РефератыИностранный языкUnUntitled Essay Research Paper All Men Created

Untitled Essay Research Paper All Men Created

Untitled Essay, Research Paper


All Men Created Equal


America has undergone incredible hardships as a nation. No issue has had


more impact on the development of the American definition of freedom than


the issue of slavery. Did the Constitution specify which men were created


equal? Surprisingly enough the phrase “all men are created equal with certain


inalienable rights” did not mean what it does today. The nation was divided


on the issue of slavery and the rights of the black man in its early stages


as a growing republic. Abraham Lincoln was a brave pioneer who dared to rub


his hand against the grain of slavery bringing the original ideals of


America’s founders to a new light. He was a man who felt he was witnessing


a slow decay in the foundation of the American principles. His views were


not met with unanimous applause from the American people. He battled against


an equally strong constituency – the slave owner’s and their


presidential candidate, Judge Douglas. Abraham’s grounds for the abolition


of slavery were based on the words that were scripted in the Declaration


of Independence and the meaning of those words as they related to American


citizens and the celebration of the 4th of July.


Many American’s argued that the Negroes were not entitled to the same


rights because they were not legally citizens of the United States of America.


This issue was dealt with in the ruling of the Dredd Scott case. Lincoln


points out that the ruling of the case was based on historical fact that


was wrongly assumed. Judge Taney, who presided over the case stated that


“Negroes were no part of the people who made, or for whom was made, the


Declaration of Independence, or the Constitution of the United States.” This


statement was later refuted by Judge Curtis who shows that “in five of the


then thirteen states…free negroes were voters, and, in proportion to


their numbers, had the same part in making the Constitution that the white


people had.” The fact that Negroes were citizens who participated in the


framing of the Constitution gave them the same freedoms as the white men


who helped shape the American ideals classifying the Negro as a “citizen.”


The strongest persuasion that Abraham could have possibly given the American


people were the words that the Declaration of Independence so powerfully


spoke. Lincoln fully understood the phrase “all men were created equal” as


pertaining to the entire human family. He explained:


“[they] intended to include all men, but they did not


intend to declare all men equal in all respects. They


did not mean to say all were equal in color, size,


intellect, moral developments, or social capacity.”


This statement was perfectly logical. The Declaration goes on to state that


the “inalienable rights” that human beings have are the rights to “life,


liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” This was the idea which Abraham believed


was the “standard maxim for free society.” Abraham even used a parallel from


the Bible. “’As your Father in Heaven is perfect, be ye also


perfect.’” This quote from Matthew 5:48 was used to illustrate that


God had set an impossible goal for us to attain, and in the same way the


framers of the Constitution and writers of the Declaration of Independence


gave mankind an endeavor to gi

ve equality to all mankind. Douglas argued


that the writers only meant to give the British citizens in America equal


rights to the British citizens then residing in Great Britain. Douglas’


argument for this hypothesis was:


“’they [the writers] referred to the white race alone,


and not to the African, when they declared all men


to have been created equal’”


It was terribly wrong because ‘white’ did not necessarily mean


British. Where did this statement leave white immigrants from Germany and


France who were not necessarily ‘British’? The Declaration was


not meant as a mere statement of liberation from Britain but as the basis


of a government that would uphold the belief that the people deserved to


be free from a King or other form of rule which infringed on those rights


that mankind deserves.


In fact, what worth was the Declaration eighty years after it was written


if it’s only purpose was as statement of independence from Great Britain?


What’s more, the Declaration of Independence would have given no freedoms


to men residing in America if it had read, as Douglas implied, “’We


hold these truths to be self-evident that all British subjects who were on


this continent eighty-one years ago, were created equal to all British subjects


born and then residing in Great Britain.’” To the citizen of the United


States, the Fourth of July would have come to mean absolutely nothing if


freedom was granted to an exclusive group of people.


Though Americans were divided on the issue of Negro rights and their right


to citizenship, an almost unanimous fear was the possibility of an increase


in interracial marriages following the abolition of slavery. Abraham agreed


with the separation of the races when it came to mixed blood. He gave Americans


numerical statistics which showed that interracial marriages were significantly


less within free states. The end of slavery (and thus separation of whites


and blacks) “is the only perfect preventive of amalgamation.” The reasoning


was based on the frequency of mulatto births arising from slaves and their


masters in comparison to the number of mulatto births that were among free


states. The mixing of the blood was occurring because the Negroes and whites


were in forced contact. The elimination of an almost universal fear was yet


another argument for the separation of the races.


Although he was not a ‘modern day’ civil right’s activist,


Lincoln’s logic eventually led to the abolition of slavery, tragically


driving the nation into a state of civil war. However, the American ideals


which he embraced have made their way into our modern societies standards


leading to civil right’s programs which are constantly being reformed.


Immigrants, of all nationalities and colors now look to America as a symbol


of great ideals. Abraham said more prophetically than he could imagine that


the American ideals of freedom should be “constantly spreading and deepening


its influence, and augmenting the happiness and value of life to all peoples


of all colors everywhere.” As a result of his push for the preservation of


the American ideal of freedom, slavery no longer exists and is even considered


unconstitutional on the grounds that it is in direct contradiction with the


conception that “all men are created equal.”

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