2000s, Bush's Lincolnian Challenge (2002)
“In 1860 Senator Wilson, like Lincoln, could not ask for recognition of more than the black man's natural rights. But he showed in dramatic fashion that his argument, like Lincoln's, applied ultimately to all rights, civil and political no less than natural.”
Source: 2000s, A New Birth of Freedom: Abraham Lincoln and the Coming of the Civil War (2000), p. 228
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Harry V. Jaffa 171
American historian and collegiate professor 1918–2015Related quotes
2000s, The Real Abraham Lincoln: A Debate (2002), The Lincoln-Douglas Debates
"Our Lincoln" http://www.ericfoner.com/articles/012609nation.html (26 January 2009), The Nation
2000s
2000s, The Real Abraham Lincoln: A Debate (2002), The Lincoln-Douglas Debates
2000s, The Real Abraham Lincoln: A Debate (2002), The Lincoln-Douglas Debates
“Lincoln thought slavery was wrong and he did not think a vote of the people could make it right.”
2000s, Interview with Peter Robinson (2009)
1990s, Defending the Cause of Human Freedom (1994)
1990s, The Party of Lincoln vs. The Party of Bureaucrats (1996)
Context: Bob Dole and Jack Kemp declared that the Republican Party is the party of Lincoln. But just what is the connection between the Republican Party of 1860 and that of 1996? The essence of slavery, Lincoln said, was expressed in the proposition: "You work; I'll eat." Upon his election as president, he was besieged by office seekers who drove him to distraction. Lincoln was blunt in his judgment of the great majority of them. They wanted to eat without working. Lincoln saw the demand for the protection of slavery and the demand for government sinecures to be at bottom one and the same. The origin of all constitutional rights, according to Lincoln, was the right that a man had to own himself, and therefore to own the product of his own labor. Government exists to protect that right, and to regulate property only to make it more valuable to its possessors.