As we have stated, the Colossal Lie of their ‘Civil War’
was the culmination of ALL denoted herein & below!
Deo Vindice,
Craig Maus,
President, The Confederate Society of America
_____________________________________
From: James King [mailto:jkingantiquearms@bellsouth.net]
Sent: Thursday, 2014 2:19 PM
To: SouthernRights@yahoogroups.com; csacommand@windstream.net
Subject: Socialism-Lincoln To Obama
Sent: Thursday, 2014 2:19 PM
To: SouthernRights@yahoogroups.com; csacommand@windstream.net
Subject: Socialism-Lincoln To Obama
SOCIALISM-LINCOLN
TO OBAMA
Author-Unknown
In an essay entitled "Lincoln, the Declaration, and
Secular Puritanism: A Rhetoric for Continuing Revolution," the late
literary scholar Mel Bradford explained the ideological genesis of American
military and foreign policy that has prevailed since 1863. Lincoln’s "erroneous understanding of the Declaration of
Independence" as espoused in The
Gettysburg Address, wrote Bradford, established "a rhetoric for
continuing revolution" and "set us forever to ‘trampling
out the grapes of wrath.’"
What Bradford meant by this is the way in which Lincoln
quoted the "all men are created equal" line from the Declaration and
reinterpreted it to mean that it was somehow the duty of Americans to stamp out
all sin in the world, wherever it may be found, so that ALL MEN
everywhere could share in equal freedom. Hence the "rhetoric of continuing
revolution." The "Battle Hymn of the Republic," which referred
to the death of some 850,000 Americans (the latest estimate of the "Civil
War" death toll) as "the glory of the coming of the lord," went
a long way toward implanting this vision in the minds of Americans. The
decades-long deification of Lincoln after his death (by the Republican Party
with the help of the New England clergy) served (and serves) the same purpose.
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Prior to
1863 American foreign policy was based mostly on the Washington/Jeffersonian
ideology of commercial relations with all nations, entangling alliances
with none. It was considered a virtue to remain neutral in
disputes between two other countries. As Murray Rothbard wrote in an essay
entitled "Just War," in those days "neutrality was considered
not only justifiable but a positive virtue." In the old days, "he
who kept
us out of war" was a great tribute to any political leader, wrote Rothbard, and "standing idly by" while
other nations warred with each other was "a mark of high statesmanship."
Lincoln and his political descendants in both major
political parties, but especially the Republican Party, changed all that with
their enormously successful implantation of Lincoln’s imperialist fantasies
about perfecting the entire planet as the bedrock of American foreign policy
ideas.
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Only a believer in such fantasies could work as a speech
writer for President George W. Bush and put in his mouth words about
"eliminating evil from the earth," which Dub-Yuh declared as his goal
in commencing his "War on Terra." (His speech writers never could
teach him to enunciate the words "terror" and "nuclear," as
opposed to "terra" and "nuke-you-ler"). Indeed, Republican
Party Propaganda organs such as the Claremont Institute have been almost exclusively
devoted for decades to spreading this Lincolnian propaganda by pretending
to be the One Sole Source of Truth about THE REAL MEANING of the Declaration of
Independence (in sharp contrast to the meaning intended by the author of the
Declaration, Thomas Jefferson).
It is the rhetoric of continuing military aggression, which
of course is why the Claremont Institute has handed out "Statesman of the
Year" awards in recent years to such figures as Donald Rumsfeld, Dick
Cheney, and war propagandist Victor Davis Hanson.
This Lincolnian rhetoric has been the ideological
cornerstone of all American wars ever since the "Civil War." It is
usually used to disguise from the public the fact that war is always and
everywhere a racket, as General Smedley Butler proclaimed in his famous book, War is a Racket. In
reality, war is almost always waged over some hidden economic reasons
for the benefit of the politically-connected class. As Rothbard pointed
out, in the old days, "interventionists were more correctly considered
propagandists for despotism, mass murder, and perpetual war, if not spokesmen
for special interest groups, or agents of ‘the merchants of death.’ Scarcely a
high ground."
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But
today, armed with this hoary Lincolnian ideology, the American empire continues
its generations-long crusade of "perpetual war for perpetual peace"
where "we are obligated to take up the sword and wage a perpetual war to
force Utopia on the entire world by guns, tanks, and bombs," according to
Rothbard. We are "humanitarians with a guillotine," as Isabel
Patterson described us in her book, The God of the Machine,
pursuing "freedom and equality" for the people of other countries,
even if we must kill them by the hundreds of thousands and bomb and wreck their
civilizations. "The humanitarian in theory is the terrorist in
action," wrote Isabel Patterson.
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Which brings us to the latest rendition of Lincolnian
humanitarianism with a guillotine, Obama’s recent speech before the United
Nations. The speech could have been written by the Claremont Institute’s Harry
Jaffa himself, the high priest of Lincoln idolatry and keeper of political
correctness when it comes to interpreting the Declaration of Independence. In
his September 25 speech before the United Nations Obama eulogized the American
"representative" to Libya, Chris Stevens, who was murdered by
anti-American protesters. Obama praised Stevens for having gone to Libya as his
representative, and having "crafted a vision for a future" for
Libyans.
Think about that from the perspective of a Libyan. A
foreign government instigates a revolution; imposes a puppet
government; and then announces the "vision" that you
must live by, presumably forever. You and your fellow citizens have nothing
whatsoever to do with the elements of that "vision" or its
enforcement by the puppet government.
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Obama
then went on to boast of all the recent American military aggressions in the
name of humanitarianism, including interventions in Iraq, Afghanistan,
Egypt, Yemen, and Libya, while threatening future wars with Syria and Iran
("We again declare that the regime of Bashar al-Assad must come to an end
. . .").
Then came the "justification" for all of this
military interventionism in the form of a textbook example of Lincolnian
rhetoric of continuing revolution:
"We have taken these positions because we believe that
freedom and self determination are not unique to one culture. These are not
simply American values or Western values – they are universal values. And even
as there will be huge challenges that come with a transition to democracy,
I am convinced that ultimately government of the people, by the people
and for the people is more likely to bring about the stability,
prosperity, and individual opportunity that serve as a basis for peace in our
world" (emphasis added).
Obama then promised more perpetual war for
perpetual peace by declaring that "America will never retreat from the
world" and that "No government or company; no school or NGO will be
confident working in a country where its people are endangered . . . our
citizens must be secure and our efforts must be welcomed."
That is, since Americans work and travel all
over the world, any time "we" detect "danger" in any
country anywhere, "we" believe that we have the "right" to
either invade that country or to have our CIA orchestrate a bloody revolution
there which may well cause the death of thousands. All men everywhere must be
made equal – or else.
September 27, 2012
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