Malice
Toward All, Charity Toward None: The Foundations of the American State
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
DIGG THIS
"Americans
are forever proclaiming our boastful aspersions to the world .
. . that our government was based on the consent of the people,"
though in fact "it rests upon force, as much as any government
that ever existed."
~ Letter from Robert E. Lee to E.G.W. Butler, Oct. 11, 1867
"[H]ad
the Confederates somehow won, had their victory put them in position
to bring their chief opponents before some sort of tribunal, they
would have found themselves justified . . . in stringing up President
Lincoln and the entire Union high command for violation of the
laws of war, specifically for waging war against noncombatants."
~
Lee Kennett, Marching
through Georgia:
A Life of William Tecumseh Sherman, p. 286
In his
book Battle
Cry for Freedom: The Civil War Era (p. 619), Lincoln cultist
James McPherson wrote that some 50,000 Southern civilians perished
during the War to Prevent Southern Independence. Others have made
estimates that are much higher. The only way this could be possible
is that if thousands were murdered in cold blood by the U.S. Army.
This is a shocking claim, and it will be shocking to most because
such statistics say little about the actual horror of mass murder
at the hands of the state. Moreover, the state always has its court
historians and paid propagandists who put such statistics "in
proper perspective," so that they will not alarm us. (Thomas
Sowell comes to mind as a contemporary commentator who has repeatedly
belittled the number of Americans killed in Iraq in the past four
years by comparing it to the number of deaths in World War II.)
The state
funding and control of higher education that have produced the totalitarian
regime of political correctness has all but guaranteed that there
will be few (if any) publications that illuminate, rather than obfuscate,
some of the more devious deeds of the American state throughout
its history. But historian Walter Brian Cisco, who is not an academic
and is not on any state payroll, has recently written a book – War
Crimes Against Southern Civilians – that blows the lid off
the conspiracy of silence about the violent, mass-murdering origins
of the American Leviathan state (or "The New Birth of Freedom,"
as both left-wing and right-wing statists put it).
In the
name of "restoring the union" the U.S. Army, under the
micromanagement of Abraham Lincoln, waged war on its own people,
shelling and burning entire cities populated only by civilians and
engaging in acts of plunder, forced evacuation, and mass murder.
It is all documented in gory detail by Mr. Cisco, who quotes conservative
icon Richard M. Weaver in his introductory chapter as having remarked
that "from the military policies of Sherman and Sheridan there
lies but an easy step to total war of the Nazis, the greatest affront
to Western civilization since its founding."
Lincoln
cultists are fond of dismissing all of this by reciting Sherman’s
"war is hell" slogan. But as Cisco points out, murders,
rapes, and robberies are also inevitable in human society, and are
likely to happen much more often if we cease to regard them as reprehensible.
Those who idolize General Sherman in this way are not "hearing
the totalitarian echo in their words."
Lincoln
was always aware of what was going on; waging war on civilians –
his own citizens – was his own policy from the very beginning,
as Cisco proves. In May of 1861, for example, Captain Nathaniel
Lyon recruited some seven thousand new German immigrants (mostly
without uniforms) to eliminate suspected secessionists in St. Louis.
They rounded up some six hundred men and paraded them through the
streets playing the Star Spangled Banner (which must have been completely
foreign to the mostly non-English speaking Germans). When the citizens
of St. Louis protested, the recruits fired on them, killing twenty-eight
civilians and wounding seventy-five. Lyon was promoted to brigadier
general a week later, while some ten thousand civilians fled St.
Louis.
By 1863
Missouri, under U.S. Army occupation, was a place were "arson,
theft, and murder became so common that vast sections of the state
were uninhabited." Cisco quotes Union General James H. Lane
as saying, "We believe in a war of extermination. I want to
see every foot of ground in Jackson, Cass and Bates counties burned
over – everything laid waste."
Another
practice of the Union Army that is reminiscent of totalitarian regimes
of the twentieth century was forced relocation of suspected dissenters.
Cisco gives chapter and verse of how this occurred in Missouri,
Tennessee, and elsewhere, as thousands of civilians were forced
to leave their homes. This even included Ohio Congressman Clement
Vallandigham.
Plunder
and pillage was also the Official Policy of the Lincoln regime from
the start of the war, as Cisco shows. Before being defeated in the
Battle of Fredericksburg the Union Army occupied the town for a
short while. Cisco quotes a Union Army officer as saying that "the
men had emptied every house and store of its contents, and the streets,
as a matter of course, were filled with chairs and sofas, pianos,
books, and everything imaginable. . . ."
An entire
chapter is devoted to the sacking of Athens, Alabama, in 1862. Every
store and shop in the town was looted, along with most private homes,
where U.S. troops went about "stealing what they wanted and
destroying the rest."
The commanding
officer in charge, a Russian immigrant named Col. John Turchin,
told his soldiers that he would shut his eyes while they went about
plundering the town. That was the way of the Russian Cossacks, he
said. One of Turchin’s superior officers, General Don Carlos Buell,
relieved Turchin of his brigade command for committing such crimes
against civilians. But he was overruled by the Lincoln regime, which
promoted him to the rank of brigadier general instead.
Cisco also
describes the shelling of civilian-occupied cities like Charleston,
South Carolina by the Federal Army. "[D]uring one nine-day
period in January no fewer than 1,500 shells fell on the city. Later,
a single gun nearby threw 4,253 missiles into Charleston. . ."
(Much of Cisco’s information comes from the U.S. Government publication,
War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of
the Union and Confederate Armies.) This is how many of those
50,000 Southern civilians were killed.
Atlanta
was shelled by Sherman for days after the Confederates evacuated
the city and left it defenseless. Cisco describes how a Mr. Warner
had a shell crash "into his home . . . . Both his legs were
severed by the missile and he died within two hours. Warner’s six-year-old
daughter was cut in two by the same shot." Sherman ordered
more and more artillery to be shipped to Atlanta, "with which
we can pick out almost any house in the town," he said. After
the shelling stopped Sherman ordered the remaining surviving civilians
to evacuate their homes just as winter approached and the land all
around had been stripped of food by the army. The city was then
burned. An "ocean of fire" covered the city, according
to one Union officer, "leaving nothing but the smoldering ruins
of this once beautiful city."
Cisco also
details the war on civilians in the Shenandoah Valley, conducted
by such cowardly murderers of women and children as Sheridan and
Custer. "Unable to vanquish Robert E. Lee on the battlefield,"
wrote the editor of the Staunton, Virginia newspaper, "Grant
has turned his arms against the women and children of our land."
War
Crimes Against Southern Civilians is a must-read for anyone
who wants to educate themselves about Sherman’s "March to the
Sea." (For the cartoonish version, see the History Channel
rendition.) The true story is a story of the continued plunder and
rape of the civilian population, along with the gang rape of mostly
black women by Federal soldiers under Sherman’s command. "Female
servants were taken and violated without mercy" by Federal
soldiers, wrote a war correspondent.
South Carolinians
were so hated by Lincoln’s army that they even killed every dog
in sight upon reaching the state on the "march." "The
dogs were easily killed. All we had to do was to bayonet them,"
boasted one brave Union soldier.
Cisco also
proves what delusional liars such Lincoln (and Sherman) cultists
as Victor Davis Hanson are. Hanson has claimed in print that Sherman
was some kind of egalitarian who was motivated by indignation over
the degree of racial inequality in the South. The truth, of course,
is that Sherman was every bit as much a racist and white supremacist
as were virtually all other white Northerners, including Lincoln.
He was also an anti-Semite, and of course hated red-skinned people
almost as much as he hated South Carolinians – and would later kill
them in even greater numbers.
Cisco documents
"Abuse of African-Americans" by Sherman’s army in his
final, stomach-turning chapter. Slaves were raped, pillaged, and
murdered indiscriminately along with the white population of the
South, and Sherman did nothing to stop it.
A favorite
pastime of Sherman’s "bummers" was to tie a black man
up by his thumbs until he told them where any valuables might be
hidden. Sometimes they were hung by the neck instead, and quite
often killed in that way. "They tied me up by my two thumbs
and try to make me tell where I hid the money and gold watch and
silver, but I swore I didn’t know," said a former slave, quoted
by Cisco from The Slave Narratives.
There
is nothing truly consensual about government. It is always and everywhere
based on force, intimidation, and violence. When the founding generation
formed a confederacy with the Articles of Confederation, and later
the Constitution, it was at least a voluntary union of the states.
The citizens of each state understood that their state, and all
others, was free and independent and sovereign. They were free to
participate in the union, or not.
The
union of the founders was destroyed in 1865. War Crimes Against
Southern Civilians explains in great detail how, in addition
to killing some 300,000 dissenters to rule by Washington, D.C. on
the battlefield, the U.S. Army, under the micromanagement of Abe
Lincoln, also murdered tens of thousands of Southern civilians,
including thousands of slaves and free blacks, while stealing tens
of millions of dollars of their private possessions as well. None
of it was necessary, of course, for the purpose of ending slavery;
all other countries on earth ended slavery peacefully during the
nineteenth century. This included the British, Spanish, French,
Dutch, and Danish colonies, where 96 percent of all the slaves in
the Western Hemisphere once existed. The purpose of the war was
to finally realize the Hamiltonian dream of a consolidated, monopolistic
government that would pursue what Hamilton himself called "national
greatness" and "imperial glory." The purpose of the
war, in other words, was a New Birth of Empire, one that would hopefully
rival the Europeans in the exploitation of their own citizens in
the name of the glory of the state.
May
9, 2007
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
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives at LRC
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives at Mises.org
|