Cancelling ‘Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Lee’?
Article by William Sullivan in "The American Thinker":
The
most popular musical act of the 1940s was a trio of ladies named Patty,
LaVerne, and Maxene, collectively known as the Andrews Sisters. Their
patriotic tunes are particularly nostalgic for me, a child of the Reagan
era who had a special appreciation for the Abbott and Costello movies
in which they sometimes appeared.
Bud and Lou’s first starring roles came in the comedy film Buck Privates,
and it remains one of their most popular. The movie released in early
1941, prior to America’s entry into World War II, and amidst the
backdrop of the first peacetime conscription in American history, the
Selective Training and Service Act of 1940. The Andrews Sisters
featured prominently in its musical interludes. The most famous tune
from the movie was probably “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy of Company B,” but
in recent weeks, I’ve been reminded of another of their popular songs
from the film, because the spirit of the song serves as a time capsule
which could not exist in starker contrast to the spirit of the country
today.
Consider the opening verses of a tune that they sing as a reminder to the American everyman, “You’re a Lucky Fellow, Mr. Smith”:
You’re a lucky fellow, Mr. Smith,To be able to live as you do.And to have that swell Miss Liberty galCarrying the torch for you.You’re a lucky fellow, Mr. Smith,Do you know just how highly you rate?You should thank your lucky stars, and I meanYou should thank all 48.Man, you’ve really got a family tree,With Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Lee.You’re lucky to have ancestors like that,Don’t you know you were born with a feather in your hat?You’re a very, very wealthy gent.I don’t care if you haven’t a cent.You’ve got your American way,And, brother, that ain’t hay.
The
song was clearly meant to stir America’s patriotic sap, including later
references to our “freedom of speech” and our “great Constitution,” but
perhaps you noticed that interesting line in the third verse
referencing “Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Lee?”
There’s
no mystery about the inclusion of Washington, Jefferson, and Lincoln,
but you might be surprised about the song’s inclusion of one Mr. Robert
Edward Lee. Though you might not know it in today’s American cultural
landscape, Robert E. Lee was broadly revered as an example of an
American hero until about five minutes ago, when ignorant adult children
and their Marxist instructors reimagined him as an irredeemable villain
and began tearing down his many monuments.
Just one of many presidents
to have spoken reverently about the man is Dwight D. Eisenhower, who
explained why Lee’s portrait was among the four “great Americans” that
hung in his office. He said that Lee was:
…one of the supremely gifted men produced by our Nation… selfless almost to a fault… noble as a leader and as a man, and unsullied as I read the pages of our history. From deep conviction I simply say this: a nation of men of Lee’s caliber would be unconquerable in spirit and soul.
Indeed,
for the vast majority of America’s history since 1865, Robert E. Lee
has been known as one of the greatest Americans to have ever lived,
which is quite a feat when one considers that the most famous aspect of
his life occurred as a military leader in rebellion to the United States
government. But this son of a Revolutionary War hero, “Light-Horse”
Harry Lee, had over three decades of valorous service to his country
under his belt before being asked to lead the Union against his home
state of Virginia in 1861. He refused, which some might say was the
honorable choice.
Anyone
who can appreciate the contextual nuances of history should be able to
understand that, in Lee’s time, there was an as yet unresolved question
in America as to whether one’s final allegiance should be owed to one’s
own state, or to the United States government. James Buchanan’s
Secretary of State, Lewis Cass, summed
the conflict up thusly: “I speak to Cobb, and he tells me he is a
Georgian; to Floyd, and he tells me he is a Virginian; to you, and you
tell me you are a Carolinian. I am not a Michigander; I am a citizen of
the United States.”
Like Thomas Jefferson, whose gravestone
refers to his Virginian heritage more prominently than his identity as
an American, Lee believed his loyalty to Virginia as more central to his
identity than his loyalty to the Federal Union of the states. And
rather than taking up arms against his home state, Lee reluctantly
served the Confederacy to defend his family and neighbors with his
considerable military prowess. After the Civil War, he sought and was
granted amnesty in order to lead other former Confederates to do the
same, and thus unify the nation in the aftermath of their failed war for
independence.
For
those reasons and much, much more, Robert E. Lee has been viewed almost
universally as a great man for much of our nation’s history. But
today, historical revisionists have reduced his storied legacy to one
damning feature that can be fit in a protest sign -- he was a
slaveowner. Therefore, like the Soviet politburos and Taliban
iconoclasts before them, they are working tirelessly to destroy or
rename all streets, parks, schools, and monuments that bear his name
and/or visage in order to expunge his legacy from the collective mind.
But there’s a problem with all of this, which President Trump wisely predicted.
If our culture commits to cancelling Lee because he did not subscribe
to modern moral understanding about the questions of slavery and race
relations, then we certainly have to cancel Washington and Jefferson,
who both owned slaves, and fought to create a nation in which slavery
would be legal. All of the other gifts that these men have given to the
world must be reduced to that one fact, progressives demand. And as
you should have expected, Jefferson and Washington are also having their
monuments destroyed by ignorant vandals, and SJWs are winning Pulitzers
for inventing fictional and nonsensical tales about how Washington and Jefferson were actually fighting to keep the British from taking their slaves away back in 1776.
So,
Lee is cancelled, and we’re headlong into the process of permanently
cancelling Washington and Jefferson. Among those American ancestors
that we were so lucky to have, as the Andrews Sisters’ ditty went, only
Lincoln remains.
But for how long?
You
see, Lincoln was indeed an abolitionist, but you will find very little
information that he was in favor of making equal citizens of the slaves
that he wished to be free prior to 1863. What you will find, however,
is evidence that he was more than willing to sign a law making slavery
“irrevocable” to avoid the prospect of civil war (see: 1861 Inaugural Address) and that he favored the “colonization option” for freed slaves, supporting
a $600K Congressional expenditure to ship the freed slaves away from
American shores, and openly suggested that blacks in America were
“selfish” to not submit to being shipped off to a distant land.
So,
Lincoln may not be canceled just yet, but is it really hard to believe
that progressive revisionists won’t be tearing down his statues soon,
too? Especially when they hear that he told Stephen Douglas, while
debating in favor of abolition, that he would
never intend to make "voters or jurors of negroes" and that he, "as
much as any man" among the populace he entreated, was "in favor of
having the superior position" among the races "assigned to the white
man?"
This
slippery slope in our current culture shouldn’t be too difficult to
identify. If this formula persists, all Americans throughout history
who didn’t subscribe to the most modern and radical progressive
doctrines will soon be cancelled, and their legacies destroyed like
countless memorials to the great Robert E. Lee, in an effort to raze the
very foundations of Western civilization, and to replace them with
whatever might suit these Marxist reformers better.
All
of humanity is flawed, but for most of our nation’s history, we’ve been
able to understand that men like Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and Lee
were great men in spite of their flaws, and reason demands that we view
their unique challenges in appropriate context. As Thomas Sowell wrote in his 2002 column titled “Twisted History”:
In 1862, a ship carrying slaves from Africa to America, in violation of a ban on the international slave trade, was captured. The crew were imprisoned and the captain was hanged in the United States -- despite the fact that slavery itself was still legal in both Africa and the U.S. at the time.What does this tell us? That enslaving people was considered an abomination but what to do with millions of people who were already enslaved was not equally clear.That question was finally answered by a war in which one life was lost for every six people freed. Maybe that was the only answer. But don't pretend today that it was an easy answer -- or that those who grappled with the dilemma in the 18th century were some special villains, when most leaders and most people around the world at that time saw nothing wrong with slavery.
These
American leaders represent America, and they are worthy of our
reverence. And while we should recognize the flaws of our leaders (they
are not exalted kings or Soviet Premiers, after all), we should
certainly appreciate their considerable contributions in creating the
freest nation the world has ever known -- one which we are now watching
being burned to the ground in a violent tantrum by their ignorant,
weak-minded, and petulant national descendants who’ve done nothing but
selfishly reap its material fruits.
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