Lincoln wasn't a good president. He wasn't even a mediocre president. He was a terrible president. He suspended individual rights. He massively expanded the government through money printing. He led millions of people to their deaths. All for power.
What we learn in school is that he was the great emancipator, ending slavery and winning a war that had to be won. That he was some man of genius and virtue, thrust upon the national stage at the right time to progress history.
Such is the result of the history being written by the winners. Similar hagiographies have been written about FDR and even Woodrow Wilson. But like the news, much of history is spun to manipulate us. Most of conventional history is fake and even a cursory study of what actually happened is enough to make you question how virtuous they were, and why they made the decisions they did. Almost always, you find that they were opportunistic cowards that did what would cost them least, even at the expense of the people they affected.
History is a tricky topic because the counterfactuals are always very speculative. But what we can judge is the values played out in actions taken, and in that sense, Lincoln was pretty terrible. He suspended habeas corpus, he cheated in border state elections to keep them in the union, and he massively, massively expanded the scope, power and size of government through inflationary theft.
It's hard to imagine what things were like before Lincoln, because before him, was a string of single-term Jacksonian, hard-money Democrat presidents. This was back when liberal meant being for personal liberty and that era of government before 1860 was insanely small, about 2% of the GDP. He would oversee an unprecedented expansion which would take the government to 20%.
Much of it, was, of course, because of the Civil War, and the popular narrative is that he needed to wage that war to end slavery. And yes, the issue was a major one in that era, but the elimination of slavery was more of a lucky by-product than an aim. His main goal, as he stated over and over again and as acted out in his policies, was to preserve the union, not to end slavery.
In preserving the union, he destroyed the idea that states had the right of secession, he weakened the idea of natural rights and he stole through inflation and sent many to their deaths. The centralizing of the federal government, the behemoth that we live with today began during his heyday.
The main thing that preserved his legacy was his assassination. Had a couple of battles gone the wrong way in 1863 and 1864, he wouldn't have been re-elected and he would have disappeared into the annals of history as a political amateur that lucked into the presidency in 1860 and screwed things up for 4 years. Instead, he was re-elected, assassinated and the horrific legacy of reconstruction was blamed on others. In short, he died at the right time.
There are those, of course, that will argue that Lincoln would have done things differently, and that he would have been more merciful to the south and rebuilt things as to spare them the suffering. But that's inconsistent with everything he did. Like most politicians he was a power grabber and he did what was politically expedient and not what was virtuous or right. He suspended habeas corpus (needing a reason to arrest and detain people)! He made generals do what would make him look good so he would get elected, not what would save the most lives or win the war the quickest. He created the greenback, which was a form of money printing to finance the war. And he spent an insane sum of other peoples' money through implicit and explicit taxes to "preserve the union."
Ending slavery, of course, was a big deal and in the annals of history, it's a dark mark in the history of the US that the institution survived so long. And yes, the Civil War did end it, but that wasn't the objective of the war itself.
Being Republican, he had a large Radical wing that he had to deal with and they wanted abolition, and later full voting rights for blacks. Because the south had seceded, they had the votes to pass the constitutional amendments, though only toward the end of the war when it was clear the north would win. That was a political expediency that ended up defining his legacy. But really, it's his biographers and historians of the winning side that have spun him to be a hero, when he was anything but.
The big flaw of Lincoln is that he created an unnecessary war that cost millions of lives and billions of dollars, one that set back the US by decades. Letting the south secede and revoking the Fugitive Slave Act would have ended the institution just as well, for much less cost. And this isn't idle speculation. Brazil had the second largest slave population in the 19th century that was whittled down quickly because the slaves had northern provinces where they could escape. The price of slaves dropped dramatically and soon, the institution itself was destroyed through economic means, not martial ones.
What's worse about Lincoln's legacy is that he set a precedent for federal power that brought forth the progressive era and eventually to Woodrow Wilson and FDR. The centralization of federal power began with him.
Lincoln wasn't a good president. But the history is written by the winners and they have made a secular saint out of him.
this territory is moderated
The big flaw of Lincoln is that he created an unnecessary war
What would compel you to say this?
Letting the south secede and revoking the Fugitive Slave Act would have ended the institution just as well, for much less cost.
this is simply ahistorical.
It ignores the reality that South Carolina published their declaration of independence December 1860 in reaction to Lincoln being elected to office that November on a platform of not expanding slavery to new states.
In those documents they explicitly state that the unwillingness of the other states to enforce the Fugitive Slave act is one of the reasons why they chose to leave. Revoking it is not something that would have had an effect on the war - and not something that Lincoln could have done as they had already left once he entered office January 1861.
The first battle of the Civil War occurred at Fort Sumter in April 1861 when Confederates fired on the fort after a months long blockade.
Prior to this, the Confederate States and the Union were in peace talks negotiating different parcels of land - Fort Sumter was one of these disputes that had not yet been settled and the Confederates sought to take it by force.
Lincoln did many things - but being responsible for the Civil War isn't one of them.
The fault lies solely with slave owners who wanted the state to protect their ability to buy and sell other human beings and were willing to shoot other people over it.
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Thanks for giving this necessary added context. I'm not a big history buff so it gave me a chance to learn something new. Here's a link to South Carolina's declaration of independence if anyone else is interested in reading it: https://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/csa_scarsec.asp
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I think you're smuggling in an assumption that the entirety of the Civil War had to happen because of South Carolina's actions. My understanding is that there were states that were not interested in leaving the union until war broke out.
As I see it, slavery ended everywhere else in the west without needing a war, so it's not a given that the south's defense of slavery justified war. Also, I don't know how Lincoln is absolved of any fault when "preserving the Union" is an unjust cause for war.
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I think you're smuggling in an assumption that the entirety of the Civil War had to happen because of South Carolina's actions.
The Civil War didn't "have to happen".
If slave owning elites didn't want their industry protected on land they didn't own (yet to be made states and territories) there would be no cause for war.
You will not find a single declaration for secession that does not include their desire to protect the institution slavery as their cause for leave, if not the main focus of the document.
My understanding is that there were states that were not interested in leaving the union until war broke out.
If we consider opening conflict to start on April 1861 - as Fort Sumter is considered to be the first battle of the conflict- South Carolina (December 20, 1860), Mississippi (January 9, 1861), Florida (January 10, 1861), Alabama (January 11, 1861), Georgia (January 19, 1861), Louisiana (January 26, 1861), and Texas (February 1, 1861) had already published their documents of secession before the blockade occurred. There were multiple attempts to have peaceful negotiations beforehand on to try and get the demands of the then seceeded states met during this time period.
Virginia joined the week after the battle of Fort Sumter (April 17, 1861), and Arkansas (May 6, 1861), North Carolina (May 20, 1861), Tennessee (June 8, 1861) followed.
The majority of the states that would form the CSA had already left before South Carolina started, shooting during negotiations and after starting a blockade.
As I see it, slavery ended everywhere else in the west without needing a war
This is for many reasons, but(generally speaking) it is because the slave owning class didn't want to start one and were willing to do away with the prospect of owning human beings in favor of other ventures.
In some countries (including some slave owners in the US post civil war) they were compensated for their "losses" - and so were able to transition more easily into other markets.
Also, I don't know how Lincoln is absolved of any fault
"Lincoln is absolved of fault" is not a statement you read in my statements nor is it something I agree with. "Lincoln not being responsible for the civil war" is what I stated to - and is what I stand by.
"preserving the Union" is an unjust cause for war.
The Confederates would not agree with you, as many of them wanted to preserve the Union too - they just wanted to also own human beings even more than they wanted to remain. They were explicit about this and explained themselves in real-time.
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I'm fine rephrasing my point to conform with your wording. Lincoln bears some of the responsibility for the Civil War, because the war didn't have to happen. He chose to escalate the conflict and, whether or not the Confederates agree, "preserving the union" is still not a just cause of war. (Also, I didn't see where the confederates indicated a willingness to go to war in order to preserve the union.)
Do you think compensating slave owners wouldn't have worked? I believe people have estimated what the cost of that would have been and that it's much less than the cost of the war. Even if it hadn't worked, the Union would have been the Confederacy's most natural trade partner and over time consumer pressure would have made Confederate slavery economically unprofitable.
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He chose to escalate the conflict
The federal government made multiple conessions to the slave owning class for decades. The core catylyst for secession was the refusal to expand slavery beyond the existing states that had it as an institution - various groups threatened organizing secession since the compromise of 1850-all the way up until South Carolina started blockading & firing on Fort Sumter.
By the time Fort Sumter is being blockaded, he has been president for all of 4 months - and they left in reaction to things he hadn't yet done( abolished slavery/promising to abolish).
How did he 'escalate' things? As a head of state, should he have let his soldiers get shot at and held hostage without consequence? What of the black soldiers that the Confederates refused to give up during the negotiations after the battle as even then the Union made efforts to stave off total conflict - The Confederates took them as property & refused to trade them for Confederate prisoners - what soverign nation would allow that to occur without consequence?
Do you think compensating slave owners wouldn't have worked?
Without going into how morally rephrehensible it is to compensate someone for the loss of labor from freeing their slaves - this was tried. It was offered multiple times over the years prior to Lincoln's election in various funding methods, and they refused because the Confederates valued the ability to own other humans and create a permanent underclass more.
In the US, the regulation of slavery was primarily a function of the states - not the federal government. In Washington DC (which is directly controlled by the federal government) they did enact compensated emancipation - and this was done by Lincoln.
Lincoln as a congressman was also in favor of compensated emancipation by the federal govt. to the states - and as president during the civil war he drafted a compensated emancipation secession act for Delaware (a slave state that didn't secede) and also national legislation but by then the Southern states didn't care as this was late 1861.
over time consumer pressure would have made Confederate slavery economically unprofitable
You are correct - and slave owning elites knew this, which is why they wanted to make sure that slavery could expand into the yet to be established states out west to preserve the institution of slavery for as long as possible in to ensure that their slave labor could remain competitive with free labor.
And when Lincoln won on a platform of not expanding slavery west, it put a cap on the potential markets they could work in, and permanently shifted things in favor fo the Union economically. Combine this with the free states not enforcing the Fugitive Slave act (meaning that any slave who walked onto a free state was legally free & not forced to return to bondage) and you have a situation where your captive labor force has an escape route. And the southern states were preferentially dependent on slave labor.
The only thing that would have stopped the war would have been the right to own slaves being enshrined in the Constitution.
They actually tried that too - and it passed -but by that time the Confederates were shooting, so it was a moot point.
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should he have let his soldiers get shot at and held hostage without consequence
There's a lot of room between no consequences and one of the ugliest wars in human history (to that point).
The only thing that would have stopped the war would have been the right to own slaves being enshrined in the Constitution.
I doubt there would have been a war if Lincoln had acknowledged the Confederacy's independence, so that claim seems a tad too strong.
It seems like we agree about slavery being on the way out had there been no war. If slavery was soon to be abolished anyway, the only real point of the war was preserving the union, which again is not a just cause of war.
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There's a lot of room between no consequences and one of the ugliest wars in human history (to that point).
One that the Confederates started, and were proud to start, whose underpinnings were in motion before Lincoln was ever president. It's simply not something a singular individual could have changed the course of with any one act - and it again would require the Confederates to not escalate tensions (which is something they did not want to do).
I doubt there would have been a war if Lincoln had acknowledged the Confederacy's independence, so that claim seems a tad too strong.
Why would you recognize the independence of an organization who steals your property & holds your people in slavery? And mind - the confederacy refused negotiations - acknowledging independence would also be denying their own national sovereignty - not something I see a statist doing. If the Confederates did not open fire, and participated in discussions, maybe things would have been different. Avoiding conflict simply wasn't something that the CSA wanted.
If slavery was soon to be abolished anyway, the only real point of the war was preserving the union, which again is not a just cause of war.
This ignores why the Confederates fought the war - which was to have the right to run a slave society, have that power recognized even in places that did not want it, and have the power of the state to keep it going as long as possible.
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Why would you recognize the independence of an organization who steals your property & holds your people in slavery?
I didn't say Lincoln should have done that. I'm countering your claim that there was only one way to avoid war. However, the answer to that question is "to avoid one of the worst wars in human history".
and have the power of the state to keep it going as long as possible.
That's a totally fair point. There's no shortage of evil regimes continuing evil practices even when they make no economic sense. Perhaps that would have gone on for a long time in this counterfactual.
I'm just not as convinced the CSA wanted a military conflict with the USA as you are. I'm also not as convinced as you that Lincoln was just a powerless bystander. I see both governments as pretty bad actors pursuing fundamentally illiberal goals.
Sir, I will not sit by quietly while you attempt to cloud the issue with facts.
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i’m a fan of jimmy, but this sort of shallow dunk on a truly significant and inspiring man just to make equally shallow points about debt, money, and government power is lame. I get that Jimmy’s got his soapbox that his books depend on so he has to keep beating the same drum, but why drag Lincoln into it?
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It's symptomatic at this point. Every time he steers off into a tangent and tries to link it to his raison-d'etre, it is shallow, uninformed, etc.
I realized this first when I read his essay about childbirth on SN. It showed his deep lack of understanding and nuance in complicated topics that are outside his confort zone.
Here, somehow he starts by acknowledging history is complicated and it is hard to make definite claims, yet his essay ends up doing just that, definite claims.
Lincoln wasn't a good president. He wasn't even a mediocre president. He was a terrible president.
At most, say he is not as great as he is sometimes portrayed to be.
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Demonizing historical figures is annoying. They were all imperfect, but also had good qualities. It's like the left's obsession with Columbus and their yearly hate week in October in his memory. There's no need to similarly turn Lincoln into some arch villain. Let's learn from his mistakes of course, but saying things to like "he was a terrible president" is counterproductive.
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This is a very well-written essay. Thank you. I think it is funny, but perhaps tragic, how Americans hold history and mythology on the same topic, with esteem, simultaneously. I think more people than we give credit understand Lincoln and slavery just fine. But we do like our heros. As you excellently describe, the mythological writings of the Lincoln biographers left such an impression that modern (current era) historians who know more of the actual truth, still offer god-like reverence to the man.
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i think it’s perfectly fine to critique what Lincoln did, and how much he increased federal power, and in hind sight how he could have handled the war better. but, from my readings of Lincoln, both in favor and against, i personally think he was an incredible man who handled an impossible task very well. and i don’t see any reason to think ill of him. i don’t understand the mentality to look back at history so naively, like all the outcomes were so obvious or act like there weren’t wheels set in motion that could not be stopped.
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I don't know why but when I clicked on this, I thought this was going to be about Lincoin pool.
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Because it’s on stacker news, that’s why you thought so.
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Interesting how much people cling to the history they have been told as sacred while thinking that today is a shit show. The truth is it started a long time ago and history being written by the winners it is always distorted to make them look much better than their actions. Regarding Lincoln there is a case to make that abolishing slavery was not his main motivation and happened as a by-product of fighting the southern states. Maybe a more realistic hypothesis is that secession meant a big loss of tax revenue for the federal government that Lincoln was not willing to let go so he went to war and in doing so cancelled the right to secede to supposedly sovereign states (not that southern states were right but that is another story)
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Interesting!
Great write up as always Jimmy, thanks for sharing.
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Curtis Yarvin is essential reading on Lincoln and the civil war. We have been lied to about the money, we have been lied to about public health, and we have been lied to about history https://www.unqualified-reservations.org/
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I think the one thing Lincoln is known for is much more important and honorable than what the economic policy was under his presidency. A universally good thing for the world that dwarfs whatever modern perspective you try to measure it by.
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USA is a zombie falling apart anyway, let's move on
I used to be more confused on this historical point. After many years of study, it became clear. Lincoln hated slavery, but his main goal was to preserve the Union of States. The states decided they could go against The Declaration of Independence in order to hold slaves. "All men are created equal". They they wanted to use the Constitution and so forth to justify this violation of the foundational document mostly due to greed since slavery was lucrative. Hence, they said the Federal Government has no power to enforce ultimately its founding document. This was wrong since the entire purpose of the Federal Government is to enforce the framework of the Declaration of Independence and secure its continual functioning.
Hence, slavery was the "breaking issue" due to hypocrisy and a war had been only narrowly avoided before Lincoln became president.
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