Mr. President, take heart you are in great company with  Lincoln and to a 
lesser degree FDR when it comes to the public's attitude and  appreciation in 
being a transformative President......one of just a few through  out our 
history as a nation.
 
 
In a message dated 5/29/2017 7:28:29 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:


April 27, 2017
The  Deification of Lincoln
(and of the American  State)
Thomas DiLorenzo

“The violence of the  criticism aimed at Lincoln by the great men of his 
time on both sides of the  Mason-Dixon line is startling.  The breadth and 
depth of the spectacular  prejudice against him is often shocking for its 
cruelty, intensity, and  unrelenting vigor.  The plain truth is that Mr. 
Lincoln 
was deeply  reviled by many who knew him personally, and by hundreds of 
thousands who only  knew of him.” -- Larry Tagg, _The  Unpopular Mr. Lincoln: 
America’s Most Reviled President_ 
(https://www.amazon.com/UNPOPULAR-MR-LINCOLN-Americas-President/dp/1932714618?SubscriptionId=AKIAI63WS3YGA3Y5U2QA&tag=lew
rockwell&linkCode=xm2&camp=2025&creative=165953&creativeASIN=1932714618) 



In his  book, The Unpopular Mr. Lincoln, historian Larry Tagg, a native of  
Lincoln, Illinois, constructs a powerful case that Abraham Lincoln was by 
far  the most hated and reviled of all American presidents, North and South,  
during his lifetime.  For example, in May of 1864 the New York  Times 
labeled Lincoln “a perjurer, a usurper, a tyrant, a subverter of the  
Constitution, a destroyer of the liberties of this country, a reckless  
desperado, a 
heartless trifler . . .  there is no circle in Dante’s  Inferno full enough of 
torment to expiate his iniquities.”

The  Lacrosse, Wisconsin Democrat newspaper warned in November of 1864 that 
 should Lincoln be reelected, “we hope that a bold hand will be found to 
plunge  the dagger into the tyrant’s heart . . .”  Such views were 
commonplace  in the North.

This all changed after Lincoln’s death, as the  Republican Party recruited 
(and probably paid quite handsomely) the New  England clergy to capitalize 
on the assassination for political propaganda  purposes.  Professor Tagg 
explains this in a chapter entitled “The Sudden  Saint.”  After viciously 
vilifying him for four years as an infidel, and  worse, “pastors across America 
rewrote their Easter sermons” after Lincoln’s  death on Good Friday, “to 
include a new, exalted view of Lincoln as an  American Moses, a leader out of 
slavery, a national savior who was not allowed  to cross over into the 
Promised Land.”  The Republican Party, with the  help of a highly-politicized 
clergy, saw that “all their political enemies  would fall before the sword that 
Lincoln’s death had put into their hands” in  the post-war world.

Such were the origins of the Lincoln Myth, a much  bigger rewriting of 
history than anything the Soviets or any other  totalitarian regime ever 
attempted, for it has been going on now for more than  150 years.  An important 
part of this story is told in a 1943 book that I  recently discovered entitled 
_The  Deification of Lincoln_ 
(https://www.amazon.com/Deification-Lincoln-Classic-Reprint/dp/0243389205?SubscriptionId=AKIAI63WS3YGA3Y5U2QA&tag=lewrockwe
ll&linkCode=xm2&camp=2025&creative=165953&creativeASIN=0243389205)  by Ira 
D. Cardiff.  It is for sale on  Amazon.com, and is also _online_ 
(https://archive.org/details/deificationoflin00card)  .   It was recently 
reprinted by 
the Christopher Publishing House of Boston and is  dedicated to “those 
lovers of truth who are unafraid of special interests,  public opinion or 
popular 
superstitions.”

The book starts out stating  that, by 1943 most Americans were already “not 
at all interested in the truth  about Lincoln” thanks to nearly eighty 
years of lies, myths, and superstitions  about him in thousands of books.  
“They 
are not interested, in other  words, in the real Lincoln,” wrote Cardiff.  “
They desire a supernatural  Lincoln, a Lincoln with none of the faults or 
frailties of the common man, a  Lincoln who is a savior, leading us to 
democracy and liberty -- though most of  said readers are not interested in 
democracy or liberty . . .”  Moreover,  “a biography of Lincoln which told the 
truth about him would probably have  great difficulty in finding a publisher.” 
 That was nearly seventy-five  years ago.

Nearly three quarters of a century before Larry Tagg’s book  was published, 
Ira Cardiff wrote of the widespread hatred and revulsion of  Lincoln by 
Northerners, especially the Northern clergy, and how that all  changed after 
his death for purely political reasons, based on an ever-growing  mountain of 
lies.  Cardiff focuses on perhaps the biggest lie told by the  
hyper-political New England clergy, the zealots who instigated the war in the  
name of 
eradicating America -- and then the world -- of sin in order to create  a 
Kingdom of God on Earth that would pave the way for the Second Coming of  
Christ.  That is what motivated the “abolitionist” movement much more  than 
concern for the slaves.  (See Murray Rothbard’s essay, “Just  War”).

All of a sudden, the atheist Abraham Lincoln was portrayed by  the lying 
New England clergy, in cahoots with the Republican Party, as the  holiest and 
most saintly man in America, if not on the entire planet.   His father, who 
he hated so much that he did not attend his funeral, suddenly  was said to 
have possessed “sterling mental and moral qualities.”   Lincoln the atheist 
was said to have spent most of his time on his knees in  prayer in the White 
House.  “His mother became second only to the Virgin  Mary in her chastity.”

“Thousands of sermons were preached to prove him  devoutly religious . . “ 
 There was of course never any evidence or proof  of any of this.  In fact, 
there is voluminous evidence that exactly the  opposite was true, as 
Cardiff explains in great detail.  The first  biographies of Lincoln, of which 
there are now over ten thousand, were filled  with statements like “He 
[Lincoln] believed in his inmost soul that he was an  instrument in the hands 
of God 
for the accomplishment of a great  purpose.”  It is of course absurd to 
assert that you know what is in a  man’s “innermost soul.”  Yours truly has 
found that contemporary  Lincoln biographies are polluted with similarly silly 
statements about what  was supposedly in Lincoln’s heart, his soul, his 
mind, etc.  Bill  O’Reilly’s _Killing  Lincoln_ 
(https://www.amazon.com/Killing-Lincoln-Shocking-Assassination-Changed/dp/0805093079?SubscriptionId=AKIAI63
WS3YGA3Y5U2QA&tag=lewrockwell&linkCode=xm2&camp=2025&creative=165953&creativ
eASIN=0805093079)  is especially ridiculous in this regard.  There are  
statements on nearly every page about what was “in his mind” or “in his  heart.
”

Another hallmark of contemporary Lincoln “scholarship” is the  repetition 
of statements just like this one from one of the very first Lincoln  
biographies:  “He was in the White House as God’s instrument.”  The  assumption 
here is that the biographer knows what is in the mind of God.   Such nonsense 
set the template for almost all future Lincoln biographies, with  very few 
exceptions.

Cardiff devoted much of his book citing primary  sources describing how 
atheistic and anti-religious the “saintly”  Lincoln really was.  For example, “
previous to his nomination for the  presidency, he was roundly condemned by 
the clergy as an infidel, while after  his martyrdom, the same clerics were 
loud in the claim of his piety  (emphasis added).”  Larry Tagg says the 
exact same thing.

When  Lincoln was a candidate for president, Cardiff points out, only three 
of the  twenty-three ministers in Springfield, Illinois supported him.  
Moreover,  early biographers who actually knew Lincoln had a very different 
take on his  views on religion than writers who never had any personal contact 
with him, or  anyone else who did.  Colonel Ward Lamon, a close friend and 
confidant of  Lincoln’s, wrote a biography in which he called Lincoln “an 
infidel.”   His personal White House secretary, John G. Nicolay, wrote that “
Mr. Lincoln  did not, to my knowledge, in any way, change his religious 
ideas, opinions of  beliefs from the time he left Springfield till the day of 
his death.”   Those “religious ideas” were the ideas of a non-believer.  
Nicolay made  this comment to counter the absurd lie pedaled by the Republican 
Party, the  New England clergy, and court historians after the war that 
Lincoln  experienced some kind of religious conversion late in life.  This lie 
is 
 still repeated to this day in myriad Lincoln biographies.

Judge David  Davis, who managed Lincoln’s presidential campaign and who was 
subsequently  appointed to the Supreme Court, wrote that Lincoln “had no 
faith, in the  Christian sense of the term . . .”  Lincoln’s wife, Mary Todd, 
said that  “Mr. Lincoln had no hope, and no faith, in the usual acceptation 
of those  words.”

All of this is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to The  Lincoln 
Myth, as I discuss in _The  Real Lincoln_ 
(https://www.amazon.com/Real-Lincoln-Abraham-Agenda-Unnecessary/dp/0761526463?SubscriptionId=AK
IAI63WS3YGA3Y5U2QA&tag=lewrockwell&linkCode=xm2&camp=2025&creative=165953&creativeASIN=0761526
463)  and _Lincoln  Unmasked_ 
(https://www.amazon.com/Lincoln-Unmasked-Youre-Supposed-Dishonest/dp/0307338428?SubscriptionId=AKIAI63WS3YGA3Y5U2QA&tag=le
wrockwell&linkCode=xm2&camp=2025&creative=165953&creativeASIN=0307338428) . 
 Mountains of lies, myths and superstitions envelope  almost every fact of 
Lincoln’s life, thanks to generations of “Lincoln  scholars.”  To be a 
card-carrying “Lincoln scholar” one must demonstrate  the ability to come up 
with at least a half dozen excuses or rationales for  every tyrannical or 
immoral act or words of Lincoln’s.  His lifelong  racist, white-supremacist 
speeches were not his sincere beliefs but a ploy to  win over white racist 
voters, we are told.  He objected “to making voters  or jurors of Negroes,” he 
said in a Lincoln-Douglas debate, so that Negroes  could eventually become 
voters and jurors, Harry Jaffa informed us in his last  book on “Father 
Abraham.”  He proposed the enshrinement of slavery  explicitly into the 
Constitution with the Corwin Amendment, Doris  Kearns-Goodwin informs us, to 
“save the 
Republican Party” so that it could,  someday, maybe in fifty years, end 
slavery.  When he advocated the  deportation or “colonization” of black 
people, “this is how honest people  lie,” Gabor Boritt tells us.  And on and 
on.  
As Cardiff  wrote:  “The unfortunate and defenseless public . . . is almost 
powerless  to protect itself from Lincoln hysteria.  If it attempts to get 
the truth  about Lincoln, it is confronted with a mountain of fable and 
froth,  foolishness and fancy . . . .  Of the thousands of books published on  
Lincoln [as of 1943], one can almost count on his fingers those of any value  
as critical, scientific productions.”

Cardiff believed that the U.S.  could have ended slavery peacefully, as all 
the rest of the world did in the  nineteenth century (including the 
British, French, Dutch, Danes, Swedes,  Spaniards, the northern states in the 
U.S.).  That would have taken a  real statesman, however, and not a small-time 
Illinois railroad lobbyist who  once stated his life’s aspiration as being the 
political party boss of  Illinois.  Without the war, wrote Cardiff:

“[T]here would have  been saved several million valuable lives and several 
billions of money . . .  .  But the secondary effects [of the war] were even 
more disastrous . . .  . the enmity and sectional hatred which arose, the 
political oligarchy of ex  soldiers with their disgusting pension raids upon 
the public treasury and a  monopoly by them of political offices, a false 
and distorted idea of  patriotism, the retardation to the material development 
of the South, the  racial hatred between southern whites and blacks greatly 
exaggerated . .  .”

To all of this “is now added the debasing moral effect of presenting  to 
the innocent youth of the land the account of a prominent national  character 
of this period in an utterly false light.”  Even worse, as  Clyde Wilson 
once remarked, is the fact that the deification of Lincoln led to  the 
deification of the presidency in general, and then eventually to the  entire 
government.

Robert Penn Warren wrote about this phenomenon in  his book, _The  Legacy 
of the Civil War_ 
(https://www.amazon.com/Legacy-Civil-Robert-Penn-Warren/dp/0803298013?SubscriptionId=AKIAI63WS3YGA3Y5U2QA&tag=lewrockwell&linkCode=xm2&c
amp=2025&creative=165953&creativeASIN=0803298013) , in which he explains 
how the Lincoln myth --  and myriad other myths about the war in general -- 
were used by the Republican  Party to create The Mother of All Political Myths 
-- that thanks to Lincoln,  the U.S. government had acquired a “treasury of 
virtue.”  This meant that  anything the government did from then on -- 
genocide against the Plains  Indians, murdering hundreds of thousands of 
Filipinos, the imperialistic  Spanish-American War, entering World War I, 
dropping 
atomic bombs on Japan,  etc., was virtuous, by definition, because it was 
the U.S. government  that was doing it.

The founding fathers never argued that Americans  were so morally 
exceptional that they therefore had a right to become the  bullies of the world 
and 
attempt to remake the entire planet in their  image.  That is the Lincoln 
legacy. Actually, the idea emanates  from the New England “yankees” and their 
Mid-Western compatriots like  Lincoln.  See Clyde Wilson’s “The Yankee 
Problem in America.”   Lincoln’s own political rhetoric, which has been 
faithfully repeated by  generations of court historians, is what the late 
Professor 
Mel Bradford  called “the rhetoric of continuing revolution.”  Others call 
it the  rhetoric of “American exceptionalism.”


https://lewrockwell.com/2017/04/thomas-dilorenzo/the-deification-of-lincoln/
   
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