http://newsrealblog.com/2009/10/26/now-im-only-going-to-say-this-once-the-th
ree-fifths-compromise/

Now I'm Only Going to Say This Once: The Three-Fifths Compromise
2009 October 26


While chiding Glenn Beck for his cherishing the U.S. Constitution,
MSNBC talk show host Ed Schultz repeated one of the most oft-repeated
lies about the Founding Fathers: they considered blacks less than
fully human. In an episode of "Psycho Talk," Schultz blasted Beck for
saying "Progressives" believe individuals are the problem, and "in
Samuel Adams's day, they used to call them tyrants. A little later, I
think they were also called slave owners."

Ed asked rhetorically, "Remember the three-fifths rule, where slaves
counted as three-fifths of a person? It's in Article 1, Section 2,
Paragraph 3 of the United States Constitution that you so passionately
defend," he helpfully pointed out. "Maybe you should add that to your
reading list."

Ed joins a throng of notables on the well-worn path of misinterpreting
the three-fifths clause (not "rule"; this isn't the NFL, Ed). No less
a constitutional scholar than Louis Farrakhan noted, "The South
argued, saying, 'Look, we gotta count these nigras.' And the North
said, 'They don't count. Them is nigras. They don't count!'.So you
were counted as three-fifths of a human."

Farrakhan actually got the two regions' positions correct: the North
did not want to count slaves and the South did. Examining this
logically, why would the North oppose slaves' humanity while the South
acted as its defender?

Because, like most threadbare myths of Progressives or racists, this
is transparent nonsense.

The three-fifths compromise has nothing to do with how closely related
blacks are to human beings: it had to do with how much power the
Constitution would invest in those who enslaved them. The article
Schultz cites resolved a dispute between Northern (as as they would
have called themselves, "Eastern") states and their Southern
counterparts over how seats in Congress would be apportioned. It
decreed taxes and representation would be determined according to each
state's "respective Numbers, which shall be determined by adding to
the whole Number of free Persons, including.three fifths of all other
Persons." The Founders pointedly avoided using the term "slaves," for
fear that would legitimize the institution.

Some spoke out against the proposition. Pierce Butler and Gen. Charles
Pickney, both of South Carolina, stood before the Constitutional
Convention to demand the government count each slave on an equal basis
with each white man. James Madison recorded in shorthand that Butler
believed adamantly, "Representation Sd.. be according to the full
number of inhabts. including all the blacks." Was Butler an early
egalitarian? Things become clearer when one learns Pierce Butler owned
as many as 500 slaves and authored the Fugitive Slave Clause. Indeed,
after the Revolution, Butler was so impoverished by British
devastation of his plantation that he got a loan in Amsterdam, with
which he purchased more slaves.

Southerners wanted all of the slaves counted, because that would
increase the power slaveholders wielded in Congress. Slaves - who,
naturally, could not vote - would nonetheless be given
"representatives" chosen by white slavers, who would vote to
perpetuate slavery and dilute the power of the industrializing North.
Northerners wanted no slaves, or a smaller percentage of slaves,
counted, to avoid opening the frontier to slavery. The Abolitionist
movement had already taken hold in the North, and many of the Founders
(contrary to Schultz) longed to abolish "the peculiar institution."

Pierce and the Pickering cousins were vigorously opposed by Gouverneur
Morris, a Pennsylvania delegate who gave an incendiary speech against
the three-fifths compromise during the Constitutional Convention in
1787:

===>

   The admission of slaves into the Representation when fairly
explained comes to this: that the inhabitant of Georgia and S. C. who
goes to the Coast of Africa, and in defiance of the most sacred laws
of humanity tears away his fellow creatures from their dearest
connections & damns them to the most cruel bondages, shall have more
votes in a Govt. instituted for protection of the rights of mankind,
than the Citizen of Pa. or N. Jersey who views with a laudable horror,
so nefarious a practice.

<===


In other words, the three-fifths compromise had nothing to do with
anthropological merit and everything to do with crafting the best
possible deal to dilute the slaveholders' power in the newborn
republic. It was as anti-slavery a compromise as the North could
implement.

This is not new information. This basic history is in any reputable
history textbook of the American founding (of which they are probably
too few). In fact, Glenn Beck explained it in thumbnail style the week
before Ed Schultz's segment. Yet shakedown artists, America-haters,
and "progressives" generally cannot keep themselves from repeating the
"three-fifths of a human being" mantra; it is simply too tantalizing
an indictment of the American system, "institutional racism," and the
evils of whitey. The lie is even included in a book marketed to help
Georgia's high school students pass that state's End of Course Test,
showing their comprehension of U.S. history. (The text includes an
erroneous quotation of "three-fifths of a person," as though this were
in the Constitution.)

This is one lesson the leftists, racists, and Islamists fail.

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