Fighting for a Future
by David O. Jones
We
are here today to remember the past. But our honoring of the brave men of
the Confederacy falls short if we fail to understand their cause or refuse
to continue to fight for the future for which they prayed, and bled and
died.
The fight of the Confederacy was against
invasion of their duly constituted nation and for independence and
self-determination. Lincoln’s War permanently established an American
empire defined by autocratic rule and economic centralization. It was
called the “War of the Rebellion” by the U.S. government. If we had
succeeded, it would have been called the Second American Revolution and
the War for Southern Independence.
Abraham
Lincoln’s actions in usurping the delegated powers in the U.S.
Constitution is unparalleled in the history of Christendom. H.L.Mencken,
wrote in 1931,
“Lincoln has become one of our national deities and a realistic
examination of him is thus no longer possible.”
But our freedom demands that we take an honest look at our history, our
leaders, and our actions.
The facts?
- Less
than a week after his subterfuge in provoking an attack on Fort
Sumter, Lincoln ordered the blockade of Southern ports
- April
21, he ordered the navy to buy five warships
- April
27, he started suspending the privilege of habeas corpus
- Soon
thereafter he started shutting down newspapers
- May
3, he called for more troops
- September
12 & 13, all suspected Southern sympathizers in the Maryland state
legislature were arrested along with other influential citizens, and
were locked up in prison at Fort McHenry.
- In
November all members of the federal armed forces voted in Maryland
elections. Voters had to pass through platoons of Union soldiers. It
was said of that event, “It was as perfect an act of despotism as
can be conceived. It was a coup d’etat in every essential
feature.”
Lincoln’s
justification of his actions was that constitutional legislative powers
applied to the commander in chief in difficult times. In fact, Lincoln had
the audacity to inform Congress that he had the right to suspend the
Constitution in order to save it. He also took the position that he had
the final say on any Constitutional question, not the court, and his power
to make such a determination was a higher power than the Supreme Court.
Lincoln
usurped congressional and judicial power, and then with Congress’s
blessing created an American gulag for an estimated 20,000 citizens who
disagreed with him. It should be noted that by comparison, Mussolini is
reported to have jailed only two thousand men.
The
British press wrote, “It does seem the most monstrous of anomalies that
a government founded on the ‘sacred right of insurrection’ should
pretend to treat as traitors and rebels six or seven million people who
withdrew from the Union, and merely asked to be let alone.”
Again
the British press asked, “With what pretence of fairness can you
Americans object to the secession of the Southern States when your nation
was founded on secession from the British Empire?”
But
when the Chicago Times editorialized, “We then repeat the question as to
what adequate motive we have for inaugurating a civil war?” In a short
time, a military officer arrived at the newspaper, shut it down and sealed
its presses. Eventually over 300 northern newspapers would be closed by
Union troops and the journalists who dared question Lincoln’s actions
were jailed.
Charles
Dickens concluded, ”The Northern onslaught upon slavery was no more than
a piece of specious humbug designed to conceal its desire for economic
control of the Southern states.” And later he wrote, “Union means so
many millions a year lost to the South; secession means the loss of the
same millions to the North.”
Preserving
the Union was so important economically and for the perceived destiny of
the American nation that the country as a whole didn’t seem to mind
if Lincoln pushed the Constitution aside, ignored its checks and balances,
and assumed the role and power of a Roman consul, a virtual dictator for
the duration of his life.
Our
freedom demands that we take an honest look at our history, our leaders,
and our actions. Journalist Tom Brokaw in a recent question and answer
period following a speech promoting his book on the “Greatest
Generation” dodged a question about whether the dropping of the atomic
bombs on Japan was a war crime because of the massive civilian casualties.
We can’t afford to dodge the questionable actions of our national
government. A pledge to a flag does not make it all right.
We
can ill afford to ignore the facts. Nor can we justify the facts and
pretend that all is well now. We have fought the Spanish-American War, two
World Wars, and in Korea and Vietnam as a united Union and have many
honourable Southern veterans. But there are questions.
- Question:
The sinking of the Maine prompted the Spanish war, but wasn’t that
probably an accident blown out of proportion by leadership to achieve
desired political ends?
- Question:
It is widely agreed that U.S. code breakers had already intercepted
Japanese intensions to bomb Pearl Harbor, but why did our leadership
allow the military base to be destroyed without warning?
- Question:
The Gulf of Tonkin incident which prompted greater activity in Vietnam
was challenged almost from the moment it happened. Were our leaders
honest?
We
can ill afford to ignore the facts. Nor can we justify the facts and
pretend that all is well now, because the world will not let us forget.
Just this last year, at a news conference with President Clinton (8
April 1999), Chinese premier Zhu Rongii, responded to questions about
China’s use of force upon Taiwan. The Communist Chinese premier said,
“Abraham Lincoln, in order to maintain the unity of the United States
… resorted to the use of force … so, I think Abraham Lincoln,
president, is a model, is an example.”
Charles
Adams in his recently published book,
When in the Course of Human Events, on
page 1 writes, “With the Civil War, America failed the world as well as
itself.”
The
fight of the Confederacy was against invasion and for
independence and self-determination. Today our fight is against
total intrusion into our lives and for independence and
self-determination.
The
Constitution survived Lincoln’s War, but not as originally intended by
the founding fathers and not as conceived of during pre-war years. The war
to preserve the Union turned out to be a war that destroyed it. People
today have no idea of the real dangers to American society that were on
the line, and few realize just how fortunate succeeding generations are
that the military despotism that plagued the land for over five years did
not last forever. The consequences of Lincoln’s War afflict us every
day.
Southerners
had a cause—independence and repelling an invading foreign army—a
just cause like the American War for Independence in 1776. But
Northerners had no such noble cause. “Preserving the Union” can be
translated into conquering the South and imposing Northern will on the
Southern people.
During
the War for Southern Independence, the London Times wrote, ”If
Northerners…had peaceably allowed the seceders to depart, the result
might fairly have been quoted as illustrating the advantages of Democracy,
but when Republicans put empire above liberty, and resorted to political
oppression and war…It was clear that nature at Washington was precisely
the same as nature at St. Petersburg…Democracy broke down. …when it
was upheld, [it was done] like any other Empire, by force of arms.”
We
are quick to be trite in saying of our form of government, “It may not
be perfect, but it’s the best the world has ever known.” Is that
really true? In the twentieth century, when over a hundred new nations
have come into being, most often from Europe’s colonial empires, American
democratic forms have not been adopted—it has been British
parliamentary government that swept over the globe. The world in turmoil
understands the despotism which is possible from an unfettered executive,
and the nations of the world who gain their freedom do not wish to visit
that despotism upon themselves.
The
American empire managed out of Washington, DC is dying, gasping its last
breaths. It is grasping for life by sending troops around the world to
prove that Big Brother still exists even though there isn’t one in
Moscow anymore. There is no proverb more true than that a man without
authority will attempt to exert control. It is also true of our
national government. As it has lost respect and authority not only from
its own citizenry but also lost it around the world, it will attempt to
exert even greater control.
We
must stand with our fallen brothers of a century ago and denounce every
action of the U.S. government which seeks to impose the will of a minority
upon others, whether it is in Bosnia or Bethesda. We must fight against
total intrusion into our lives and for independence and
self-determination. We must fight for a future of freedom
for our children and our grandchildren.