Commenting on Walter E. Williams’s “Were Confederate
Generals Traitors?,” June 28, 2017, creators.com/read/walter-williams/06/17/were-confederate-generals-traitors.
Williams
chose a controversial question: “Did the South have a right to secede from the
Union?” I think it’s as erroneous a question as “Why does anything exist
instead of nothing?” A
reasonable response to the treason question is: If the South had won, they
would have established the right to secede. Perhaps the South was the victim of
1500 years of erroneous religious belief.
Williams
answers that King George III would have held George Washington to be a traitor
against England, and similarly might hold R. E. Lee a traitor to the USA, since
both fought for independence.
However,
Williams poses a false comparison. England was an empire that was unjustly
ruling a colony---enslaving the loyal colonists to benefit loyal subjects in
England---whereas the states were in a perpetual confederation. Williams
overlooks this document of perpetual commitment by the colonies turned states:
Agreed to by Congress 15
November 1777
Articles of Confederation and
perpetual Union between the states of New Hampshire, Massachusetts-bay Rhode
Island and Providence Plantations, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and
Georgia.
Every State shall abide by the
determination of the United States in Congress assembled, on all questions
which by this confederation are submitted to them. And the Articles of this
Confederation shall be inviolably observed by every State, and the Union shall
be perpetual; nor shall any alteration at any time hereafter be made in any of
them; unless such alteration be agreed to in a Congress of the United States,
and be afterwards confirmed by the legislatures of every State.
A critical
phrase is “perpetual Union,”
which would be denied by slave states in 1860. The USA did not accept their
opinion.
Williams,
as is typical of Western propriety, overlooks the ancient evil done by the
Catholic Church, which led to the US slavery problem to start with. The evil of
African slaves, that continental commodity, has always been known:
chains, whips, brutality and rape to black slaves with physical burdens to
masters and psychological burdens to owners. The Church is without excuse for
including books that condone slavery. In the 300 AD to 400 AD, the Church
canonized the Christian Bible. The Church is also without excuse for assigning
Portugal a monopoly on African slave trade in the east and Spain in the west and
for the doctrine of discovery in the 15th century.
I’ll return to religion later.
The
colonists objected to the African slave trade during their decision to become
statesmen. From 1720 to 1765, colonists accumulated the courage to confront
England’s injustices, also debating how they would emancipate the slaves once
they gained states’ independence. The statesmen found themselves in charge of
persons displaced from their homelands and knew not how to either return them
or accommodate them as free citizens in this land. As thirteen independent
states, they soon realized they must establish a nation. They negotiated an
organization with federalism: The people would govern their states and a
limited nation would serve the people in their states. The draft
constitution represented a drastic change from a confederation serving
the states to a nation serving the people in their states.
The
signers of the draft constitution provided for the end of slave trade and for
representation of slaves in Congress but did not emancipate the slaves---left
that justice for a viable future, perhaps yet to be attained even in 2017. When
nine states ratified the draft constitution on June 21, 1788, the four lagging
states had to decide whether to remain independent yet confederated or join the
USA. The laggards included Virginia, New York, North Carolina, and Rhode Island,
the later two joining many months after the 1st Congress was seated.
Their ratification debates become moot as to effects on the USA, except insofar
as the nine states had agreed to include a bill of rights to be negotiated by the
1st Congress. The 1st Congress neither proposed
nor effected revision of the preamble.
The
preamble does not break the commitment in perpetuity on which the thirteen
states declared and won independence from England. The perpetual Union
remained, but responsibility had been transferred from the states to the people
in their states. So far, after 229 years, the people have neglected that
responsibility. Many descendants of the slaves and other blacks dismiss the preamble.
Some citizens look to government as surrogate to personal responsibility and
some depend on their personal God, neither of which has proven reliable, as
demonstrated by the Civil War, as explained below. Yet there are some citizens
who willingly trust in the purpose and goals stated in the preamble: They look
to other willing people for civic justice.
Returning
to religion’s role in the injustices, America, so far, seems a willing victim
of the canonization of the Bible, the Atlantic Slave trade, and the doctrine of
discovery. It is difficult to separate the historical facts from the outcome: they
are related. However, if most people adopt the preamble to the constitution for
the USA they may establish public integrity for discovering civic morality. The
outcome of a troubled history can be favorable, and the past may be put aside.
Under that possibility, religious doctrine that conforms to civic morality may
flourish. It does the people no harm if someone believes they must save their
soul, as long as they do not ruin other people’s lives in the pursuit of
salvation.
Rather
than candidly rely on the-objective-truth, at each major step, all but two
authors, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, appealed to divinity---however
the authors chose to refer to whatever divinity may be. They started vaguely,
in the Declarations of the first Congress, 1774:
That the inhabitants of the
English colonies in North-America, by the immutable laws of nature, the
principles of the English constitution, and the several charters or compacts,
have the following RIGHTS . . .
Then
with specific divinity in the Declaration of Independence, 1776:
When in the Course of human
events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands
which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the
earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of
Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires
that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.
In the
Articles of Confederation, 1777:
And Whereas
it hath pleased the Great Governor of the World to incline the hearts of the
legislatures we respectively represent in Congress, to approve of, and to
authorize us to ratify the said Articles of Confederation and perpetual Union.
Breaking
the tradition, George Washington, in June 1783, chose not to impose a divinity
into civic morality. This quote seems a forecast of the subject of the preamble,
We the People of the United States:
There are four things,
which I humbly conceive, are essential to the well being, I may even venture to
say, to the existence of the United States as an Independent Power: An indissoluble Union of the States under one
Federal Head; A Sacred regard to Public Justice; The adoption of a proper Peace
Establishment; and The prevalence of that pacific and friendly Disposition,
among the People of the United States, which will induce them to forget their
local prejudices and policies, to make those mutual concessions which are
requisite to the general prosperity, and in some instances, to sacrifice their
individual advantages to the interest of the Community.
It
disturbed dissidents during 1787 through 1791 that the preamble did not invoke divinity,
and some dissidents to this day strive to add divine invocation to the preamble.
The preamble states the purpose “to form a more perfect Union,”
which does not signal terminating the perpetuity.
The
South Carolina Declaration of Secession, 1860, invokes religion as a concluding
concern:
. . . the non-slaveholding
States . . have denounced as sinful the institution of slavery. Sectional
interest and animosity will deepen the irritation, and all hope of remedy is
rendered vain, by the fact that public opinion at the North has invested a
great political error with the sanction of more erroneous religious belief.
President
Lincoln, on March 4, 1861, responded to the threat of war, returning to
Washington and the preamble’s dependence on the people:
Why should there not be a
patient confidence in the ultimate justice of the people? Is there any better
or equal hope in the world? In our present differences, is either party without
faith of being in the right? If the Almighty Ruler of Nations, with His eternal
truth and justice, be on your side of the North, or on yours of the South, that
truth and that justice will surely prevail by the judgment of this great
tribunal of the American people.
This
last item in the catalog of possible appeals to divinity is Lincoln’s
explicit claim that God, mysterious as God may be, leaves the consequence of
war to the people. Civil War,
like any other war, is determined by military might.
The
confederate states, at that time 7 CSA states against 27 USA states, believed
God would answer their prayers rather that the USA’s prayers. Having accused
the North of “more erroneous religious belief,” they embarked on a war that
shows that their interpretation of the Christian Bible cannot be trusted. I
count them victims of the Catholic Church and personal rejection of reason more
than traitors.
However,
I don’t want apology or reform from the Catholic Church beyond, in the USA, the
Church adopting the preamble more than church doctrine. To serve We the People
of the United States, all religions must conform to civic morality.
I want
most of the people in their states to adopt the preamble as a tool for
establishing public integrity in the USA. After 229 years, the USA is still in
the drastic change from a confederation serving the states to a nation serving
the people in their states: the people may accept that
responsibility by collaborating for comprehensive safety and security. The meaning of “comprehensive”
in that phrase may be discovered in the-objective-truth.
Copyright©2017 by Phillip R. Beaver. All rights reserved.
Permission is hereby granted for the publication of all or portions of this paper
as long as this complete copyright notice is included.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThe Catholic church is at fault now? Who are you, Mr. Beaver? I clicked on your "view my complete profile" link, and all that came up were endless blogs. Not one word about "who" you are. From this lame post, I can only surmise you are a Protestant troll once again injecting the Catholic Church as a casus belli for all things that are wrong in the world. America at the formation stages, was a Protestant nation. The southern states were 99% Protestant. It was the Protestant faithful who brought slavery to the New World.
ReplyDeleteOf course, you must be so happy for your protest brethren. What are there now, some 40,000 protestant churches with new ones forming by the day? You are also a sophist and no amount of knowledge can break a sophist out of his own self-deception. A sophist is a person who reasons with clever, but fallacious and deceptive arguments, and Mr. Beaver must be at the head of the list. Just because someone has learning, doesn't mean that they've also got great understanding. One can read a thousand books or write a thousand blogs and be all the worse for it.
The defining characteristic of a sage is his simplicity, humility, clarity, and deftness at comprehending and using what he knows without doing any violence to the facts...as the world presents them! And that's just not who Mr. Beaver's is.
Mr. Korkus, I apologize for missing your post for so long. My writing has improved, I think, because I stopped referencing scholarly opinion so as to write only what I propose for civic collaboration.
DeleteIn my sixth year inviting civic meetings at libraries, a recent consequence is an interpretation of the preamble to the U.S. Constitution: willing citizens collaborate for five public institutions---integrity, justice, peace, strength, and welfare---to encourage responsible human liberty to living people.
The preamble says nothing about religion so as to assign it to responsible human liberty.
I encourage every citizen or aspiring citizen to write the interpretation of the U.S. preamble he or she would like to live under in order to develop and practice statutory justice. This is only a part of my work, and I hope it restores your interest in it.
Phil Beaver
Also, about who I am, please see https://www.blogger.com/profile/01453746828255478352
ReplyDelete