Tuesday, October 10, 2017

“The greatest threat to our planet is the belief that someone else will save it.” - Anonymous

From “Lincoln 365,” by Arnold Kunst:
October 10
Up until Lincoln’s nomination in 1860 the heir apparent to the Republican Presidential nomination was New York’s Senator William Seward. Lincoln appointed him Secretary of State, but Seward took a while to figure out who was really in charge; initially he took the attitude that he was prime minister with Lincoln as a kind of figurehead president. In those first few weeks he even conducted secret negotiations with Confederate emissaries without his boss even knowing! He also submitted to Lincoln a most curious document blandly entitled ‘Some Thoughts for the President’s Consideration,’ a document based on the assumption that the administration had no stated policy or strategy for coping with the looming constitutional crisis that came to be the Civil War. Lincoln, who remarked to his private secretary, ‘I can’t let Seward take the first trick,’ held a private meeting with Seward at which he politely but firmly rejected his advice [for example, Seward had suggested that a war with England would unite the country, North and South; Lincoln countered, ‘one war at a time’]. Lincoln pointed out that his policy was to hold Forts Pickins and Sumter as stated in the Inaugural Address, a document Seward himself had read in advance, edited and approved. Finally, if there were to be any change or modification in the administration’s policy, the president had said, ‘I must do it.’ When all the dust was settled Seward wrote his wife, ‘Executive force and vigor are rare qualities. The President is the best of us.’ Curiously, Lincoln’s putting Seward in his place was the basis for this initial sense of respect – which in turn was the basis for a friendship unparalleled perhaps in all of American presidential history, a friendship that was to last until the day Lincoln died.

‘Imagine a boy coming to his new teacher and bragging, ‘I got kicked out of my last school because I brought a four-inch switch-blade knife to school!’ and the teacher in effect brushing all that to one side, saying, ‘I understand you’re interested in history, is that right?’ and before the boy has time to mutter, ‘Huh?’ getting him to open his history book to the chapter on World War II. In the process the boy will have learned just about everything there is to learn not only about a properly formed sense of values but also about creativity and courage.’
- Arnold Kunst



No comments:

Post a Comment