by Walter Williams
28th November, 2012
For decades, it has been obvious that there are irreconcilable
differences between Americans who want to control the lives of others
and those who wish to be left alone. Which is the more peaceful
solution: Americans using the brute force of government to beat
liberty-minded people into submission, or simply parting company? In a
marriage, where vows are ignored and broken, divorce is the most
peaceful solution. Similarly, our constitutional and human rights have
been increasingly violated by a government instituted to protect them.
Americans who support constitutional abrogation have no intention of
mending their ways.
Since Barack Obama’s re-election, hundreds of thousands of
petitioners for secession have reached the White House. Some people have
argued that secession is unconstitutional, but there’s absolutely
nothing in the Constitution that prohibits it. What stops secession is
the prospect of brute force by a mighty federal government, as witnessed
by the costly War of 1861. Let’s look at the secession issue.
At the 1787 Constitutional Convention, a proposal was made to allow
the federal government to suppress a seceding state. James Madison, the
acknowledged father of our Constitution, rejected it, saying: “A Union
of the States containing such an ingredient seemed to provide for its
own destruction. The use of force against a State would look more like a
declaration of war than an infliction of punishment and would probably
be considered by the party attacked as a dissolution of all previous
compacts by which it might be bound.”
On March 2, 1861, after seven states had seceded and two days before
Abraham Lincoln’s inauguration, Sen. James R. Doolittle of Wisconsin
proposed a constitutional amendment that said, “No State or any part
thereof, heretofore admitted or hereafter admitted into the Union, shall
have the power to withdraw from the jurisdiction of the United States.”
Several months earlier, Reps. Daniel E. Sickles of New York, Thomas
B. Florence of Pennsylvania and Otis S. Ferry of Connecticut proposed a
constitutional amendment to prohibit secession. Here’s my no-brainer
question: Would there have been any point to offering these amendments
if secession were already unconstitutional?
On the eve of the War of 1861, even unionist politicians saw
secession as a right of states. Rep. Jacob M. Kunkel of Maryland said,
“Any attempt to preserve the Union between the States of this
Confederacy by force would be impractical, and destructive of republican
liberty.”
The Northern Democratic and Republican parties favored allowing the
South to secede in peace. Just about every major Northern newspaper
editorialized in favor of the South’s right to secede. New York Tribune
(Feb. 5, 1860): “If tyranny and despotism justified the Revolution of
1776, then we do not see why it would not justify the secession of Five
Millions of Southrons from the Federal Union in 1861.” Detroit Free
Press (Feb. 19, 1861): “An attempt to subjugate the seceded States, even
if successful, could produce nothing but evil – evil unmitigated in
character and appalling in content.” The New York Times (March 21,
1861): “There is growing sentiment throughout the North in favor of
letting the Gulf States go.”
There’s more evidence seen at the time our Constitution was ratified.
The ratification documents of Virginia, New York and Rhode Island
explicitly said that they held the right to resume powers delegated,
should the federal government become abusive of those powers. The
Constitution never would have been ratified if states thought that they
could not maintain their sovereignty.
The War of 1861 settled the issue of secession through brute force
that cost 600,000 American lives. Americans celebrate Abraham Lincoln’s
Gettysburg Address, but H.L. Mencken correctly evaluated the speech: “It
is poetry, not logic; beauty, not sense.” Lincoln said that the
soldiers sacrificed their lives “to the cause of self-determination –
that government of the people, by the people, for the people should not
perish from the earth.” Mencken says: “It is difficult to imagine
anything more untrue. The Union soldiers in the battle actually fought
against self-determination; it was the Confederates who fought for the
right of people to govern themselves.”