Was Lincoln a Tyrant?

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Was Lincoln a Tyrant? by 1. Thomas J. DiLorenzo In a recent WorldNetDaily article, “ 1. Examining ‘Evidence' of Lincoln's Tyranny (April 23),” David Quackenbush accuses me of misreading several statements by the prom inent historians Roy Basler and Mark Neely in my book, The Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an Unnecessary War. With regard to Basler, I quote him in Abraham Lincoln: His Speeches and Writings, as suggesting that on the issue of slavery, post 1854, Lincoln's “words lacked effectiveness.” Quackenbush says he was not referring to Lincoln's comments on slavery here, but other things. I read him differently. What Basler said was that, yes, Lincoln used eloquent language with regard to human equality and “respecting the Negro as a human being,” but he offered no concrete proposals other than the odious colonization idea of his political idol, Henry Clay. As Basler wrote, “The truth is that Lincoln had no solution to the problem of slavery [as of 1857] except the colonization idea which he inherited from Henry Clay.” In the next sentence he mentions Lincoln's eloquent natural rights language, then in the next sentence after that, he makes the “lacking in effectiveness” comment. What I believe Basler is saying here is that because Lincoln's actions did not match his impressive rhetoric, his words did indeed lack effectiveness. As Robert Johannsen, author of Lincoln, the South, and Slavery put it, Lincoln's position on slavery was identical to Clay's: “opposition to slavery in principle, toleration of it in practice, and a vigorous hostility toward the abolition movement” (emphasis added). Regardless of what Basler said, I take the position that Lincoln's sincerity can certainly be questioned in this regard. His words did lack effectiveness on the issue of slavery because he contradicted himself so often. Indeed, one of his most famous defenders, Harry Jaffa, has long maintained that Honest Abe was a prolific liar when he was making numerous racist and white supremacist remarks. He was lying, says Jaffa, just to get himself elected. In The Lincoln Enigma Gabor Boritt even goes so far in defending Lincoln's deportation/colonization proposals to say, “This is how honest people lie.” Well, not exactly. Truly honest people do not lie. The problem with this argument, Joe Sobran has pointed out, is that Lincoln made these kinds of ugly comments even when he was not running for political office. He did this, I believe, because he believed in these things.


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