Fighting
Facts With Slander
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
Certain
neo-conservatives have responded to the publication of my book,
The
Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an
Unnecessary War, with quite hysterical name calling, personal
smears, and slanderous language. The chief practitioners of this
vulgar means of public discourse are Alan Keyes and employees of
his Washington, D.C. based "Declaration Foundation."
On
the Foundation’s Web site on Easter Sunday was a very pleasant,
Christian blessing, located right below a reprinting of Paul Craig
Roberts’s March 21 Washington Times review of my book ("War
on Terrorism a Threat to Liberty?"). In a very un-Christian
manner the Declaration Foundation accuses Roberts (and myself, indirectly)
of "ignorance and calumny." According to Webster’s
College Dictionary "calumny" means making false and
malicious statements intended to injure a reputation, slander, and
defamation. Let’s see if what Roberts said in his column fits that
definition.
"Lincoln
used war to destroy the U.S. Constitution in order to establish
a powerful central government," says Roberts. This is certainly
a strong statement, but in fact Lincoln illegally suspended the
writ of habeas corpus; launched a military invasion without consent
of Congress; blockaded Southern ports without declaring war; imprisoned
without warrant or trial some 13,000 Northern citizens who opposed
his policies; arrested dozens of newspaper editors and owners and,
in some cases, had federal soldiers destroy their printing presses;
censored all telegraph communication; nationalized the railroads;
created three new states (Kansas, Nevada, and West Virginia) without
the formal consent of the citizens of those states, an act that
Lincoln’s own attorney general thought was unconstitutional; ordered
Federal troops to interfere with Northern elections; deported a
member of Congress from Ohio after he criticized Lincoln’s unconstitutional
behavior; confiscated private property; confiscated firearms in
violation of the Second Amendment; and eviscerated the Ninth and
Tenth Amendments.
A
New Orleans man was executed for merely taking down a U.S.
flag; ministers were imprisoned for failing to say a prayer for
Abraham Lincoln, and Fort Lafayette in New York harbor became known
as "The American Bastille" since it held so many thousands
of Northern political prisoners. All of this was catalogued decades
ago in such books as James G. Randall’s Constitutional
Problems Under Lincoln and Dean Sprague’s Freedom Under
Lincoln.
"This amazing disregard for the Constitution," wrote historian
Clinton Rossiter," was "considered by nobody as legal."
"One man was the government of the United States," says
Rossiter, who nevertheless believed that Lincoln was a "great
dictator."
Lincoln
used his dictatorial powers, says Roberts, to "suppress all
Northern opposition to his illegal and unconstitutional acts."
This is not even controversial, and is painstakingly catalogued
in the above-mentioned books as well as in The Real Lincoln.
Lincoln’s Secretary of State William Seward established a secret
police force and boasted to the British Ambassador, Lord Lyons,
that he could "ring a bell" and have a man arrested anywhere
in the Northern states without a warrant.
When
the New York City Journal of Commerce published a list of
over 100 Northern newspapers that opposed the Lincoln administration,
Lincoln ordered the Postmaster General to deny those papers mail
delivery, which is how nearly all newspapers were delivered at the
time. A few of the papers resumed publication only after promising
not to criticize the Lincoln administration.
Lincoln
"ignored rulings hand-delivered to him by U.S. Supreme Court
Justice Roger Taney ordering Lincoln to respect and faithfully execute
the laws of the United States" says Roberts. Absolutely true
again. Taney and virtually all legal scholars at the time
was of the opinion that only Congress could constitutionally suspend
habeas corpus, and had his opinion hand delivered to Lincoln by
courier. Lincoln ignored it and never even bothered to challenge
it in court.
Roberts
also points out in his article that "Lincoln urged his generals
to conduct total war against the Southern civilian population."
Again, this is not even controversial. As pro-Lincoln historian
Steven Oates wrote in the December 1995 issue of Civil War Times,
"Lincoln fully endorsed Sheridan’s burning of the Shenandoah
Valley, Sherman’s brutal March to the Sea through Georgia, and the
. . . destructive raid through Alabama." James McPherson has
written of how Lincoln micromanaged the war effort perhaps as much
as any American president ever has. It is inconceivable, therefore,
that he did not also micromanage the war on civilians that was waged
by his generals.
Lincoln’s
war strategy was called the "Anaconda Plan" because it
sought to strangle the Southern economy by blockading the ports
and controlling the inland waterways, such as the Mississippi River.
It was, in other words, focused on destroying the civilian economy.
General
Sherman declared on January 31, 1864 that "To the petulant
and persistent secessionists, why, death is mercy." In a July
31, 1862 letter to his wife he said his goal was "extermination,
not of soldiers alone, that is the least part of the trouble, but
the people." And so he burned the towns of Randolph, Tennessee,
Jackson and Meridian, Mississippi, and Atlanta to the ground after
the Confederate army had left; bombarded cities occupied only
by civilians in violation of the Geneva Convention of 1863; and
boasted in his memoirs of destroying $100 million in private property
and stealing another $20 million worth. All of this destroyed food
stuffs and left women, children, and the elderly in the cold of
winter without shelter or food.
General
Philip Sheridan did much of the same in the Shenandoah Valley of
Virginia, burning hundreds of houses to the ground and killing or
stealing all livestock and destroying crops long after the Confederate
Army had left the valley, just as winter was approaching.
"A
new kind of soldier was needed" for this kind of work, writes
Roberts. Here he is referring to my quotation of pro-Sherman biographer
Lee Kennett, who in his biography of Sherman wrote that "the
New York regiments [in Sherman’s army] were . . . filled with big
city criminals and foreigners fresh from the jails of the Old World."
Lincoln recruited the worst of the worst to serve as pillagers and
plunderers in Sherman’s army.
Lincoln
used the war to "remove the constraints that Southern senators
and congressmen, standing in the Jeffersonian tradition, placed
in the way of centralized federal power, high tariffs, and subsidies
to Northern industries." Indeed, Lincoln’s 28-year political
career prior to becoming president was devoted almost exclusively
to this end. Even Lincoln idolater Mark Neely, Jr., in The
Fate of Liberty, noted that as early as the 1840s, Lincoln
exhibited a "gruff and belittling impatience" with constitutional
arguments against his cherished Whig economic agenda of protectionist
tariffs, corporate welfare for the railroad and road building industries,
and a federal government monopolization of the money supply. Once
he was in power, Lincoln appointed himself "constitutional
dictator" and immediately pushed through this mercantilist
economic agenda an agenda that had been vetoed by president after
president beginning with Jefferson.
Far
from "saving the Union," writes Roberts, Lincoln "utterly
destroyed the Union achieved by the Founding Fathers and the U.S.
Constitution." The original Union was a voluntary association
of states. By holding it together at gunpoint Lincoln may have "saved"
the Union in a geographic sense, but he destroyed it in a philosophical
sense.
Paul
Craig Roberts based his column on well-documented facts as presented
in The Real Lincoln. In response to these facts, in a recent
WorldNetDaily column the insufferably sanctimonious Alan Keyes described
people like myself, Paul Craig Roberts, Walter Williams, Joe Sobran,
Charles Adams, Jeffrey Rogers Hummell, Doug Bandow, Ebony
magazine editor Lerone Bennett, Jr., and other Lincoln critics as
"pseudo-learned scribblers," with an "incapacity
to recognize moral purpose" who display "uncomprehending
pettiness," are "dishonest," and, once again, his
favorite word for all who disagree with him: "ignorant."
"Ignorant"
and "slanderous" is the precise language one should use
to describe the hysterical rantings and ravings of Alan Keyes and
his minions at the so-called Declaration Foundation.
April
3, 2002
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
is
the author of The
Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an
Unnecessary War
(Forum/Random House 2002) and professor of economics at Loyola College
in Maryland.
Copyright
2002 LewRockwell.com
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives
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