More
Lies and Sophistry
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
"[T]ariffs
were in the service of free trade . . ."
~
Thomas L. Krannawitter
This
Orwellian absurdity the statement that protectionist tariffs
are good for free trade defines the intellectual shallowness
of the latest tirade against my book, The
Real Lincoln, to come from the Claremont Institute. In a
supposed "review" in the Spring 2002 Claremont Review
of Books Thomas Krannawitter lies about the contents of my book,
attacks straw-man arguments, and simply makes things up.
He
claims, for example, that I say that Lincoln "did not care
a whit about" slavery. This is a lie; these words do not appear
in my book, nor does any similar statement. On page 13 I note how
Lincoln used natural rights language to condemn slavery by calling
it a "monstrous injustice," among other things.
Krannawitter
amazingly claims that I do not produce "a shred of evidence"
for my assertion that Lincoln and the Republican Party pursued an
agenda of centralized government and the pursuit of empire."
He obviously hasn’t read the book; in it I trace how Lincoln and
the Republican Party inherited the political mantle of the Whigs,
who themselves were the political heirs to the Hamiltonians, the
party of centralized government power and the pursuit of empire.
This is another lie that Krannawitter presents to his readers.
A
third blatant lie in Krannawitter’s screed is his statement that
in my book I claim that Lincoln "only wanted to talk about
[the Dred Scott decision] as an avenue for championing the nationalization
of money." What I actually say on page 68 is that: "Even
when commenting on the Dred Scott decision on June 26, 1857, Lincoln
apparently couldn’t resist once again criticizing Andrew Jackson’s
refusal thirty years earlier to recharter the Bank of the United
States . . ."
My
point is the opposite of what Krannawitter says it is: Lincoln commented
extensively on the decision, which had nothing to do with banking
policy, but he also could not help but throw in another minor jab
at Jackson for not rechartering the bank. Such things were always
apparently on his mind.
Krannawitter
also makes a big deal about a botched quote that was in the first
printing of my book which I admitted in print as having been a mistake
two months before his "review" appeared. It is dishonest
of him to dwell on this point in full knowledge of the fact that
I have acknowledged the mistake and have corrected it in the latest
printing.
The
quote had to do with Lincoln’s opposition to racial equality, which
he enunciated on many occasions. Thus, the fact that I messed up
that one quote in no way affects my argument. Lincoln was not nearly
as devoted to equality as the Claremontistas would have us believe.
Lincoln clearly stated in his August 21, 1858 Ottawa, Illinois debate
with Stephen Douglas, for example, that:
I have
no purpose to introduce political and social equality between
the white and black races. There is a physical difference
between the two, which in my judgment, will probably forever
forbid their living together upon the footing of perfect equality;
and inasmuch as it becomes a necessity that there must be a difference,
I, as well as Judge Douglas, am in favor of the race to which
I belong having the superior position. I have never said anything
to the contrary.
In
the same debate Lincoln also stated that any notion that he was
in favor of "perfect social and political equality with the
Negro is but a specious and fantastic arrangement of words, by which
a man can prove a horse chestnut to be a chestnut horse." On
the topic of emancipation, in the same speech, he said: "Free
them, and make them politically and socially our equals? My own
feelings will not admit of this . . . . We cannot, then, make them
equals."
In
his July 6, 1852 eulogy to Henry Clay Lincoln announced that in
his opinion slavery could not be eradicated "without producing
a greater evil, even to the cause of human liberty itself."
And for his entire political career he advocated deporting black
people out of the country, to Haiti, Central America, or Africa.
"There is a moral fitness in the idea of returning to Africa
her children," Lincoln said in the Clay Eulogy. Deportation
would supposedly mean "the ultimate redemption of the African
race," he continued, and in his December 1, 1862 Message to
Congress, Lincoln said: "I cannot make it better known than
it already is, that I strongly favor colonization."
For
many years he was an active member of the American Colonization
Society and in 1857 he urged the Illinois legislature to appropriate
money to be used to deport the free blacks out of the state (see
Eugene Berwanger, The
Frontier Against Slavery, p. 4). Lincoln also supported
the Illinois Black Codes, which deprived black people of any semblance
of genuine citizenship.
As
Joe Sobran has written, Lincoln’s position was that black people
could be equal all right, as long as it wasn’t here in the U.S.
Some champion of racial equality and natural rights. These are some
of the reasons why Ebony magazine editor Lerone Bennett,
Jr. so harshly denounces the "Lincoln Myth" in his book,
Forced
into Glory.
The
Claremontistas and their fellow Straussian neocons go berserk whenever
anyone brings these facts to light. Richard Ferrier, for example,
recently labeled me a "delusional idiot" on the FreeRepublic
website for stating that Lincoln opposed racial equality. To Ferrier
and the Claremontistas, Lincoln’s statement that "I have no
purpose to introduce political and social equality between the white
and black races" means "I DO have the purpose of introducing
political and social equality between the white and black races."
To
Ferrier and Krannawitter, Lincoln’s statement that "we cannot,
then, make them equals" means "We CAN, then, make them
equals." You be the judge of who is, and is not, delusional
here.
When
backed into a corner the Claremontistas frequently repeat Harry
Jaffa’s disingenuous charge that the "White Citizens Councils"
of the 1950s also pointed out Lincoln’s white supremacist views,
implying that anyone else who quotes them must agree with white
racists. The silly thing about this feeble-minded charge, however,
is that Lincoln himself agreed with the "White Citizens
Councils," as just shown. I bring these statements up in my
book as an illustration of how generations of Americans have been
lied to about the real Lincoln by the likes of Thomas Krannawitter.
Yet
another fabrication is Krannawitter’s statement that I completely
ignore the natural rights foundation of American government
which I do not. I argue that in light of Lincoln’s outspoken opposition
to racial equality, his promise upon being elected to support a
constitutional amendment to protect Southern slavery, his promise
in the First Inaugural to not interfere with Southern slavery, and
his evisceration of constitutional liberties in the North during
the war, the claim that Lincoln was a great champion of natural
rights is dubious, if not preposterous. I quote one of the preeminent
natural rights theorists of the day, the Massachusetts abolitionist
Lysander Spooner, along with the great historian of liberty Lord
Acton, as supporting my position. The claim that I ignore natural
rights arguments is yet another lie.
Krannawitter
slanders Edgar Lee Masters, author of Lincoln
the Man, by referring to the book as a compilation of "slanders"
against Lincoln without offering a single example. He then plays
the guilt-by-association game by noting that I quote the book "approvingly."
The implication is that I repeat the alleged "slanders"
by Masters, an Illinois native who was Clarence Darrow’s law partner
and a famous playwright in the first half of the twentieth century.
In reality, I quote only one passage from Lincoln the Man,
and it is about Henry Clay, not Lincoln. It is a perfect
description of the corrupt, mercantilist economic agenda (protectionist
tariffs, corporate welfare for the railroad and road-building industries,
and inflationism through central banking) that Clay championed and
which was adopted by Lincoln. Masters described that system as one
which "doles favors to the strong in order to win and to keep
their adherence to the government," a system which "offered
shelter to devious schemes and corrupt enterprises" and "a
people taxed to make profits for enterprises that cannot stand alone."
Exactly.
I
discuss in The Real Lincoln how Lincoln devoted a 28-year
political career prior to becoming president to this economic agenda,
and how it was all finally put into place in the first eighteen
months of his administration. Krannawitter is not interested in
any of this, however, for his objective is to mislead, not enlighten
his readers about the contents of my book.
Krannawitter
is as ignorant of public choice or political economy as he is of
international economics. At one point he criticizes me for supposedly
not understanding that "all economics is political economics."
In fact, my entire book is an exercise in political economy, with
a major theme being how the Hamilton/Clay/Lincoln agenda of mercantilism
was battled over in American politics for some seventy years before
finally prevailing during Lincoln’s reign.
In
the very next sentence after ludicrously claiming that I am unaware
of political economy Krannawitter identifies me as a public choice
economist, a "sin" to which I plead guilty, having been
a student at VPI of Nobel laureate James Buchanan and Gordon Tullock.
Krannawitter is obviously ignorant of the fact that public choice
is precisely the way in which the study of political economy
was resurrected in the economics profession some forty years
ago. He is in a fog here and is grasping at straws.
Krannawitter
ridiculously asserts that John C. Calhoun invented the doctrine
of legal secession out of thin air in order to divorce the idea
of states’ rights from natural rights. But as I discuss in my book,
the New England Federalists believed in a legal right of secession
and they attempted to have the New England states secede from the
Union for over a decade after Jefferson’s election. No one at the
time argued that a legal right of secession did not exist, only
that it may not have been a wise course to take.
Northern
abolitionists also argued for a legal right of secession, wisely
understanding that if the Northern states were to secede the Fugitive
Slave Clause, which subsidized the institution of slavery, would
have become defunct.
There
were scholars such as the Pennsylvania abolitionist William Rawle,
a close personal friend of George Washington’s, who believed in
a constitutional right of secession as well. Rawle’s book, A
View of the Constitution, argued this and was the one text
on the Constitution that was used at West Point before the war.
And
before Fort Sumter, as I show in my book, dozens of Northern
newspapers editorialized in favor of a constitutional or legal
right of secession on behalf of the Southern states. These Northern
newspapers were not acolytes of John C. Calhoun; they believed that
governments derived their just powers from the consent of the governed,
and that whenever a political community no longer consented then
it had a right to secede from the contract. Newspapers throughout
the Northern states expressed this view.
Krannawitter
is extremely patronizing toward Walter Williams, who wrote the Foreword
to The Real Lincoln. He calls it "shameful" that
Walter would endorse a book that Krannawitter says "celebrates"
John C. Calhoun. Of course, the book does no such thing, and Walter
is fully aware that there were Southerners like Calhoun who defended
slavery. What is shameful is the assertion that Walter, who could
run intellectual rings around Krannawitter, is somehow unaware of
such things.
Having
read my book, Walter is also aware that Northerners treated the
few blacks who were permitted to live among them as worse than second-class
citizens; that Lincoln spoke out of both sides of his mouth with
regard to racial equality; that he advocated deporting black people
out of the country; that the Emancipation Proclamation specifically
exempted all those areas of the South and the border states where
slaves could have actually been freed; that dozens of countries
around the world, including the British and Spanish empires, ended
slavery peacefully during the first half of the nineteenth century;
that Lincoln trashed constitutional liberties in the North and waged
war on innocent civilians; and many other facts that he (or anyone
else) would never know of if he were to rely on the biased and distorted
history that comes from the Claremont Institute.
Krannawitter
concludes his tirade in a most buffoonish way, by claiming that
it takes "a real man" (no women, presumably) like himself
to engage in the kind of analysis of Lincoln that he and his fellow
Claremontistas perform, compared to that of a mere "boy"
like myself. He then partakes in a spasm of puerile name calling
that suggests there is a need for some adult supervision at the
Claremont Institute.
June
17, 2002
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
is
the author of the LRC #1 bestseller, 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
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