T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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58.1 | First thoughts | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Magister dixit | Tue Jan 14 1992 09:21 | 22 |
| Lincoln was a very controversial leader. He was hated in some quarters
and loved in others. Even his own cabinet members schemed more than
once to subvert his policies or worse. He would have had the favor of
many people behind him, but politicians being what they are, his
political agenda would have been subject to a great deal of bitter
infighting.
He was also probably the cleverest, most savvy and people-smart
politician who ever came down the pike in the U.S. It's inconceivable
that he would have allowed something he didn't want to happen, and I
personally feel that he was, what is almost the antithesis of a
politician, an honorable man. I don't think the man who suspended
habeas corpus would have tolerated the unethical and inhuman abuses of
Reconstruction once he didn't ahve to struggle to keep the country from
falling apart.
I think he might very well have changed the entire course of racial
relations in the Western world - what happened in South Africa could
not have happened nearly as easily in the face of what Lincoln would
have done in the U.S.
-dick
|
58.2 | Racial problems would be fewer... | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Tue Jan 14 1992 10:47 | 8 |
| I personally think that many of the racial problems wouldn't occur
today. Partly because I think many of the issues of race would have
been dealt with sooner. Also many of the black politicians would not
have been ousted out of office. After the Civil War and during
Reconstruction, many blacks were elected to political office for the
first time. But due to the machinations of white politicians, they
were forced out of office and segregation was forced upon the blacks
which resulted in less political power for blacks.
|
58.3 | Did he reach his peak? | CST23::DONNELLY | | Tue Jan 14 1992 15:30 | 13 |
|
There are limits on what any man can do, even a great one. Actually,
I believe the effects of a 2nd or even 3rd term would be greater
because of breaking the chain of presidents as we've known them than
what he could have done during those terms. I doubt he'd have lasted
a 3rd term anyway. Photos I've seen show me one TIRED man. Preserving
the Union through four terrible years of civil war must have drained
him severely. A kinder, gentler Reconstruction? Maybe. Better race
relations today? I think that would be too big an order. All-in-all,
I think when he was killed he was at his peak.
Tom
|
58.4 | A realistic view .... | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Fri Jan 17 1992 10:59 | 38 |
|
This is a fascinating question ..... it is certainly true that
Lincoln would probably not have fallen out with Congress as
Andrew Johnson did, and the South would probably have escaped
the full rigours of Congressional Reconstruction.
However, in pursuing a unity of approach, Lincoln would
undoubtedly have compromised with the Radicals in Congress
(Stevens, Sumner etc.) so that Reconstruction would have been
more stringent than Johnson wished, and would probably have
been more effective.
One thing stands out starkly from the Reconstruction era:
The South was more determined to preserve racial inequality
and to struggle for State's Rights within the Constitution
than it ever was to fight for the Confederacy outside the
Constitution. Whether Lincoln would have stayed in office
long enough to overcome the South's resistance is doubtful.
After the Civil War the pendulum had swung in favour of the
blacks, however when one considers the ambivalence with
which Northerners viewed Negros, it was inevitable that the
pendulum would swing back somewhat - to what degree depended
on how far the North was prepared to go to defend Negro
rights. Lincoln would probably have been a major voice in
support of the Negro, but it must be pointed that he was
essentially a moderate, and that as a politician, he lived
by compromise.
Thus I conclude that if Lincoln had lived, the USA might
have been spared some of the terrible bitterness that
pervaded the Reconstruction era, however I do not believe that
subsequent history would have been essentially different.
The Civil War was also a Revolution, which are never
kind to those who live through them and particularly to
those who try to lead them in moderate directions.
Toby
|
58.5 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Mon Jan 20 1992 14:04 | 5 |
| I agree that the reconstruction period might have been a little kinder
and gentler....but beyond that not much difference, especially in the
area of race relations. Lincoln was no big supporter of the Blacks.
As I recall he supported a plan to move them out of the country, either
back to Africa and/or to Central America.
|
58.6 | Lincoln and Reconstruction? | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Thu Jan 23 1992 10:16 | 34 |
|
To clarify the previous note, Lincoln did support colonisation for
blacks, but not on an involuntary basis i.e. he preferred blacks
to leave under their own volition, and he never went to great lengths
to advocate the encouragement of colonisation. He had no racial
feeling himself, but could not understand why blacks would stay
in a country where they were the brunt of such hatred and misery.
Thus his view on colonisation came from his opinion on what was
best for blacks, not for whites.
The tragedy of Reconstruction was that the South was so opposed
to equality that the North could either choose to struggle maybe
for years against a determined people, a course which could only
end in the re-occupation of some of the states (local forces
could not combat such organisations as the Klu Klux Klan without
Federal support), or give up the Blacks to be at the mercy of
the former Confederates. In the 1870's, there could be no doubt
as to the course chosen by a weary North, now beset by economic
depression.
At this point, Lincoln's presidency would have been at an end anyway.
One can only wonder what he might have thought of the "new birth of
freedom" he believed the North had fought for. It was true that
the North had saved the Union and destroyed slavery, but the South
had fought a strong rearguard action and won a victory for States'
Rights and Racial Inequality in 1876.
I must add that many of the "Redeemer" governments (like that of
Wade Hampton in South Carolina) were not as totally racist as
some of their successors, even up to the 1960s. True segregation
became the norm from the rise of Populism in the 1890 period -
but that's another story.
Toby
|
58.7 | one example of a Lincoln-hater | HARDY::SCHWEIKER | | Mon Mar 18 1996 18:22 | 16 |
|
What would you do if your 93-year-old mother wanted to sleep on the floor?
[paraphrased from Paul Harvey's Rest of the Story, errors mine]
Martha Ellen Young thought the Civil War was very uncivil. As a 9-year-old
girl in Missouri, her family's farm was raided 5 times by Union troops
and their livestock killed, sometimes just for sport. A Union general
ordered that the property of most people in several counties be confiscated,
and although her father had signed a loyalty oath to the Union, she was
sent to a concentration camp far from home near Kansas City.
Over 80 years later, she went to visit her son Harry's new digs in
Washington, D.C. He offered her the finest accommodations in the place,
the Lincoln bed in the Lincoln bedroom, but she said she'd rather sleep
on the floor! [I don't know if she did]
|
58.8 | | SMURF::BINDER | Manus Celer Dei | Tue Mar 19 1996 10:04 | 6 |
| I'd let her sleep on the floor. :-) But I'd offer a pallet to keep
her back from getting thrown out.
But, on the other hand, I'd point out that it is a refusal to let
bygones be bygones that is responsible for the vast majority of strife
in the world today.
|