Monday, February 15, 2010

Happy Presidents Day

Happy Presidents Day! For those of you who don't know, George Washington's birthday is actually on February 22nd. Abraham Lincoln's birthday is on February 12th. And Ronald Reagan's birthday is on February 6th. For some interesting background on Presidents Day check out this article that I found online today.

I thought it might be fitting to give a quick recap of a speech I heard from Assembly candidate David Kimmel, who hosted a Lincoln Celebration Dinner in Plattsburgh on Friday night. I'd say there were about 90 people in attendance for the dinner, including Doug Hoffman and a few members of the UNYTEA Party that Mark Barie organizes. Below are some excepts of Kimmel's speech titled, "A House Divided Against Itself Cannot Stand," which I encourage you to check out.
My speech tonight is titled, “A House Divided against Itself Cannot Stand.” Some might think it is a speech about Republican politics. Nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, it is noteworthy that we have Republicans, Democrats, Conservatives, Independence, and Independent voters in the room... Some people forget that the Republican Party had only recently replaced the Whig Party when Lincoln gave his famous speech. I think today’s prospective candidates ignore this similarity to their own peril. In fact, I submit that a Nation that ignores its own history is on a perilous path. And it’s in that regard we can learn a lot from Lincoln’s “House Divided” speech.

Lincoln gave the speech in 1858 during the famous Lincoln-Douglas debates. He was actually running for the U.S. Senate. He said: “A house divided against itself cannot stand. I believe this government cannot endure, permanently, half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved — I do not expect the house to fall — but I do expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing or all the other...” We can learn much from this speech and this man.

A house divided against itself cannot stand…It will become all one thing or all the other...

In hindsight we know these words were prophetic. However, in 1858 there were those who discouraged this speech. Every generation has a Chamberlain who exclaims “peace for our time.” Every generation has those who believe the words “can’t we all just get along” are better than addressing the issues of their time. There were those in Lincoln’s day as well.

As you examine the speech you realize that Lincoln wasn’t being provocative or inciting. He was speaking the truth. It cost him the election in 1858. People were doing everything possible to avoid the impending war between the states. But you cannot avoid the inevitable by ignoring it. You could not avoid the war by ignoring slavery any more than you can avoid terrorist attacks by avoiding the word terrorism or the term “War on Terror.” The simple truth is: we must face the problems of our day head on, unless it is our desire to pass the problems we have created on to the next generation of Americans.

We know this was no mere anomaly. When Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation most of his cabinet was against it. They complained the timing was wrong. They claimed it would incite the South to fight harder. They complained it would alienate moderates in the North. All of this sounds familiar. We see in these decisions that Lincoln possessed an abundance of two great leadership traits: decisiveness, and initiative. It is essential that our leaders possess the bravery and fortitude to exercise these traits in order to make the right decisions because they are right, and not just politically expedient.

Abraham Lincoln was also a student of modern history. In 1812 Abigail Adams invoked these same words, “a house divided…” in a private letter to her friend regarding the enemies of our young country. In 1850 Sam Houston invoked these same words when discussing The Compromise of 1850, also about slavery.

We learn from Lincoln that it is important to know our own history and the words of our founders. As we study our founders we learn that they rejected big government. They embraced free markets. They warned against providing welfare, in favor of promoting it. They agreed that the people were the great “safe depositors” of the ultimate powers of society. They embraced virtue and discouraged vice. They rejected “influence” and acknowledged it as the antithesis of government. “Influence” was not bad government. It was “no government.” Still today, whether in Albany or Washington, we gage our politicians based on their ability to peddle or distribute influence. We consider our vote based on our belief that someone can or cannot bring home the bacon, somehow forgetting that the bacon was ours to begin with...

Today we stand on a precipice. Whether in Washington or Albany, politicians are spending the hard-earned money of our children’s children’s children. We will either be a free United States or one enslaved to debt. We will either be free to determine our course and live the dream our founders envisioned, or we will be a nation of mediocrity, bound to the state in return for our daily bread. We will either promote the general welfare of the people or provide it. Ladies and gentlemen…we cannot be both...

As I look at you tonight I am hopeful. I see great New Yorkers who are alert. I see people from New Jersey, Virginia, and Massachusetts who have rejected the alternate narration of those who seek to remake the United States. I see the great people of the North Country who are committed to the preservation of our State and Nation. I see people who are ready and able to show our leaders the way. And if our politicians will not abide, I see people who will show them the door.

Kimmel draws some interesting parallels from Lincoln's "House Divided" speech and government's approach to providing the general welfare of its people today. He also suggests that our founders were weary of big government approaches to policy-making. It sounds like a theme the Tea Party movement is united against. Kimmel's reflection on Lincoln's leadership qualities, the need to be decisive and avoid political expedient decision-making, foreshadows what he believes to be Albany and Washington's inability to make the tough and difficult decisions for the future of our state and country.

While I don't think Kimmel is suggesting that our country is as divided and torn over the growth of government as it was over the question of slavery, I do think he might be tapping into the national sentiment that our leaders need to make some tough decisions regarding how to deal with the size and scope of our government. And Kimmel is right that those decisions ultimately lay in the hands of the people who are the "great depositors of the powers of society." The people will decide if we follow the current path we are on, or if they will entrust a new set of leaders committed to challenging the status quo in state and federal government. It is a great question for citizens everywhere to ponder as we celebrate this Presidents Day.

7 comments:

  1. Looks like it was a good speech.

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  2. Nice that someone took the time to celebrate instead of berate and that this time was dedicated to philosophy, choice and reflecting on history repeating itself. We cannot stand for both and a good student of history can see that it is time to make the hard choices, the necessary choices and the choices which will determine whether New York and the country gather momentum toward solvency or destruction.

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  3. I hope that Doug Hoffman listened to the speech given by Mr. Kimmel. If he divides the GOP by running only on the Conservative line this November Bill Owens will win...

    Sign the pledge Barclay put out Doug and you might just surprise some of us...I will support whoever wins the Republican primary. Hope you'll do the same because that's the only way we'll send someone to Washington besides Bill Owens.

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  4. I just noticed that Buggs put Doheny down to the third tier in his candidate hierarchy. It is evident that you don't like the guy, but come on. That is just ridiculous.

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  5. Anny. 3:46...
    Doheny is third tier....He can't run to represent people he left, people he has not lived among. Matt moved to NYC and is a NYC resident...where is he on wind? We've heard nothing from him on the issue that is tearing apart Jefferson County gov't right now.
    What did Matt think of the Long Island Sound windd farm that got axed in favor of eastern lake Ontario? lets hear it!
    Will Barclay has been clear and consistant on the wind issue, it is southern NY and NYC taking advantage of us yokals again.

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  6. 346 - I really have to agree with the 1032 poster that Doheny is a nice alternative to Barclay or Hoffman, but he is far and away not in their same league. Hoffman appeals to the pure candidate voter and Barclay appeals to the general election Republican voter. Those are the two groups that mostly matter.

    Wall Street is a lightning rod and Doheny just isn't able to gracefully work his way around it. He has a future if he'd like to be involved here in the North Country, but he's not going to be a Member of Congress - not yet at least.

    Barclay or Hoffman...that's what this comes down to and right now I think Barclay has the best shot at beating Owens. That's just my opinion, however.

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  7. I put all three candidates on the same tier. This website is pro-Hoffman, still acknowledges Barclay and insults Doheny. The mayor's website seems to be pro-Doheny, acknowledges (and sometimes insults Barclay) and doesn't even acknowledge Hoffman much at all. I think the tiers all depend on the source. I put all three as top tier candidates and agree that Doheny and Maroun are not in the same league. Has Maround done a single thing yet? I don't think so whereas Hoffman, Barclay and Doheny seem to keep showing up at all the relevant political events.

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