1864 & Me
A response to Southern Appeal.
Some of the good folks at Southern Appeal have taken umbrage at my essay Monday, which drew parallels between Sunday’s Iraq election and the American presidential election of 1864. At least one is demanding an apology for my having purportedly compared soldiers who fought bravely for the Confederacy to terrorists killing civilians in Iraq. Had I done anything so shameful, I would not hesitate to apologize–and to check myself into the nearest mental ward. As I have done no such thing, and would not, I don’t apologize. I do, however, think it’s appropriate to respond to some of the points raised.
First and foremost, the Confederate soldier was an honorable combatant. From the perspective of the
To accuse me of drawing a moral equivalence between the Confederate soldier and the al Qaeda terrorist simply because I recognize a parallel in the effects of the different wars on the electoral process is as groundless as would be a contention by me that my critic is in favor of slavery because he has a harsh view of Abraham Lincoln and a favorable view of Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Taney (author of the Dred Scott decision). I wouldn't attribute such base motives to my critic, so I am at a loss to understand how he does not think I know the difference between an honorable soldier and a terrorist.
Second, I never said, nor do I believe, that there were no excesses in the imposition of martial law. There clearly were. But the fact that there were many incidents of suppression of mere dissent does not eradicate the fact that
It is unknown exactly how many civilians were arrested by military authorities during the Civil War. Estimates range from 13,000 to 38,000. Most of these arrests were in the
Stone, Perilous Times — Free Speech in Wartime, at p. 124. It is important to consider the excesses in this context. I did not say that the arrests of those engaging in dissent was courageous; nor do I think it is fair to say, as my critic does, that they were the "acts of a tyrant." They were, instead, the unavoidably erratic acts of a government dealing with a true existential crisis — and it bears mentioning that Lincoln himself believed much of what was done in the way of stifling lawful protest (which he often learned of only after the fact) was excessive. I do think
Third, turning to my discussion about the struggle between Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney, my critic claims I am whitewashing more of
Obviously, this was not intended as a disquisition on habeas corpus jurisprudence; I was simply observing what I regard as an interesting historical parallel: viz., that the suitability of the civilian courts for dealing with wartime exigencies was an issue just as vexing and controversial in 1864 as it is today. But as long as my critic brings up suspension of the writ: (a) at the time Lincoln suspended the writ, it was not settled law that the executive did not have that power; (b) there is nothing in the text of the Suspension Clause that indicates the president does not have this power — the clause merely says that the writ may only be suspended in cases of rebellion or invasion, not who may suspend it; (c) the Supreme Court ultimately held that Congress alone had the power based on the structure of the Constitution (the Suspension Clause is in Article I, Sec. 9), but that hardly meant Lincoln's construction had been an unreasonable one; and (d) certainly the historical evidence does not support that Lincoln made an unnecessary and blatantly unconstitutional power grab: on March 3, 1863, the Congress endorsed Lincoln's suspension of the writ, enacting a law (12 Stat 755) which stated that "during the present rebellion, the President of the United States, whenever, in his judgment, the public safety may require it, is authorized to suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus in any case throughout the United States, or any part thereof." (See Stone, Perilous Times, supra, at 581 n.173).
This leads to the next turn in my critic's moral equivalence mode of thinking: the suggestion that because I have compared the wartime detention situation I am thoughtlessly dragging President Bush, who has been respectful of the Court's precedents, down to the level of President Lincoln, who my critic believes reviled the Court. No one actually familiar with my support of President Bush's treatment of enemy combatants could really think I have anything but the highest regard for what the administration has done in this area, and anyone familiar with the president's graciousness can only suppose he would be thrilled at being put on a par with Lincoln. But, in any event, I would remind my critic that not everyone shares his view of the current administration's adherence to what is now settled law (but was unsettled when
Fourth, in my discussion of the 1864 Democrats (which primarily quoted from their party platform, expressed at the Democratic Convention of August 1864) (see David Herbert Donald,
Fifth, I don't believe the historians' consensus is, as my critic suggests, that
Sixth, and finally, I simply don't understand my critic's being incensed at my comparison of
This is a patent distortion. My point was that war is hell because even victories can never be fully divorced from man's inhumanity to man.
The anguish caused by the Civil War can never be removed and must never be forgotten. A great benefit, however, came out of all that suffering: the Union was preserved, which means the great states of the South remain a crucial part of our national fabric — not to mention the home of a disproportionately large number of the brave men and women putting their lives on the line in the armed services of the
