jmdrake
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- Joined
- Jun 6, 2007
- Messages
- 51,995
Very good post. It truly is a widespread fallacy that A. Lincoln was the Great Emancipator. The purpose of the Emancipation Proclamation was purely strategical and political, aimed at keeping England from recognizing the Confederacy as a valid country (and to keep them out of the war!). There were many sympathizers for the South in Parliament.
*Yawn* Not true. Lincoln wanted to see slavery ended. He just didn't want to do it immediately and he CERTAINLY didn't want to fight a war over it. In his desire to preserve the union he was no different from Andrew Jackson, a president who most southerners ironically love and admire. The U.S. constitution forbade Lincoln from freeing slaves by decree. When southern states declared themselves no longer a part of the union the constitution no longer applied to them and hence the emancipation proclamation was viable. The fact that Lincoln was willing to put forward a proposal to BUY the slaves EVEN BEFORE THE WAR puts the final nail in the "Lincoln didn't want to free the slaves" coffin. Lincoln wasn't perfect. He was a racist. He did overstep his constitutional bounds (and Andrew Jackson did on occasion). But he did want to see an end to slavery.
Regards,
John M. Drake