The
Official, Politically-Correct Cause of the 'Civil War'
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
Recently
by Thomas DiLorenzo: Another
Big Lincoln Lie Exposed
The memo has
gone out. Since 2011 is the 150th anniversary of the
start of the War to Prevent Southern Independence the Lincoln Cult,
aided and abetted by the many worshippers of the centralized, bureaucratic,
Leviathan state that he founded, has been hard at work since the
first week of January endlessly repeating the politically-correct
version of the one sole cause theory of the "Civil War."
Unlike all
other wars in human history, the "Civil War" is said to
have one and only one cause. This was not always the case; university
courses on the war during the 1960s and 70s frequently used
as a text Kenneth Stampp’s The
Causes of the Civil War. Stampp was a former president of
the American Historical Association. His scholarship has been replaced
with a-historical political correctness on today’s college campuses.
Supposed "proof"
of the "one sole cause" theory is that when the Southern
states seceded in 1860-61, some Southern politicians defended the
institution of slavery. Therefore, the story goes, slavery was the
sole cause of the war. The not-so-implicit assumptions behind this
assertion are the following: 1) Lincoln was about to abolish slavery
"with the stroke of a pen" as soon as he took the oath
of office; 2) Southerners understood this; therefore, Southern secession
amounted to kidnapping of the slaves; and 3) Lincoln launched an
invasion of the South to free the kidnapped slaves. This is the
only way in which Southern secession could have necessitated
war. Read any of Harry Jaffa’s books if you want "verification"
of this "official view."
Everything
about this politically-correct fantasy is patently false, regardless
of how many times it is repeated in the New York Times and
Washington Post. Some Southern politicians did indeed defend
slavery, but not as strongly as Abraham Lincoln did in his first
inaugural address, where he supported the enshrinement of Southern
slavery explicitly in the U.S. Constitution (the "Corwin Amendment")
for the first time ever. Coming from the president of the United
States, this was the strongest defense of slavery ever made by an
American politician.
Some Southern
politicians did say that their society was based on white supremacy,
but so did Abraham Lincoln and most other Northern politicians.
"I as much as any man want the superior position to belong
to the white race," Lincoln said in a debate with Stephen Douglas
in 1858. When Lincoln opposed the extension of slavery into
the new territories (but not Southern slavery), he gave the standard
Northern white supremacist reason: We want the territories to be
reserved "for free white labor," he said. The Lincoln
cultists can quote Alexander Stephens’ "cornerstone" speech
all they want, but the truth is that Abraham Lincoln, and most of
the leaders of the Republican Party, were in total agreement with
Stephens. White supremacy was as much (if not more of) a "cornerstone"
of Northern society as it was of Southern society in the 1860s.
The abolition
societies of the North never claimed more than two percent of the
Northern adult population as members. Lincoln was never an abolitionist,
distanced himself from them politically, and even boasted in a speech
in New York City that "we have abolitionists in Illinois; we
shot one the other day." All of this makes it extremely unlikely
that anyone who voted for Lincoln in the 1860 election did so because
they thought he would end Southern slavery (which of course the
Republican Party Platform of 1860 did not promise).
More importantly,
secession in no way necessitates war, regardless of what the reasons
for secession are. The reasons for secession, and the reasons why
there was a war, are two entirely separate issues. When New Englanders
openly and publicly plotted to secede for fourteen years after Thomas
Jefferson’s election, culminating in the 1814 secession convention
in Hartford, Connecticut, neither President Jefferson nor President
Madison (or anyone else) said one word about the appropriate response
to a Northern-state secession being "invasion," "force,"
and "bloodshed." These are the words Lincoln used in his
first inaugural address to describe what would happen in any Southern
state that seceded.
It is unlikely
that anyone even dreamed of invading Massachusetts, Connecticut
and Rhode Island and bombing and burning Boston, Hartford and Providence
into a smoldering ruin while murdering thousands of New Englanders,
women and children included, if New England were to secede. Indeed,
when Jefferson was asked what would happen if New England seceded,
he said in a letter that New Englanders, like all other Americans
"would all be our children" and he would wish them all
well. More recently, all of the Soviet republics, and all of Eastern
and Central Europe peacefully seceded from the Soviet Union. Secession
does not necessitate war.
No American
president had the power in the nineteenth century to abolish slavery
"with the stroke of a pen." The slaves were slaves before
Southern secession, and they were slaves after secession. Indeed,
as Alexander Stephens once correctly remarked, slavery was more
secure in the union than out of it because of the Fugitive Slave
Clause, which Lincoln strongly supported, and because of the 1857
Dred Scott Supreme Court decision.
No respectable
historian would argue that Lincoln invaded the South to free the
slaves. Even his Emancipation Proclamation was only a "war
measure" that would have become defunct if the war ended the
next day – and it was written so as to avoid freeing any slaves
since it only applied to "rebel territory." Both Lincoln
and Congress announced publicly that their purpose was not to disturb
slavery but to "save the union," a union that they actually
destroyed philosophically by destroying its voluntary
nature, as established by the founders. All states, North and South,
became wards or appendages of the central government in the post-1865
era.
What Lincoln
did say very clearly about war in his first inaugural address was
that it was his duty "to collect the duties and imposts,"
but "beyond that there will no be any invasion of any state
. . ." That is, if Southern secession made it impossible for
Washington, D.C. to "collect the duties and imposts" (i.e.,
tariffs on imports, which had just been more than doubled two days
earlier), then there will be an invasion. He followed through
with this threat, and that is why there was a war that ended
up killing 670,000 Americans, including some 50,000 Southern civilians,
while maiming for life more than a million.
Secession does
not necessitate war; nor was war necessary to end slavery. The rest
of the world (including all of the Northern states ended slavery
peacefully in the nineteenth century, as James Powell documents
and describes in his outstanding book, Greatest
Emancipations: How the West Ended Slavery.
April
12, 2011
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
is professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland and the
author of The
Real Lincoln; Lincoln
Unmasked: What You’re Not Supposed To Know about Dishonest Abe
and How
Capitalism Saved America. His latest book is Hamilton’s
Curse: How Jefferson’s Archenemy Betrayed the American Revolution
– And What It Means for America Today.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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