Lincoln Uber Alles: Dictatorship Comes to America

Front Cover
Arcadia Publishing, Sep 23, 2010 - History - 320 pages

A FEATURED ALTERNATE SELECTION OF THE CONSERVATIVE BOOK CLUB

"No honest student of American history can avoid coming to terms with this work."
-Clyde N. Wilson, distinguished professor emeritus of history, University of South Carolina

"A provocative book challenging the actions of one of America's most beloved presidents."
-WMOT-FM 89.5, Middle Tennessee Public Radio

In this comprehensive volume, John Avery Emison sets the record straight on the legality of Southern secession. He laments the unnecessary loss of 620,000 lives, the burning of cities, and the mass devastation to the South wreaked between the years of 1861 and 1865 by the North. A close examination of the true causes of the Civil War reveals that the fight was not one for racial justice but rather a battle over the economic disparities between the North and the South. By illustrating how Abraham Lincoln's tyrannical presidency paved the way for today's "Leviathan" government, Emison brings his subject into the twenty-first century and puts forth his fear for the future.

Contrary to contemporary assumptions, secession was-and still is-within the rights of all states. The concept of sovereignty grants such powers to the states, not to the federal government. Emison explains the list of violations Lincoln committed in an effort to prevent the South's peaceful exit from the Union. These atrocious actions include blockading ports, arresting innocent citizens, suspending habeas corpus, suppressing newspapers, and, most notably, ordering a gruesome war without consent from Congress.

Against a historical backdrop, the author credits the events and political figures that contributed to Lincoln's election. He references significant Supreme Court doctrines and delves into the depths of the US Constitution. Emison's arguments are backed by the analyses of notable legal historians such as Kenneth Stampp and Carl Wittke.

About the author (2010)

John Avery Emison is an environmental scientist who has worked as a science reporter for the Oak Ridge (TN) Oakridger and as an editor of a business newspaper in eastern Tennessee. He has a keen interest in Southern history and constitutional law. Emison graduated with a BA in liberal arts from Union University, MS in physical geography from Memphis State University, and PhD in resource geography from Oregon State University. He resides in Alamo, Tennessee.

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