Saturday, February 13, 2010

Lincoln's Extended Hand

clipped from biggovernment.com

As he prepared “Notes on Government” for publication in 1791, Congressman James Madison wrote a note to himself. “In proportion as slavery prevails in a State, the Government, however democratic in name, must be aristocratic in fact. The power lies in a part [of the people] instead of the whole, in the hands of property, not of numbers.” He drew a telling conclusion: “The Southern States of America,” very much including his native Virginia, “are on the same principle aristocracies.”

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As an architect of the new Constitution, Madison knew that Article IV, Section 4 says, “The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government.” He knew, therefore, that the American regime contained a self-contradiction.
It took civil war and Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation to continue the liberation that the founders had begun.
Lincoln extended his hand to Madison, redeeming the promise of the old fathers who had not lived to see the fulfillment