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Two Bush
cabinet nominees are being accused of a thought crime: being
on the side of history’s losers. John Ashcroft, prospective
attorney general, and Gale Norton, prospective secretary of
the interior, have said favorable words about the Confederacy
(while taking care to say that slavery was wrong).
What both
Ashcroft and Miss Norton said was that the South stood for
states’ rights and resistance to an all-powerful federal
government. Yes, it was also defending slavery, but that
doesn’t negate the good principles it fought for, any more
than the American Revolution is discredited by the fact that
Washington, Jefferson, and many other revolutionaries owned
slaves.
Unfortunately,
many Northerners insist on equating the perfectly
constitutional principle of states’ rights – more
properly, the powers reserved to the states – with slavery
and segregation.
You can (and
should) be pro-secession without being pro-slavery, as in fact
many Americans, North and South, were. The right of secession
was affirmed by two Northern states, New York and Rhode
Island, when they ratified the Constitution.
As a friend of
mine points out, the Tenth Amendment implies the right of
secession, since it reserves to the states and the people
"the powers not delegated to the United States [i.e., the
federal government] by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it
to the states." The Constitution doesn’t prohibit the
states from seceding, so that power remains with them. The
fact that the North won the Civil War doesn’t alter the
principle, unless might makes right.
During the
debate over ratification of the Constitution, opponents of
ratification made many dark predictions: the Constitution
would enable the federal government to impose tyranny, it
would lead to "consolidated" – centralized and
monolithic – government, and so forth. But nobody complained
that the Constitution would prevent the states from reclaiming
their independence, as they certainly would have done if the
Constitution had been understood to rule out secession. After
all, the Declaration of Independence had established the right
of the people to "alter or abolish" any form of
government that injures their rights.
Since the
Constitution doesn’t forbid the states to secede, the North
found it necessary to violate the Constitution in order to
suppress Southern independence. Lincoln was forced to usurp
legislative powers by raising troops and money and by
suspending the writ of habeas corpus; when Chief Justice Roger
Taney ruled such acts unconstitutional, Lincoln wrote an order
for Taney’s arrest! He never followed through on that, but
he did illegally arrest 31 antiwar members of the Maryland
legislature and install a puppet government. He went on to
crush freedom of speech and press throughout the North. Such
was Lincoln’s idea of "preserving the
Constitution" and "government of the people, by the
people, for the people."
The notion that
Lincoln "saved the Union" is as naive as the notion
that he "freed the slaves." The Union he saved was
not the one he set out to save. The Civil War destroyed the
"balance of powers" between the states and the
federal government which he had promised to protect in his
1861 inaugural address.
This was not
Lincoln’s intention, but it is the reason many of his
champions praise him. James McPherson celebrates Lincoln’s
"second American Revolution"; Garry Wills exults
that Lincoln "changed America" with the Gettysburg
Address, which he admits was a "swindle" (albeit a
"benign" one).
In other words,
Lincoln’s war destroyed the original constitutional relation
between the states and the federal government. His own
defenders say so – in spite of his explicit, clear, and
consistent professed intent to "preserve" that
relation.
The Civil War
wasn’t just a victory of North over South; it was a victory
for centralized government over the states and federalism. It
destroyed the ability of the states to protect themselves
against the destruction of their reserved powers.
Must we all be
happy about this? Lincoln himself – the real Lincoln, that
is – would have deprecated the unintended results of the
war. Though he sometimes resorted to dictatorial methods, he
never meant to create a totalitarian state.
It’s tragic
that slavery was intertwined with a good cause, and scandalous
that those who defend that cause today should be smeared as
partisans of slavery. But the verdict of history must not be
left to the simple-minded and the demagogic.
January 31,
2001 |