James
Webb’s Fight Against Political Correctness
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
DIGG THIS
"He’s
not an ordinary politician. He has strong beliefs."
~ Senator Charles Schumer describing Senator James Webb
I
have never met Senator-elect James Webb (D-VA), a highly decorated
Vietnam War-era Marine, former U.S. Navy Secretary, novelist, screen
writer, and historian, but I knew he was a man I should respect
when I read his latest book, Born
Fighting: A History of the Scots-Irish in America. Unlike
so many books on American history, especially those about the "Civil
War" era, Born Fighting gives one the impression that
the author had embarked on a relentless search for truth and had
no tolerance for the poison of political correctness.
My intuition
about Webb was confirmed recently when he refused to genuflect,
scrape and grovel, and kiss the ring of George W. Bush at a White
House reception (in stark contrast to every other member of Congress
in attendance). Then, a day later, I really knew that Senator-elect
Webb was a man to be admired when George "Statecraft as Soul
Craft" Will, the resident Lincoln-worshipping Straussian /Neocon
Iraq war apologist on the Washington Post op-ed page, called
him a "boor" and generally trashed him in a column. Congratulations,
Senator-elect Webb!
Born Fighting
is a passionate, well-researched book about the Scotch-Irish in
America ("my people," as Webb calls them). Libertarians
should be interested in this book, and the topic in general, because
of the strong argument that Webb makes that the Scotch-Irish have
always been radical individualists. "To them, joining a group
and putting themselves at the mercy of someone else’s collective
judgment makes about as much sense as letting the government take
their guns." Webb proved that he is a true blue Scotch-Irishman
when he not only failed to bow and scrape to the Decider-in-Chief,
but used the opportunity to express his opinion that the troops
in Iraq, including his own Marine-son, should be brought home immediately.
In the early
years of America, Webb writes, the Scotch-Irish had very little
in common with the English immigrants who settled in New England
– the Puritans and, later, the "Yankees." Indeed, the
Scotch-Irish were among the people who were tyrannized for centuries
by the British government. They eventually became a "dominant
culture of the South," and comprised a large portion of the
Confederate Army during the War to Prevent Southern Independence.
They were typically yeoman farmers who "had no slaves and actually
suffered economic detriment" from the practice of slavery.
This statement is an example of what I mean by Webb’s disregard
for political correctness. A prerequisite for being a "Lincoln
Scholar" or a "Civil War Scholar" in American academe
is one’s ability to express hatred and derision for the South, its
people, its history, and its institutions. This hateful impulse
is especially strong among the so-called Straussians. Webb will
have none of this personally offensive, bigoted, politically-correct
nonsense.
On the subject
of Lincoln and his war, Webb asks why "his people" fought
the way they did. He quotes historian Wilbur Cash as noting that
Confederate soldiers came from a culture that produced "the
most intense individualism the world has seen since the Italian
renaissance." They were never as compliant and obedient as
their Yankee counterparts were in the Union Army, for example, even
down to their half-hearted salutes to superior officers.
Understanding
this culture, which was pervasive in the Confederate ranks, Webb
concludes that "It is impossible to believe that such men would
have continued to fight against unnatural odds and take casualties
beyond the level of virtually any other modern army [70%] –simply
so that 5 percent of their population who owned slaves could keep
them . . . . Something deeper was motivating them, something that
appealed to their self-interest as well."
One particularly
telling fact that Webb brings out about the average Confederate
soldier is that he knew that slave owners in Delaware, Maryland,
Missouri, and Kentucky were allowed to keep their slaves when the
war began. The Lincoln administration’s policy was that slave owners
could keep their slaves as long as their state remained in the union
and continued to collect federal taxes. When the seven states of
the lower South initially seceded, Lincoln was more than happy to
preside over the slave states of Virginia, North Carolina, Arkansas,
and Tennessee, which only seceded after Lincoln commenced his invasion
of their sister states. At the time of Fort Sumter there were more
slave states in the union than out of it.
Consequently,
writes Webb, "in virtually every major battle of the Civil
War, Confederate soldiers who did not own slaves fought against
a proportion of Union Army soldiers who had not been asked to give
up theirs." This fact spoke volumes to the Confederate soldier
about the true purpose of the war, and about the character of Lincoln
himself.
Webb also
writes of how the Confederate soldier knew that the Emancipation
Proclamation "exempted all the slaves in the North," and
in all areas of the South that were under U.S. Army control at the
time. They understood that the union was voluntary and believed
that the Constitution was on their side: "The Tenth Amendment
to the Constitution reserved the right to the states all rights
not specifically granted to the federal government, and in their
view the states had thus retained their right to dissolve the federal
relationship."
So
why did the Confederate soldier fight? He fought, says Webb,
because "he was provoked, intimidated, and ultimately invaded."
His leaders "convinced him that this was a war of independence
in the same sense as the Revolutionary War." The "tendency
to resist outside aggression was bred deeply into every heart"
of every Scotch-Irishman in America, writes the former U.S. Navy
Secretary.
What
a pathetic statement about the phony, false, and often just plain
silly state of Lincoln and "Civil War" scholarship (so-called)
that it takes a man hardened by his life experiences as a platoon
leader in Vietnam (who earned the Navy Cross and Silver Star) to
use simple logic and plain historical facts to contradict part of
the "accepted wisdom." The politically-correct, New England
version of American history that has prevailed for generations may
be widely accepted, but is based much more on superstition and political
puffery than reality. It will be fun to watch Senator-elect Webb as he
continues to challenge other superstitions that constitute the core
beliefs of our rulers in Washington (and their media mouthpieces
like George Will).
December
2, 2006
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland and the
author of The
Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an
Unnecessary War,
(Three Rivers Press/Random House). His
latest book is Lincoln
Unmasked: What You’re Not Supposed To Know about Dishonest Abe
(Crown Forum/Random House).
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives at LRC
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DiLorenzo Archives at Mises.org
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