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The Real Lincoln
Other products by DiLorenzo, Thomas J.
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Item #: B324
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This is the book that made it happen: the nationwide revision concerning the man who they tried to tell us was a great liberator. Dictator and slayer of liberty is more like it. Lincoln was not the godlike figure of myth and legend but an unusually cruel political operator who exploited the moment for personal gain, just as we've come to expect of modern politicians.

In this blockbuster, Thomas DiLorenzo calls for a complete rethinking of a central icon of American historiography. He looks at the actions and legacy of Abe Lincoln from an economics point of view to show that Lincoln's main interest was not in opposing slavery but in advancing mercantilism, inflationism, and government spending: the "American system" of Henry Clay.

Through extensive historical investigation, DiLorenzo shows that the high tariff pushed by Northern industries, at the expense of Southern agriculture, was the main cause of the sectional conflict. Further, Lincoln's goal in preventing Southern secession was the consolidation of federal power and the collection of revenue, not the elimination of slavery. Introduction by Walter Williams.

Barron's says: "More than 16,000 books have already been written about Abraham Lincoln. But it took an economist to get the story right. The Real Lincoln, by Loyola College economics prof Thomas J. DiLorenzo, is this year's top pick in [Gene Epstein's] sixth annual review of Holiday Gifts that Keep on Giving, When It's the Thought that Counts."

ISBN 0761526463

Reviews

Average Rating: (based on 20 reviews)

Showing 1 - 5 of 20 Reviews:

by Mark
on 9/7/2009
Finally, the Truth about the war monger Lincoln
This is an outstanding book that tries to correct the myths about the worst president in American history. Lincoln violated the constitution by invading and propagating war with the south. The southern states had every legal right and constitutional right to leave the Union. His march into the south was ILLEGAL and UNCONSTITUTIONAL. 600,000+ troop deaths, tens of thousands of innocent civilians killed and a complete subversion of the law is no justification for ending slavery.

Just as the states joined the union at free will, they had a Right to leave the union at free will. Under the constitution of this land, the States have higher authority than the federal government on the issue of secession. There was no mandate for Lincolns murderous rampage over the south. The North was an invading army and the south was simply defending its sovergn rights as a new nation. Lincoln ordered his army to kill civilians and for this he is simply a war criminal. 
by Sam Waddell
on 8/28/2009
The Real Lincoln
The Real Emancipation Proclamation:
First. State what your understanding is in regard to the acts of Congress and President Lincoln's proclamation touching the condition of the colored people in the rebel States.
        Answer. So far as I understand President Lincoln's proclamation to the rebellious States, it is, that if they would lay down their arms and submit to the laws of the United States before the 1st of January, 1863, all should be well, but if they did not, then all the slaves in the rebel States should be free, henceforth and forever. That is what I understood.
       General Sherman speaking to some Freed Ministers in Savannah Georgia. 

No other proof, however, is needed than the undeniable fact that at any period of the war from its beginning to near its close the South could have saved slavery by simply laying down its arms and returning to the Union.   General Gordon C.S.A.

Patrick Ronayne Cleburne
"Every man should endeavor to understand the meaning of subjugation before it is too late... It means the history of this heroic struggle will be written by the enemy; that our youth will be trained by Northern schoolteachers; will learn from Northern school books their version of the war; will be impressed by the influences of history and education to regard our gallant dead as traitors, and our maimed veterans as fit objects for derision... It is said slavery is all we are fighting for, and if we give it up we give up all. Even if this were true, which we deny, slavery is not all our enemies are fighting for. It is merely the pretense to establish sectional superiority and a more centralized form of government, and to deprive us of our rights and liberties."
    --- Maj. General Patrick R. Cleburne, CSA, January 1864, writing on what would happen if the Confederacy were to be defeated. 
"If this cause, that is dear to my heart, is doomed to fail, I pray heaven may let me fall with it, while my face is toward the enemy and my arm battling for that which I know is right."
    --- Major General Patrick R. Cleburne before his fatal wound at the battle of Franklin, Tennessee. 
by Mike
on 8/28/2009
Unbelievable
Not only am I shocked at what I read in this book, but also what I am reading in these reviews.  Somehow "this is what we've known all along"?  This should be taught in our public schools?  Are you kidding me?  The government has removed the word of God from school as a textbook, yet you want the words of this man treated as truth?  His misquotes and misuse of the proper scholarship is astonishing.  He is a revisionist historian at best and like so many others, his goal is to assault the character of the great leaders of our country.

He spends so much time quoting other people and abridging the actual quotes from Lincoln.  He has quoted Lincoln's quotes of others and attributed them to Lincoln himself.  This is a Lincoln DiLorenzo wants you to think is real.  Do some research and check his quotes.  Look at what this author omits for the purpose of making DiLorenzo's point, not Lincolns.

In a country where all that is virtuous is attacked and mocked, this book comes as no surprise.
by Hank
on 6/26/2009
Did you even read it?
The folks that gave negative reviews clearly didn't read the book. If you really seek truth, read this book and then go check sources. Its right on.  God forbid we mess with America's sacred cows or bother to dig a little deeper.  State run education has been foisting Lincoln's supposed greatness on us for far to long.  This book is not about "hate", its about truth.  Nowhere does the author claim slavery was a good thing or that it shouldn't have been ablosihed.
by Tim Schmidt
on 6/8/2009
Response to arguments
I have not read this book yet but it is on my wishlist. To ths subscriber who posted this link: http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=27346
I did some researching myself and found DiLorenzo's counter argument which seems to holds more legitimacy in comparison with Quackenbush's. After reading Quackenbush's argument I did not think I was going to read the book anymore but then read DiLorenzo's rebuttal and my mind has changed. I nonetheless must judge the book after I read it but I'm assuming it's a good read by the amount of good reviews. The only overrated president that I know of now is FDR, but I find myself increasingly intrugued by revisionism.
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