PoliticalChic
Diamond Member
ā¦either ending the institution of slavery, or the creation of the United States?
1.Many times I have heard the ātime machine argumentāā¦.if you could go back in time would youā¦ā¦???
Often, the question is this disingenuous one, āwould you abort a fetus that you knew would be Adolph Hitler?ā It is used as a kind of ambush of pro-life folks. The right answer is no, because you cannot tell an unborn would be, and so very many random events could alter the course of a life. A Buddhist might refer to Indraās Net.
But, a less intense query is the aboveā¦.you could either have two nations, one with slavery, one free, or the nation we now call the United States.
That is the very real question that our Founders faced.
2.In actuality, that was the conflict facing the Founders. The decision that they made was supported years later by the greatest President in the last 100 years: he told aides on many occasions, āIād rather get 80 percent of what I want than go over the cliff with my flag flying.ā Ronald Reagan
Just so, the Founders compromised with the slaver-owners of the South, in order to form the finest nation the world had ever seen, while planning on coming back later to finish off slavery altogether. That design can be seen in denying the South the ability to count slaves fully in the census, which would have given them perpetual control of Congress.
3.Although his party was established to end slavery, the 16th President battled, a la Ronald Reagan, to save the nation as his first priority.
In an attempt to head off the impending war, Abraham Lincoln wrote to the Democrat who would become the vice-president of the Confederacy, promising that his administration had no intention of interfering with slaver in the states where it already existed.
Sadly, this didnāt prevent the South from starting the bloodiest war in our history.
4. But Lincoln made clear the difference between the Republican and the Democrat positions on slavery:
āI suppose, however, this does not meet the case. You think slavery is right and ought to be extended; while we think it is wrong and ought to be restricted. That I suppose is the rub. It certainly is the only substantial difference between us.ā Letter to Alexander H. Stephens
Abraham Lincoln
Springfield, Illinois
December 22, 1860
Did the Founders make the right choice, or wrong one?
1.Many times I have heard the ātime machine argumentāā¦.if you could go back in time would youā¦ā¦???
Often, the question is this disingenuous one, āwould you abort a fetus that you knew would be Adolph Hitler?ā It is used as a kind of ambush of pro-life folks. The right answer is no, because you cannot tell an unborn would be, and so very many random events could alter the course of a life. A Buddhist might refer to Indraās Net.
But, a less intense query is the aboveā¦.you could either have two nations, one with slavery, one free, or the nation we now call the United States.
That is the very real question that our Founders faced.
2.In actuality, that was the conflict facing the Founders. The decision that they made was supported years later by the greatest President in the last 100 years: he told aides on many occasions, āIād rather get 80 percent of what I want than go over the cliff with my flag flying.ā Ronald Reagan
Just so, the Founders compromised with the slaver-owners of the South, in order to form the finest nation the world had ever seen, while planning on coming back later to finish off slavery altogether. That design can be seen in denying the South the ability to count slaves fully in the census, which would have given them perpetual control of Congress.
3.Although his party was established to end slavery, the 16th President battled, a la Ronald Reagan, to save the nation as his first priority.
In an attempt to head off the impending war, Abraham Lincoln wrote to the Democrat who would become the vice-president of the Confederacy, promising that his administration had no intention of interfering with slaver in the states where it already existed.
Sadly, this didnāt prevent the South from starting the bloodiest war in our history.
4. But Lincoln made clear the difference between the Republican and the Democrat positions on slavery:
āI suppose, however, this does not meet the case. You think slavery is right and ought to be extended; while we think it is wrong and ought to be restricted. That I suppose is the rub. It certainly is the only substantial difference between us.ā Letter to Alexander H. Stephens
Abraham Lincoln
Springfield, Illinois
December 22, 1860
Did the Founders make the right choice, or wrong one?