Tag: Abraham Lincoln

Happy birthday Abraham Lincoln

Today marked the birthday of Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president and the first president to be assassinated while in office. He also appeared on Star Trek a couple of times, though to be honest, I’m not really sure that was really him.

Some say Abe Lincoln was our greatest president. I won’t go that far, but I am willing to say that he was our greatest Republican president. I’m just not convinced that he was ever qualified to be president. The Constitution states that anyone serving as president must be a “natural born citizen” and I’m not sure he met that requirement.

I think he was born in Kenya.

I have no proof of course, but who needs proof when questioning the nationality of the President of the United States? Where’s Lincoln’s birth certificate?

People back in the days of Lincoln were stupid

Lincoln-portraitI’m currently reading Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln’s Killer, a history book chronicling the hunt for Abraham Lincoln’s killer, John Wilkes Booth. Whoever said that truth is stranger than fiction must have been talking about when Lincoln was assassinated.  The events that lead to Booth shooting Lincoln, that if were not true, would seem too stupid, too far fetched even to be fiction.

If this book was a novel, if it was fiction, I would have stopped reading it after the second page.

It begins at the end of the American Civil War.  The Confederate capitol in Richmond had been taken by Union forces and General Lee had surrendered to General Grant.  The war was all but over.  Lincoln had just been inaugurated for a second term as President, which oddly enough, Booth attended Lincoln’s inauguration as an invited guest.

On April 14, 1865, President Lincoln and the First Lady, Mary Lincoln, decided to go catch a play at Ford’s theater.  They originally planned on attending the play with General Grant and his wife, but at the last minute, Grant backed out because of a scheduling conflict.  Lincoln and his wife traveled to the theater and arrived after the play had already begun.

They went there with no security whatsoever.  They didn’t have bodyguards.  They had nobody with them that were responsible for their protection.

This is the thing that I just cannot wrap my brain around.  It was during a time of war.  Not just any war, but a civil war.  A war between Americans.  A war, coincidentally enough, that began because people in the southern states were angry that Abraham Lincoln won the presidency.

These people, even some living right outside Washington, hated Abraham Lincoln so much that they didn’t want to be Americans anymore.

Not only did a large percentage of the American people hate Abraham Lincoln,  most of them were well armed.  If you didn’t own a gun in 1865, it was because you didn’t want one.  People back then regularly went around heavily armed.

How can a president that generated enough hate to start a war be allowed to wonder about without a heavily armed security force?  It seems ridiculous to me that someone like Lincoln could just go to a public theater and watch a play like he was a regular person.  What I find to be unbelievable about the story of Lincoln being assassinated by John Wilkes Booth was that it didn’t happen much sooner then it did.

Seriously, how could it not?

When in doubt, blame Abraham Lincoln

I watched some of the Sarah Palin interview shown last night on ABC News with Charles Gibson. Now we know why the McCain campaign wont allow the press to talk to Palin.  I can’t say I really blame them either.

One of my favorite parts was when she blamed Abraham Lincoln when asked about her comment to her former church that the Iraq war was a “task from God”.

GIBSON: You said recently, in your old church, “Our national leaders are sending U.S. soldiers on a task that is from God.” Are we fighting a holy war?

PALIN: You know, I don’t know if that was my exact quote.

GIBSON: Exact words.

PALIN: But the reference there is a repeat of Abraham Lincoln’s words when he said — first, he suggested never presume to know what God’s will is, and I would never presume to know God’s will or to speak God’s words. But what Abraham Lincoln had said, and that’s a repeat in my comments, was let us not pray that God is on our side in a war or any other time, but let us pray that we are on God’s side. That’s what that comment was all about, Charlie.

No, that’s not what that comment was all about Charlie.  Her statement to the Wasilla Assembly of God church was nothing at like anything Abraham Lincoln said.  In fact, it sounded a lot more like the Blues Brothers’ “We’re on a mission from God” then anything Lincoln ever said.