Letters from an American - November 3, 2024
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November 3rd, 2024. I'm home tonight to stay for a bit after being on the road for 13 months
and traveling through 32 states. I am beyond tired, but profoundly grateful for the chance
to meet so many wonderful people and for the welcome you have given me to your towns and to your homes. I know people are on edge, and there is maybe one
last thing I can offer before this election. Every place I stopped, worried people asked me how I
have maintained a sense of hope through the past fraught years. The answer, inevitably for me, I suppose, is in our history.
If you had been alive in 1853, you would have thought the elite enslavers had become America's
rulers. They were only a small minority of the U.S. population, but by controlling the Democratic
Party, they had managed to take control of the Senate, the White House, and the Supreme Court.
They used that power to stop the Northerners who wanted government to clear the rivers and
harbors of snags, for example, or to fund public colleges for ordinary people from getting any such
legislation through Congress. But at least they could not use the government to spread their
system of human enslavement across
the country because the much larger population in the North held control of the House of
Representatives. Then, in 1854, with the help of Democratic President Franklin Pierce,
elite enslavers pushed the Kansas-Nebraska Act through the House. That law overturned the
Missouri Compromise that had kept
black enslavement out of the American West since 1820. Because the Constitution guarantees the
protection of property, and enslaved Americans were considered property, the expansion of slavery
into those territories would mean the new states there would become slave states. Their representatives
would work together with those of the southern slave states to outvote the northern free labor
advocates in Congress. Together, they would make enslavement national. America would become
a slave-holding nation. Enslavers were quite clear that this was their goal.
South Carolina Senator James Henry Hammond explicitly rejected,
as ridiculously absurd, that much-lauded but nowhere accredited dogma of Mr. Jefferson
that all men are born equal.
He explained to his Senate colleagues
that the world was made up of two classes of people.
The mudsills were dull drudges
whose work produced the food and products
that made society function.
On them rested the superior class of people
who took the capital the mudsills produced
and used it to move the economy
and even civilization itself forward.
The world could not survive without the inferior mudsills, but the superior class had the right
and even the duty to rule over them. But that's not how it played out. As soon as it became clear
that Congress would pass the Kansas-Nebraska Act, Representative Israel Washburn of Maine called a meeting of 30 congressmen in Washington, D.C. to figure out how they could fight back against the slave power that had commandeered the government to spread the South's system of human enslavement.
The men met in the rooms of Representative Edward Dickinson of Massachusetts, whose talented daughter Emily was already writing poems.
And while they came to the meeting from all different political parties, often bitterly divided over specific policies, they left with one sole purpose, to stop the overthrow of American democracy. The men scattered back to their homes across the North for the summer,
sharing their conviction that a new party must rise to stand against the slave power.
They found anti-Nebraska sentiment sweeping their towns.
A young lawyer from Illinois later recalled how ordinary people came together.
We rose, each fighting, grasping whatever he could
first reach, a scythe, a pitchfork, a chopping axe, or a butcher's cleaver. In the next set of
midterm elections, those calling themselves anti-Nebraska candidates swept into both national
and state office across the North, and by 1856, opponents of the slave power had become a new
political party, the Republicans. But the game wasn't over. In 1857, the Supreme Court tried to
take away Republicans' power to stop the spread of slavery to the West by declaring in the infamous
Dred Scott decision that Congress had no power to legislate in the
territories. This made the Missouri compromise that had kept enslavement out of the land above
Missouri unconstitutional. The next day, Republican editor of the New York Tribune, Horace Greeley,
wrote that the decision was entitled to just so much moral weight as would be the judgment of a majority of those
congregated in any Washington bar room. By 1858, the party had a new rising star, the young lawyer
from Illinois who had talked about everyone reaching for tools to combat the Kansas-Nebraska
Act, Abraham Lincoln. Pro-slavery Democrats called the Republicans radicals
for their determination to stop the expansion of slavery,
but Lincoln countered that the Republicans were the country's
true conservatives, for they were the ones standing firm
on the Declaration of Independence.
The enslavers rejecting the founders' principles
were the radicals. The next year, Lincoln articulated
an ideology for the party, defining it as the party of ordinary Americans defending the democratic
idea that all men are created equal against those determined to overthrow democracy with their own oligarchy. In 1860, at a time when voting was almost entirely limited to white men,
voters put Abraham Lincoln into the White House. Furious, Southern leaders took their states out
of the Union and launched the Civil War. By January 1863, Lincoln had signed the Emancipation
Proclamation, ending the American system of human enslavement in lands still controlled by the Confederacy.
By November 1863, he had delivered the Gettysburg Address, firmly rooting the United States of America in the Declaration of Independence.
independence. In that speech, Lincoln charged Americans to rededicate themselves to the unfinished work for which so many had given their lives. He urged them to take increased devotion
to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion, that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain, that this nation
under God shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people,
for the people, shall not perish from the earth. In less than 10 years, the country went from a government dominated by a few
fabulously wealthy men who rejected the idea that human beings are created equal and who believed
they had the right to rule over the masses, to a defense of government of the people, by the people,
for the people, and to leaders who called for a new birth of freedom.
But Lincoln did not do any of this alone. Always, he depended on the votes of ordinary people,
determined to have a say in the government under which they lived.
In the 1860s, the work of those people established freedom and democracy as the bedrock
of the United States of America, but the structure itself remained unfinished. In the 1890s and then
again in the 1930s, Americans had to fight to preserve democracy against those who would destroy it for their own greed and power.
Each time, thanks to ordinary Americans, democracy won. Now it is our turn.
In our era, that same struggle has resurfaced. A small group of leaders has rejected the idea that all people are created equal and seeks to destroy our democracy in order to install themselves into permanent power.
And, just as our forebears did, Americans have reached for whatever tools we have at hand to build new coalitions across the nation to push back.
new coalitions across the nation to push back.
After decades in which ordinary people had come to believe they had little political power,
they have mobilized to defend American democracy.
And with an electorate that now includes women
and black Americans and brown Americans,
have discovered they are strong.
On November 5th, we will find out just how strong
we are. We will each choose on which side of the historical ledger to record our names.
On the one hand, we can stand with those throughout our history who maintained that
some people were better than others and had the right to rule.
On the other, we can list our names on the side of those from our past who defended democracy
and by doing so,
guarantee that American democracy reaches into the future.
I have had hope in these dark days
because I look around at the extraordinary movement that is built in this country over the past several years, and it looks to me like the revolution of the 1850s that gave America a new birth of freedom.
As always, the outcome is in our hands.
The outcome is in our hands.
Fellow citizens, Lincoln reminded his colleagues,
we cannot escape history.
We will be remembered in spite of ourselves. Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions, Denham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.