It
was in good faith that Americans in the South in 1865 laid down their
arms in expectation of Constitutional guarantees and rights within the
Union, and President Andrew Johnson naively assumed that the Radical
Congress would extend peace and such guarantees to the South.
Bernhard Thuersam, Chairman
North Carolina War Between the States Sesquicentennial Commission
"The Official Website of the North Carolina WBTS Sesquicentennial"
Absolute Despotism in America:
“The
veto of the Military Reconstruction bill was a more formidable
document, consisting of some 200,000 words or more. [President Johnson]
had examined the bill with care and anxiety; his reasons for vetoing it
were so grave that he hoped the outline of them might “have some
influence on the minds of the patriotic and enlightened men with whom
the decision must ultimately rest.”
The
bill “placed all people of the ten States therein named under the
absolute domination of military rulers.” The language of the preamble of
the bill, which undertook to justify such measures, failed to justify
them. The preamble had asserted that, in the States in question, legal
government did not exist, and that life and property were not adequately
protected. The President denied that this was a true point in fact.
The
ten States had actual and existing governments, quite as properly
organized as those of other States, and administering and executing laws
concerning their local problems.
The
Reconstruction bill, he continued, showed on its face that its real
object was not the establishment of peace and good order. Its fifth
section….revealed….that it sought to establish military rule, “not for
any purpose of order, or for prevention of crime, but solely as a means
for coercing the people in the adoption of principles and measures to
which it is known that they are opposed, and upon which they have an
undeniable right to exercise their own judgment.”
Did
not Congress realize, that such an act, in its “whole character, scope
and object, was without precedent and without authority,” in open
conflict with the plainest provisions of the Constitution, and “utterly
destructive to those great principles of liberty and humanity for which
our ancestors…have shed much blood.”
He
analyzed the powers of the military commander of a district, as those
being those of an absolute monarch. “His mere will is to take the place
of all law….Being bound by no State law, and there being no other law to
regulate the subject, he may make a criminal code of his own….He is
bound by no rules of evidence; there is indeed no provision by which he
is authorized or required to take any evidence at all. Everything is a
crime which he chooses to call so, and all persons are condemned whom he
pronounces to be guilty. “
Such
authority “amounts to absolute despotism,” and to make it even more
unendurable, the district commander could delegate it to as many
subordinates as he wished. For more than 500 years, no English monarch
had ruled with such power, in that time no English-speaking people “have
borne such servitude.” The whole population of ten States would be
reduced “to the most abject and degrading slavery.”
(The Age of Hate, Andrew Johnson and the Radicals, George Fort Milton, Coward-McCann, Inc., 1930, page 398)
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