Posted: 17 February 2010 at 2:59pm | IP Logged | 2
|
|
|
Paul, I could happily quip that ALL history is revisionist, because post-modernists don't believe in absolute truth and we pull from history only what we need to support the attitudes and movements of today. After all, in my lifetime I've seen Louis Riel go from traitor to patriot because we need aboriginal symbols and want to be more sensitive to minorities, while the cold, absolute facts about the man have not changed. (We just see the shades of gray in a new light...) However, as a student of history, I personally do believe in absolute truth and I try to remove the barnacles that grow attached over time that obscure the truth. First, let's remove some barnacles from our conversation. My comments were originally directed in reply to Brad Krawchuk who in articulating the plight and mistreatment of blacks in America included the statement "Which of those groups is considered 1/3 of a person in the Constitution?" The inaccurate math aside, Brad and many people today seek to claim the 3/5 ths compromise is clear evidence that the Founders didn't care one whit about black people. "Blacks weren't even considered a full person to those racist Founders!" is a comment you'll often hear in the black community. (I know: part of my job responsibilities include being the liaison to the black community in my city.) The fact that the 3/5 ths compromise ONLY applied to slaves and NOT free blacks in the North and South is neglected in the effort to make political points about racism. Truth is secondary to maintaining the belief that old dead white guys are racists and their constitution thus invalid. What is the truth? The 3/5 ths compromise was about political power, more specifically about limiting the political power that could be exerted by the South in the coming union. The South wanted to count the slaves as population to get additional representation in the House of Representatives and the Electoral College. The North, particularly the anti-slave Founders, didn't want the slaves to count as population for representation if they had no rights as citizens and remained slaves. (Again, remember, this is not about racism: Free blacks counted as FULL citizens, because they WERE full citizens. And if they held land, they even had the VOTE, unlike women, slaves and non-land holders.) Limiting the political power of the South meant that the South could not fully exert its mores, attitudes and social systems upon federal legislation. It forestalled any possible changes to and the overturning of legislation like the Ordinance of 1787. As new non-slave states were added to the union and as northern states abolished slavery, this led ultimately to a rough balance between the number of free states and slave states. Thus, because of this rough balance, the Missouri Compromise could be overturned in the Senate. Dred Scott, of course, changed that progress. And again, you continue to misinterpret my earlier claim. I have not said the 3/5 ths compromise "ultimately ended slavery" as you state in your post and have suggested previously. In my reply to Brad I said the 3/5 ths compromise (which he claimed to be an example of racism) was "a measure to ultimately END slavery." Unlike your tautology "slavery was a measure to end slavery", the 3/5 ths compromise was a limitation of political power, influence and control of the pro-slave South in the federal union that in time contributed to the balance between free and slave states prior to the Civil War. (Would the Civil War, and the abolishment of slavery, have come about without this rough balance between free and slave states? Could this rough balance have ever come about if the South had those extra 2/5 ths of representational power?) Imagine the alternative you are arguing for: that somehow it would be better if the Constitution counted slaves as full persons so as to increase the representation of the South in Congress. "Congratulations! I know you're held captive against your will, been bought and sold like chattel and have no rights as a citizen of this fair country, but thanks to you we've got more representation in Congress that wants to keep things just the way they are. Nice and status-quo-like. Don't you feel better about yourself? Now get back to work before you taste my whip!" Or, using a similar tautology that you've expressed above, because the anti-slavery Founders did not want to count slaves as whole persons for the purposes of calculating southern representation and allowing undue influence by the pro-slave South on the union they were obviously racists (because they didn't want to count the slaves as whole persons). What gets lost in the equation is the word "compromise". ANY reduction in the counting of slaves as whole persons for determining representation while they remained enslaved without any rights of citizenship was a victory for the anti-slavery forces who did not want them to count at all. No revisionism necessary; just pure logic and simple math. Was it perfect compromise? No. Was it a compromise that immediately put an end to slavery? Unfortunately, no, but neither was that the intent nor was such a measure likely. The 3/5 ths compromise was a step in the right direction. As I learned a long time ago, politics is the art of the possible, and sometimes the possible just isn't possible right now. Paul, you're quite correct that this country has made its share of mistakes in that past, and I don't believe my comments varnish over that. Moreover, unlike many countries in the world, America not only recognizes its mistakes but also seeks to make amends. Meanwhile, in nations across the globe today slavery is a common and accepted practice. Indeed, one could argue the Asian and Caribbean sweatshops and factories that pump out your Nikes and iPods are essentially operating with slave labour. We can argue about the fair historical representation to those who endured the crimes of the past. I am in no way meaning to minimize the crimes of the past, but would we not be better stewards of the moment if we invested our energies in helping those who endure the crimes of today?
Edited by Matthew McCallum on 17 February 2010 at 4:25pm
|