Only because you pointed it out.... YES Lincoln was a horrible president. I bet you do not know much about him. So, another long history lesson.
Did you know, or were you ever taught that President Lincoln in 1864 had the military break into the offices of two newspapers, they took documents and closed them down. Why...oh, they printed unfavorable comments about him. And to make it worse, he put the poor men in jail for three months. In this day and age, we would call that government censorship. Not too bad, right.
Anyway, While were on the subject of free speech and all, lets meet Clement L. Vallandigham. An Ohio Democrat during the dark days of the Civil War, he was by all accounts a bit of a miserable idiot, who liked nothing better than to rile his Republican rivals by opposing everything they stood for. Since this was the 1860s, that meant campaigning to end the war and criticizing Lincoln for his cavalier approach to civil liberties. A criticism Lincoln responded to by having Vallandigham arrested, tried by the military, and deported behind enemy lines. To be clear, Vallandigham was not a spy, a traitor, or even a threat. He just campaigned against Lincoln.
Without waiting for congressional approval, Abe authorized the indefinite imprisonment of citizens across the Union, culminating in an 1862 attempt to have habeas corpus suspended for draft-dodgersa suspension he intended to enforce by deploying the military against state judges. Although it was a measure born of desperate times, it allowed Jefferson Davis to portray the Confederacy as a place where liberty was valueda move that nearly won the South some vital allies in Europe. It could have been an utter disasterthe fact that it wasnt only proves how little appetite Europe had for declaring war. Sorry, I am assuming that everyone is familiar with the legal stuff. If youve ever so much as been in the same room as a lawyer, youll know that habeas corpus is an important legal principle. In essence, it means any state that orders your arrest has to then justify your continued imprisonment before a judge. Getting rid of it means anyone can be summarily rounded up, imprisoned, and left to rot.
For a president widely agreed to have been a strategic genius, Lincoln sure had a knack for picking incompetent generals. In November 1862, he ordered talentless nobody Ambrose Burnside to take control of the Army of the Potomacan outfit so well-trained and equipped that anybody should have been able to lead them to victory. Do you want to guess what happened next?
Five days after taking up his post, Burnside unveiled to Lincoln his plan for a daring assault on the Confederate capital. The President gave his approval and Burnside marched his troops into the Battle of Fredericksburga humiliating slaughter that saw the Union defeated with embarrassing ease. Undeterred by his costly failure, Burnside waited just over a month before launching his next offensivea little something known today as the Mud March.
Originally a plan to outflank General Lees troops, the Mud March quickly dissolved into farce after Burnside led his men through an apocalyptic rainstorm. Bogged down, the Yankees fell over one another, marched into each others units, and created a vast human traffic jam that sent the Confederates into hysterics. To make matters worse, Burnside attempted to boost morale by issuing each man hard liquorresulting in a mass of disheveled, drunken Union soldiers brawling with one another in a seething mess of mud and idiocy. Lincoln finally removed the incompetent general in January 1863, but not before hed single-handedly made a mockery of the entire Union war effort.
Everyone knows that Lincoln freed the slaves. But.... did you know about when Union soldiers under the command of General David Hunter had managed to occupy a fair chunk of South Carolina, Florida, and Georgia. With the Confederacy now vanquished in the region, General Hunter did something both deeply heroic and entirely unexpectedhe declared all former slaves in the occupied states free. Sadly for the 100,000 or so slaves his proclamation affected, a week later the Great Emancipator reversed his order, crushing any dreams of freedom they may have had.
Sure, Hunter never really had the right to issue his order, and Lincoln himself would devise the general Emancipation Proclamation just a few months later. Still, the incident remains a reminder that Lincoln valued other things above abolitionnamely, his own inflated ego.
Now while we are talking about Generals, how can we ever forget General Joseph Hooker, he may not have been as comically incompetent as old Ambrose Burnside up there, but in his own special way, he was probably worse. Appointed to replace Burnside after the Mud March, he was so obviously unsuitable for command that Lincoln personally wrote him a letter telling him as muchan odd move, given that it was Lincoln whod made the appointment. Within months of getting the gig, Hooker had already ratcheted up a decisive defeatsending his troops into the hellish Battle of Chancellorsville.
By rights, this should have been an easy Union victory. Lees army of 60,000 was spread thin and facing a Yankee force of over 130,000 men. Instead, Lees military genius and Hookers complete lack of it combined to create a Union slaughter. 17,000 Yankee troops were killed or wounded, 5,000 more than during the nightmare of Fredericksburg. When Lees victorious troops subsequently made a dash for Pennsylvania, Hooker completely failed to stop or counter them and wasted valuable time focusing on the Confederate capital instead of giving chase. Finally, on the eve of the Battle of Gettysburg, Lincoln removed him from his postthe first smart move he made in nine months of hiring idiots.
Now back to the slaves. Lincolns modern reputation is that of a brilliant man who would stop at nothing to do the right thing, especially regarding slavery. The truth is somewhat less perfect. In reality, Lincoln was first and foremost a pragmatist. Sometimes that pragmatism led him to support some truly disgusting laws.
Take the Fugitive Slave Act. This depressing bit of psychopathy made it a citizens duty to hunt down and report runaway slaves on pain of imprisonment and an enormous fine. It also stripped all black people of what few rights they had and made it possible for free-born men to be enslaved if a plantation owner simply claimed they were a runaway. Not only did Lincoln not oppose this law, he ran on a platform of enforcing it in the Northern States, most of which had traditionally ignored it. But even this doesnt come close to his support for the 13th Amendment.
Yes, there were two 13th Amendmentsthe one Lincolns now associated with, and the one he openly supported in his inaugural address. The purpose of this original 13th Amendment was to make it illegal for congress to interfere with slavery in the South, virtually guaranteeing it would last forever. Thats rightthe man who eventually freed the slaves very nearly condemned them to an eternity of servitude instead. How different history could have been.
By now, youve probably guessed that Lincoln wasnt exactly the great equality-lover that Hollywood likes to pretend he was, but theres one ethnic group who felt that more keenly than perhaps any other. For all their talk of equality, the first Republican presidency in history was marked by a shocking wave of brutality toward Native Americans.
In 1863, the Lincoln administration oversaw one of the biggest land-grabs in historyturfing the Navajos and Mescalero Apaches out of their New Mexico territory and into a reservation called Bosque Redondo 725 kilometers (450 mi) away. The journey there was the very definition of a death march. Thousands of people were herded across the baking desert with little in the way of supplies, surrounded by an army who summarily executed stragglers. When the survivors made it to Bosque Redondo, they were shoved into squalid, disease-ridden camps and simply left to die. By the time the decision was reversed, one-third of those interred were dead of exposure or starvation.
As bad as that is, its far from the only example. Massacres were frighteningly routine during these years and often went unpunishedunless it was the Native Americans doing the massacring, in which case execution was de rigueur. Thats before we get onto the devastation caused by the Pacific Railway Act of 1862 and the thousands it displaced. In short, the presidency of Abraham Lincoln wasnt a great time to be Native American.
Concentration camps was not just a German thing. No, It wasnt just Native Americans who got to experience death camps during the Lincoln years. Welcome to Camp Douglasthe sort of place for which the phrase hell on Earth was coined. If you were a Confederate troop during the grim years of 186265, there was a good chance youd wind up thereand an equally high chance that youd die soon after. Intended to house 6,000 prisoners, it usually held closer to 12,000, and such severe overcrowding had consequences.
There wasnt enough food, so inmates were fed on spoiled meat and potatoes. Sanitation was nonexistent and a lack of sewers meant piles of waste built up, creating a haven for bacteria. Smallpox, malaria, and other diseases ran rife, killing dozens. Rainstorms would turn the camp into a fetid mud bath, while the winter would freeze inmates to death. Vermin had run of the place and the prison hospital was overflowing with the bodies of the sick and disabled.
It was Lincolns Guantanamoa chamber of horrors on American soil that made a mockery of any claims of decency and justice. Although Jefferson Davis Confederacy oversaw equally brutal camps, Douglas remains a stain on Lincolns record as a place where ideals of hope and democracy went to die.
All of these things are bad... practically damning. But, the number one reason he was on my list as a VERY BAD PRESIDENT ....
Most of us probably dont associate Abraham Lincoln with concepts like ethnic cleansing, but Honest Abe had one thing he wanted almost as much as a slavery-free Americaan America that was completely and utterly devoid of black people.
For nearly his entire life, Lincoln supportedand, at times, was the driving force behinda plan to round up every black person in the country and forcibly ship them to another one. This wasnt just an idle wish, either. In 1863, Lincoln personally approved an order for freed slaves to be sent to remote colonies in Central and South America. A test shipment of 450 emancipated slaves was even dispatched to Haiti, where their new colony was devastated by smallpox and starvation and the survivors had to be rescued. As late as fall 1864, Lincoln still intended to go ahead with this plan in some form or another, believing that whites and blacks would never be able to live together as equals. Its possible that he even held this less-than-enlightened position right up until the very end.
It turns out that old Abe wasnt quite the saint everyone would have you believe.
Before anyone asks. No, there is no internet link for what I wrote. You will need to visit a library and read a real book....
PJT wrote:
I didn't say there are any other grievances between the federal and state governments.
Hmmm. You sound like a defends of slavery and destruction of the Union.
Yep! Lincoln was our worst president.
He was wrong in preserving the Union. The
Majority of Americans were wrong to want the Union preserved, inc. Many many Southerers.
And the anti slavery forces were wrong morally and legally. The My Klux Klan would salute your views.