President Lincoln," Brag Bowling, the SCV Virginia commander, said Thursday. The group had only recently learned of the statue, and had no immediate plans to protest.
The life-size statue by sculptor David Frech will show Lincoln and his son on a bench against a granite wall. The words "To Bind Up The Nation's Wounds" will be etched into a capstone.
If you like; but that was 50 years after Lincoln's death.
Here is something Lincoln said. See if you disagree:
"As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master. This expresses my idea of democracy. Whatever differs from this, to the extent of the difference, is no democracy."
Walt
Iniquities of the South? The same were practiced in the North. The same were introduced to the South by the North. Yet, no guilt for the North? Why?
Incidentally, I'm not sure why a statue of Calhoun would be put in Harlem. Did he have some tie to the area?
I can understand why a statue of Lincoln might be put in Richmond, though. It's because Lincoln was President of the United States, and Richmond is a city in the United States. Moreover, the statue is to commemorate a trip Lincoln actually took to Richmond.
I'm sure you can see where your analogy fails.
The Supreme Court ruled in 1862 that the "so-called Confederate states" to use the court's phrase), were violating the Constitution.
Walt
Vera did all that?!!
There's a statue to Mahatma Gandhi in Union Square - and he has a much more tenuous link than Calhoun.
Dred Scott was made up from whole cloth. It's a very bad decision.
The Prize Cases in 1862 cite the Militia Act of 1792, which requires that U.S. law operate in every state.
Walt
Well said. Thank you.
Whew!!! Good thing the Constitution makes provision for a Whiskey Papa to tell us which Supreme Court decisions are good and which are bad!
1. When, if ever, do you think slavery would have been eliminated in the Confederacy?
Within 20 years or so. Slavery was becoming quickly unprofitable. Look at how emancipation was handled throughout the Western Hemisphere. Everywhere except these United States it was handled peacefully over time. For you to assume that it would not have followed the same course would be to insult ancestors of both sides. The writing was on the wall and eventually it would have disappeared
Agreed. Your 20 years sounds reasonable. Certainly within 40 years. My point here? Those who support the CSA's side need to explicitly state that the Confederacy would not have been able to maintain slavery for more than another 20 years or so. This makes is clear that this is not nostalgia for the continuance of slavery into the 20th century.
I asked
2. What do you think the status of blacks would be in the Confederacy today?
Hmmmm, well let's see how it was under the almighty Empire. For suggested reading you might want to read all of the Slave Narratives collected in the 1930s. Not just the selected ones that paint the South in a bad light but all of them. Doesn't paint your precious union in a good light.
Oh, there certainly was racism in the North. And the release of Gangs of New York and the history programs surrounding its release are making people aware of anti-black attitudes in the North.
But that doesn't answer my question. Again, "What do you think the status of blacks would be in the Confederacy today?" I'm asking for speculation here so you can't really be wrong. I can think of any number of answers that are plausible here. I'm curious about your opinion.
I will say that if your answer is something along the lines of apartheid or repatriation to Africa or something less favorable than it is today, you shouldn't really blame blacks for not being comforted by that alternative. And if you won't answer, it is (for better or worse) going to leave the impression that you suspect a worst case scenario.
I asked
3. How do you think the CSA and USA would have fared through the end of the 19th and through the 20th Century as compared to how the USA really fared?
First off, I don't think we would be as intrusive into foreign affairs and much more along the lines of what the Founders had in mind for this nation of states. Rather now, we're sticking our noses into anything and everything all in the name of 'freedom'. Problem is, from a historical point of view, it looks a whole lot like maintaining an Empire
In some instances, this would have been an improvement. In other's, it would raise moral questions that would concern people (e.g., Would the CSA have remained neutral or have sided with Germany during WW2? And, yes, I mention siding with Germany knowing full well that there was a pro-Nazi rally in Madison Square Garden and that Lindberg was pro-Nazi.).
That said, nostalgia for the Confederacy frankly does start to look like racism when the issue of whether the South was on the right or wrong side of the issue of slavery never gets discussed. It does start to look like people wish that the Confederacy had won to preserve slavery or, at the very least, to keep blacks "in their place".
Well I'll tell you what. Let's discuss northern views of the time towards blacks, shall we?
I'd be more than happy to, once you stop evading the issue of Southern problems and admit to them. That's my point. Jesus made a comment in the Bible that you should remove the plank from your own eye before commenting on the splinter in someone elses eye. Even if they are both planks or splinters, you should get your own house in order instead of complaining about the other side to divert attention. That's exactly the tactic that Democrats use to hide their own sins. To put it on an even more simplistic level, two wrongs don't make a right.
I'm more than happy to admid that the North had racial problems. I'm not trying to use Southern racial problems to hide northern racial problems any more than I'm trying to hide the fact that the Allies bombed Dresden by discussing concentration camps. Do you think that slavery was wrong? Do you think that racial discrimination is wrong? If you make it clear that you are not a racist, then it will be easier for you to seperate your legitimate complaints about the North from any sense that you are really just a racist.
Or shall we talk about Deconstruction? Those wonderful ten years that many whites were disenfranchised to vote and blacks were all but required to vote Republican. Those years when carpetbaggers got into office only to rape a Southern state of as much money as they could carry.
I guess you skipped the part where I said:
I have a certain amount of sympathy for the idea of states rights, a certain amount of sympathy for succession as a state right, and have quite a bit of sympathy for many of the Constitutional complaints about things done during and after the war by the North.
But two wrongs don't make a right.
So you tell me. What aspects of northern ers treatment of blacks would you like to discuss?
I will be more than happy to discuss any aspect of northern treatment of blacks that you want, then or now, once you answer my second question, which is pretty much the point of what I wrote. People can have legitimate non-racist reasons for supporting succession and for disliking Lincoln and the north. But unless you are willing to clearly state that slavery was wrong and to explain how you think the CSA would have gotten itself out of slavery and how it would have affected blacks, I cannot blame blacks (and anti-slavery non-racist whites) for being less than enthusiastic about pro-CSA sentiments.
The German people probably had some legitimate reasons for being belligerant in WW2 (including their treatment at the end of WW1) but waxing nostalgic about the Third Reich on those grounds, as legitimate as it may be, unless one clearly distances themselves from the holocaust, leaves the bad taste in one's mouth that the person waxing nostalgic either doesn't care about the death of all those people or even thinks it was a good idea. Similarly, waxing nostalgic about the CSA on the grounds of states rights and Constitutional issues, as legitimate as they may be (and I have said I am sympathetic to many of these arguments), while ignoring slavery leaves the impression that one either doesn't care about slavery or thinks it was a good idea. That may be totally wrong. It may not be fair. But that's the way it is.
Say slavery was wrong and that you feel that the Confederacy would have worked its way out of slavery to ultimately respect the rights of blacks and you'll get people to listen to your other arguments. Try to claim that slavery was a non-issue or doesn't matter and people are going to think about nothing but slavery and ignore anything else that you talk about.
You just forfeited your right to ever complain about Roe v. Wade.
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