Abraham
Dubya Bush
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
As
has been their tradition for decades now, neocons who are in favor
of waging total war against somebody (this time it’s Iraq) have
been invoking the sainted Lincoln ("Father Abraham," as
the war enthusiasts at the Claremont Institute call him) as their
role model. After all, there must be some kind of ideological cover
for mass murder (as all wars are), and that is the role of the Lincoln
Myth.
As
Joseph Stromberg recently noted ("Bring
on the Honors List!", LRC, Aug. 28), George Will has written
in the Washington Post that President Bush should look to
Lincoln’s war tactics as a model for "American ways of waging
war." In recent months historian Jay Winik has written in the
Wall Street Journal that, in the spirit of Lincoln, "security"
should come before liberty. To hell with civil liberties. Tony Blankley
repeated this same anti-civil liberties theme in the Washington
Times; and David Broder and Ronald Radosh, among many others,
have explicitly invoked Lincoln in advocating that we send a quarter
of a million men to invade Iraq (for starters). A recent article
posted on the Neo-conservative website FreeRepublic described
President Bush’s developing foreign policy as "Lincolnesque
but on a world-wide scale."
What,
exactly, should President Bush do in order to mimic Lincoln’s war
policies, as the neocons are urging him to do? Well, the first
thing he should do (as Lincoln did) is to unilaterally suspend the
writ of Habeas Corpus and order the military to begin arresting
and imprisoning all dissenters, especially the press. He should
issue an order to one of his top generals similar to the one Lincoln
issued to General John Dix on May 18, 1864: "You will take
possession by military force, of the printing establishments of
the New York World and Journal of Commerce . . . and
prohibit any further publication thereof. . . you are therefore
commanded forthwith to arrest and imprison . . . the editors, proprietors
and publishers of aforesaid newspapers."
Imagine
the cheering at the Claremont Institute if President Bush were to
put the New York Times and Washington Post out of
business and throw their editors and owners into military prisons
without issuing any warrants, making any charges, or even telling
their families where they were. Father Abraham lives! Just to make
sure all other members of the press get the message, President Bush
should also follow the practice of President Lincoln, the founder
of his party, and have federal troops physically demolish the printing
presses of opposition newspapers (see Dean Sprague, Freedom Under
Lincoln, and James G. Randall, Constitutional
Problems Under Lincoln).
In
order to assure "congressional support" for his war, President
Bush should also order federal troops to interfere with elections
in predominantly Democratic districts, as Lincoln did. In Maryland,
for example, Lincoln ordered the arrest and imprisonment of several
dozen state legislators, Congressman Henry May, and the mayor of
Baltimore. He won New York State in the 1864 presidential election,
writes Pulitzer Prize-winning Lincoln biographer David Donald, "with
the help of federal bayonets." President Bush might also consider
re-instituting the draft, and instructing the draft board to conscript
primarily young registered Democrats.
Senator
Tom Daschle of South Dakota is the current leader of the opposition,
and he has been dutifully performing his proper role by criticizing
the Bush administration every chance he gets, even on the topic
of starting a war in the Middle East. If President Bush really wants
to be considered to be "Lincolnesque" he would have 60
or 70 heavily armed Marines break down the door to Senator Daschle’s
home in the middle of the night, throw him into military prison
without charging him with any crime, and eventually deporting him.
That’s
exactly what happened to the most outspoken member of the Democratic
Party in Lincoln’s day, Ohio Congressman Clement L. Vallandigham.
Congressman Vallandigham had protested vehemently on the floor of
the House of Representatives against Lincoln’s suspension of Habeas
Corpus and his trashing of much of the rest of the Constitution.
He was also a vociferous opponent of Lincoln’s high-tariff policy
and his adoption of an income tax. He favored seeking a peaceful
resolution to the conflict; Lincoln did not, so Vallandigham was
deported.
There
were a great many prominent Northerners like Vallandigham who preferred
peace and compromise over what became the bloodiest war in all of
American history. Lincoln’s political strategy, carried out by the
propaganda arm of the Republican Party known as the "Union
League," was to spread the lie that all of these men were traitors
and Confederate sympathizers. They were denigrated as "Copperheads,"
a form of snake in the grass. To make this point Vallandigham was
ceremoniously escorted across the lines and handed over to a Confederate
commander. The Confederates, however, wanted nothing to do with
Vallandigham, nor he with them, so he fled to Canada.
So
again, if President Bush wants to pursue a Lincolnesque war policy,
he should immediately deport Senator Daschle to Iraq. That will
send a strong message to any other dissenters, just as Lincoln’s
deportation of Congressman Vallandigham did. (Even though he was
in Canada, the Ohio Democratic Party still made Vallandigham its
gubernatorial nominee).
War
is always unpredictable, regardless of the best-laid war plans.
If the U.S. military does invade Iraq, it may well suffer some setbacks,
for example, if Iraq uses chemical or biological weapons, or if
other Arab states decide to enter the war on Iraq’s side. To be
truly Lincolnesque, President Bush would then decide that the war
must be waged on Iraq’s citizens (including women and children)
as well as combatants, just like Lincoln’s generals did during the
War between the States, and just as the same generals later did
in the war against the Plains Indians. As General Sherman once said,
"To secessionists, why, death is mercy." He meant all
"secessionists," women and children included, as he explained
in a letter to his wife. After all, Total War has been an American
tradition since 1861.
This
is just a short list of what President Bush must do if he wants
to go down in history as Abraham Dubya Bush and carry on the tradition
of The Party of Lincoln.
August
30, 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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