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Obama's Electrifying Lincoln 200th Birthday Speech in Springfield, Illinois

A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION

By Barack Obama

It is wonderful to be back in Springfield, the city where I got my start in elected office, where I served for nearly a decade, and where I launched my candidacy for President two years ago, this week – on the steps of the Old State Capitol where Abraham Lincoln served and prepared for the presidency.

It was here, nearly one hundred and fifty years ago, that the man whose life we are celebrating today bid farewell to this city he had come to call his own. On a platform at a train station not far from where we’re gathered, Lincoln turned to the crowd that had come to see him off, and said, "To this place, and the kindness of these people, I owe everything." Being here tonight, surrounded by all of you, I share his sentiments.

But looking out at this room, full of so many who did so much for me, I’m also reminded of what Lincoln once said to a favor-seeker who claimed it was his efforts that made the difference in the election. Lincoln asked him, "So you think you made me President?" "Yes," the man replied, "under Providence, I think I did." "Well," said Lincoln, "it’s a pretty mess you’ve got me into. But I forgive you."

It is a humbling task, marking the bicentennial of our 16th President’s birth – humbling for me in particular, I think, for the presidency of this singular figure in so many ways made my own story possible.

Here in Springfield, it is easier, perhaps, to reflect on Lincoln the man rather than the marble giant, before Gettysburg and Antietam, Fredericksburg and Bull Run, before emancipation was proclaimed and the captives were set free. In 1854, Lincoln was simply a Springfield lawyer, who’d served just a single term in Congress. Possibly in his law office, his feet on a cluttered desk, his sons playing around him, his clothes a bit too small to fit his uncommon frame, he put some thoughts on paper for what purpose we do not know:

"The legitimate object of government," he wrote, "is to do for the people what needs to be done, but which they can not, by individual effort, do at all, or do so well, by themselves."

To do for the people what needs to be done but which they cannot do on their own. It is a simple statement. But it answers a central question of Abraham Lincoln’s life. Why did he land on the side of union? What was it that made him so unrelenting in pursuit of victory that he was willing to test the Constitution he ultimately preserved? What was it that led this man to give his last full measure of devotion so that our nation might endure?

These are not easy questions to answer, and I cannot know if I am right. But I suspect that his devotion to union came not from a belief that government always had the answer. It came not from a failure to understand our individual rights and responsibilities. This rugged rail-splitter, born in a log cabin of pioneer stock; who cleared a path through the woods as a boy; who lost a mother and a sister to the rigors of frontier life; who taught himself all he knew – this man, our first Republican President, knew, better than anyone, what it meant to pull yourself up by your bootstraps. He understood that strain of personal liberty and self-reliance at the heart of the American experience.

But he also understood something else. He recognized that while each of us must do our part, work as hard as we can, and be as responsible as we can – in the end, there are certain things we cannot do on our own. There are certain things we can only do together. There are certain things only a union can do.

Only a union could harness the courage of our pioneers to settle the American west, which is why he passed a Homestead Act giving a tract of land to anyone seeking a stake in our growing economy.

Only a union could foster the ingenuity of our farmers, which is why he set up land-grant colleges that taught them how to make the most of their land while giving their children an education that let them dream the American dream.

Only a union could speed our expansion and connect our coasts with a transcontinental railroad, and so, even in the midst of civil war, he built one. He fueled new enterprises with a national currency, spurred innovation, and ignited America’s imagination with a national academy of sciences, believing we must, as he put it, add "the fuel of interest to the fire of genius in the discovery…of new and useful things."  And on this day, that is also the bicentennial of Charles Darwin’s birth, let us renew that commitment to science and innovation once more

Only a union could serve the hopes of every citizen – to knock down the barriers to opportunity and give each and every person the chance to pursue the American dream. Lincoln understood what Washington understood when he led farmers, craftsmen, and shopkeepers to rise up against an empire. What Roosevelt understood when he lifted us from Depression, built an arsenal of democracy, and created the largest middle-class in history with the GI Bill. It’s what Kennedy understood when he sent us to the moon.

All these presidents recognized that America is – and always has been – more than a band of thirteen colonies, more than a bunch of Yankees and Confederates, more than a collection of Red States and Blue States. We are the United States of America and there isn’t any dream beyond our reach, any obstacle that can stand in our way, when we recognize that our individual liberty is served, not negated, by a recognition of the common good.

That is the spirit we are called to show once more. The challenges we face are very different now. Two wars, and an economic crisis unlike any we have seen in our lifetime. Jobs have been lost. Pensions are gone. Families’ dreams have been endangered. Health care costs are exploding. Schools are falling short. And we have an energy crisis that is hampering our economy, threatening our planet, and enriching our adversaries.

And yet, while our challenges may be new, they did not come about overnight. Ultimately, they result from a failure to meet the test that Lincoln set. To be sure, there have been times in our history when our government has misjudged what we can do by individual effort alone, and what we can only do together; when it has done things that people can – or should – do for themselves. Our welfare system, for example, too often dampened individual initiative, discouraging people from taking responsibility for their own upward mobility. With respect to education, we have all too frequently lost sight of the role of parents, rather than government, in cultivating a thirst for knowledge and instilling those qualities of a good character – hard work, discipline, and integrity – that are so important to educational achievement and professional success.

But in recent years, we’ve seen the pendulum swing too far in the opposite direction. It’s a philosophy that says every problem can be solved if only government would step out of the way; that if government were just dismantled, divvied up into tax breaks, and handed out to the wealthiest among us, it would somehow benefit us all. Such knee-jerk disdain for government – this constant rejection of any common endeavor – cannot rebuild our levees or our roads or our bridges. It cannot refurbish our schools or modernize our health care system; lead to the next medical discovery or yield the research and technology that will spark a clean energy economy.

Only a nation can do these things. Only by coming together, all of us, and expressing that sense of shared sacrifice and responsibility – for ourselves and one another – can we do the work that must be done in this country. That is the very definition of being American.

It is only by rebuilding our economy and fostering the conditions of growth that willing workers can find a job, companies can find capital, and the entrepreneurial spirit that is the key to our competitiveness can flourish. It is only by unleashing the potential of alternative fuels that we will lower our energy bills and raise our industries’ sights, make our nation safer and our planet cleaner. It is only by remaking our schools for the 21st century that our children will get those good jobs so they can make of their lives what they will. It is only by coming together to do what people need done that we will, in Lincoln’s words, "lift artificial weights from all shoulders [and give] all an unfettered start, and a fair chance, in the race of life."

That is what is required of us – now and in the years ahead. We will be remembered for what we choose to make of this moment. And when posterity looks back on our time, as we are looking back on Lincoln’s, I do not want it said that we saw an economic crisis, but did not stem it. That we saw our schools decline and our bridges crumble, but did not rebuild them. That the world changed in the 21st century, but America did not lead it. That we were consumed with small things when we were called to do great things. Instead, let them say that this generation – our generation – of Americans rose to the moment and gave America a new birth of freedom and opportunity in our time.

These are trying days and they will grow tougher in the months to come. There will be moments when our doubts rise and our hopes recede. But let’s always remember that we, as a people, have been here before. There were times when our revolution itself seemed altogether improbable, when the union was all but lost, and fascism seemed set to prevail. And yet, what earlier generations discovered – what we must rediscover right now – is that it is precisely when we are in the deepest valley, precisely when the climb is steepest, that Americans relearn how to take the mountaintop. Together. As one nation. As one people. That is how we will beat back our present dangers.  That is how we will surpass what trials may come.  And that is how we will do what Lincoln called on us to do, and "nobly save…the last best hope of earth."  Thank you, God Bless you, and may God Bless America.

Barack Obama is the 44th President of the United States and former Senator from Illinois.

A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION

The remarkable speech is entitled “What the People Need Done,” delivered at the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial celebration in Springfield, Illinois.

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Lincoln

One thing we should all remember about Lincoln is that he did Wall Streets bidding. Lincoln shopped around for a general who didn't mind killing a half million of his own people and found such a general in the alcohol and nicotine soaked US Grant. Lincoln's speeches were worthy of any undertaker of that time. I did like what he said about prohibition: "Prohibition will work great injury to the cause of temperance. It is a species of intemperance within itself, for it goes beyond the bounds of reason in that it attempts to control a man's appetite by legislation, and makes a crime out of things that are not crimes. A Prohibition law strikes a blow at the very principles upon which our government was founded." Something that today's politicians could well imbibe.

Lincoln and Wall Street

Lincoln also said, "I have the Confederacy before me and the bankers behind me, and I fear the latter more." It turned out his fear were justified. Remember that he was assassinated after the war was over, and while it may have been a Southerner who pulled the trigger, there is a lot evidence that he had people helping him. It is not too far-fetched to suggest that the Radical Reconstructionists, some of whom were quite active in his own Republican party, vehemently opposed his plans for a reconciling recovery after the war. With him gone, the South suffered for many years in ways that it would not have had he lived. As Mort Sahl once quipped, "As far as we know, only one person was perfect, and look what happened to him." President Lincoln was not a Perfect Human Being, but he was a very great man whose help in building a more perfect union was a godsend.

And if Grant Hadn't Done What he Did. . .

. . .I and millions of other African-Americans would still be slaves to this day, deprived of our human dignity and our right to "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." Sorry, Drotch, but your moral outrage over Grant's excesses cannot match the far greater evil that would have been perpetrated and preserved if the South had won the Civil War.

Lincoln

But of course the civil war did not end the enslavement of millions of Americans. That 'enslavement' ended after a long an arduous, mostly non-violent, political struggle that culminated in the 1960's and 70's. The Civil war was not a war to end slavery; on the contrary, it was a war to enforce economic hegemony on a rebellious confederacy. Lincoln symbolically 'freed the slaves' in order undercut British support for the confederate cause. Britain had outlawed the slave trade in 1807 and couldn't be seen as supporting the confederacy over a US government that had, at least on paper, outlawed slavery. For you to say that millions of African Americans enjoy freedom today because of Lincoln and his generals is incorrect and detracts from the struggle that was won by millions of Americans over the period of a century; and not by the mere stroke of Lincoln's politically expedient pen. Celebrate the real heroes De Boise, Rosa Parks, King and countless others.

Slavery would have ended with the war....

If the South had won the war, slavery would have ended anyway. The Constitution of the Confederate States of America called for the end to slavery. The war was over economics and state's rights. There were war criminals on both sides, however, none as horrible as General Sherman. He ordered the murder of untold thousands of civilians, women and children and the burning of entire cities! Patrick Roberts

No, the Constitution of the CSA ...

... specifically protected slavery. Article IV Section 3 of the CSA Constitution states, (in part):

"The Confederate States may acquire new territory; and Congress shall have power to legislate and provide governments for the inhabitants of all territory belonging to the Confederate States, lying without the limits of the several Sates; and may permit them, at such times, and in such manner as it may by law provide, to form States to be admitted into the Confederacy. In all such territory the institution of negro slavery, as it now exists in the Confederate States, shall be recognized and protected by Congress and by the Territorial government; and the inhabitants of the several Confederate States and Territories shall have the right to take to such Territory any slaves lawfully held by them in any of the States or Territories of the Confederate States.

In fact, most articles of the Constitution of the CSA are word-for-word duplicateS of the United States Constitution, the major differences being the CSA's greater emphasis on the rights of individual member states, and an explicit support of slavery. Strange that, while you insist the war was about economics and states' rights, the CSA Constitution placed such emphasis protecting the institution OF slavery and the rights of slave owners.

If you want to try to revise history, at least make it plausible.

The Lincoln speech

I got lucky and tuned in to C-Span and got to watch the whole thing. Wow!!! I am telling everyone I know to read the speech and try to see it because, you know, this guy is so far above every single other thinker and speaker that we have had for a long, long time. What can you say, he is just simply remarkable. Soooo, one more point, we, the Progressive Community, we, who have been SO disappointed through the years, we, must learn some patience in this moment, we must learn some trust (I know, I know), but, what IF he actually knows what he is doing, what IF he actually has his hand on the pulse in a way that all of us, moderately remarkable people, don't.???? What a concept? A Leader who knows more than those he is leading while understanding entirely those he is leading? You know, maybe someone who is brilliant?

Man... I wish I had watched

Man... I wish I had watched him present this. Outstanding.

"Such knee-jerk disdain for government – this constant rejection of any common endeavor – cannot rebuild our levees or our roads or our bridges. It cannot refurbish our schools or modernize our health care system; lead to the next medical discovery or yield the research and technology that will spark a clean energy economy.

Only a nation can do these things."

And for the last eight years we tolerated what? OMG.

It was beautiful

I caught the speech on either Olbermann or Maddow. There were moments when I thought of this as being like the Gettysburg Address. Citing Lincoln's take on what our government is meant to do, that which we cannot do by ourselves, I had to wonder how Lincoln could have been the first Republican president thinking so much like a modern progressive. Pat Williams

Lincoln in Today's Republican Party

jcl If Lincoln were alive today as a member of the Republican Party, he will be squirming in his seat.