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A democrat's republican.


Why Lincoln Matters

Today More than Ever

Mario M. Cuomo

Harcourt, $24, 183 pp.

Former New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 governor Mario Cuomo Mario Matthew Cuomo (born June 15, 1932) served as the Governor of New York from 1983 to 1995. Cuomo became nationally known for his rousing keynote speech at the 1984 Democratic National Convention and the subsequent speculation over the next two decades that he might run for the  believes that Abraham Lincoln was a great president and that George W. Bush has so far proved a pretty bad one. Perhaps, Cuomo suggests, we can learn where and how the latter president went wrong by comparing his actions and ideas to those of the former.

Cuomo's venture is an engaging and lively one, marked by a deep appreciation for, and familiarity with, the life and thought of our sixteenth president. "What appealed to me most about Lincoln was not his humble background," Cuomo writes, "but his lucidity, the sureness of his logic, the cogency co·gent  
adj.
Appealing to the intellect or powers of reasoning; convincing: a cogent argument. See Synonyms at valid.



[Latin c
 of his analysis, and the apparent reasonableness of his conclusions." It is clear why it is Lincoln's intellect more than his biography that appeals to Cuomo, who, after all, is remembered most of all for his eloquence Eloquence
Ambrose, St.

bees, prophetic of fluency, landed in his mouth. [Christian Hagiog: Brewster, 177]

Antony, Mark

gives famous speech against Caesar’s assassins. [Br. Lit.
 and common sense, qualities rapidly disappearing in today's political environment.

Lincoln matters for almost more reasons than one can count. Of course he saved the Union. Had the South been allowed to go its own way, Cuomo reminds us, other regions would have taken the hint as well. Our country is fractured enough as it is. Permitting any group that does not like what Washington does to simply walk away would spell disaster. In addition, for Cuomo, preserving the Union makes little sense unless the Union stands for something, and here Lincoln matters again, for he gave concrete meaning to the hints toward equality made in the Declaration of Independence.

There are other reasons to appreciate Lincoln. Despite what Cuomo says about the relative unimportance of Lincoln's background, he does believe that America at its best offers opportunity to the many, a position both lived and articulated by Lincoln long before he became president. Unlike today's Republicans, Lincoln had no fear of government. His ability to use the language of religion in his speeches while endorsing principles of religious freedom and diversity (he was the first to appoint a Jew as a military chaplain and took the lead in denouncing an anti-Semitic comment made by General Ulysses S. Grant) got the balance between religion and politics just right. Although he never traveled abroad, Lincoln, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Cuomo, understood what today we would call global interdependence.

It would be difficult to find a president less Lincolnesque than the current occupant of the White House. Bush, Cuomo argues, wants those who have already had all of life's opportunities to have even more of them. He crosses the line separating faith and politics that Lincoln worked so hard to establish. Bush was anxious to go to war in contrast to Lincoln's well-known hesitation. If racial injustice moves our current president, he has neither the eloquence nor the passion to address it. By making government the enemy, Bush has distanced himself from his own party's once rocksolid commitment to internal improvement. Abraham Lincoln matters so much to Mario Cuomo because George W. Bush has accomplished so little.

Cuomo is right to compare these two presidents and to find the current one lacking; Bush, after all, invokes Lincoln in his speeches, thereby inviting a comparison that can only make him look bad. Still, Cuomo's method, inspired at the start, slowly tires. There are two reasons for this--one he acknowledges and one he does not.

As Cuomo is not loath loath also loth  
adj.
Unwilling or reluctant; disinclined: I am loath to go on such short notice.



[Middle English loth, displeasing, loath
 to admit, there are similarities between our greatest president and the present one that work to the disadvantage of both. Lincoln was no great civil libertarian civil libertarian
n.
One who is actively concerned with the protection of the fundamental rights guaranteed to the individual by law: "Civil libertarians tend to assume such tests must be an illegal invasion of privacy" 
, and were Bush interested in history, which he is not, he could cite Lincoln's administration in support of the Patriot Act Patriot Act: see USA PATRIOT Act. . The same could be said of Bush's approach to the Supreme Court. In the aftermath of Dred Scott Dred Scott

decision majority ruling by Supreme Court that a slave is property and not a U.S. citizen (1857). [Am. Hist.: Payton, 203]

See : Injustice
, Lincoln certainly applied political litmus tests to the issue of who would succeed Roger Taney, just as Bush does in the aftermath of Roe v. Wade Roe v. Wade, case decided in 1973 by the U.S. Supreme Court. Along with Doe v. Bolton, this decision legalized abortion in the first trimester of pregnancy. .

Yet even while admitting that Bush and Lincoln are not far apart on some issues, Cuomo insists that Lincoln's record is better. "As serious as the threat is of an act of terrorism," he writes, "it cannot compare with the threat to the nation posed by the Civil War," implying that Lincoln had greater justification for his violation of civil liberties than Bush. Yet no one, in the aftermath of September 11, knew whether other attacks would be coming and how serious they might be. At this point, the scorecard approach adopted by the governor to compare these two men begins to break down.

It also breaks down when Cuomo ventures too far into what the academic experts call "counterfactual history Counterfactual history, also sometimes referred to as virtual history, is a recent form of historiography which attempts to answer "what if" questions known as counterfactuals. ." Do we really need to know what position Lincoln would have taken on stem-cell research Noun 1. stem-cell research - research on stem cells and their use in medicine
biological research - scientific research conducted by biologists

embryonic stem-cell research - biological research on stem cells derived from embryos and on their use in medicine
 or whether he would support the interstate highway and space programs? Cuomo ventures too often, at least for my taste, into the realm of the imagination, even offering a speech that Lincoln would have given as an address to Congress in 2004. Although relying on Lincoln's own words and applying them to our own situation, the speech sounds Cuomoesque--a compliment, I hasten to add. Still, it raises the question why Cuomo does not simply address the current situation in his own words, for surely we need them.

Why Lincoln Matters, though short, is really two books. The one that appreciates Lincoln is as good as the one that lambastes Bush, but combining the two does not always work. Still, as Bill and Hillary Clinton reminded us, it makes little sense to turn down the offer of two for one, especially when the two come from a man as admirable and thoughtful as this one. Lincoln matters to us, among other reasons, because he matters to Mario Cuomo, and we should be indebted to the governor for bringing him once again to our attention.

Alan Wolfe Alan Wolfe is a political scientist and a sociologist and is currently on the faculty of Boston College and serves as director of the Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life.  is director of the Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life The goal of Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life is to create opportunities for discussion of the intersection of religion and American public life. The goal of these conversations is to help clarify the moral consequences of public policies to maintain the common  at Boston College Boston College, main campus at Chestnut Hill, Mass.; coeducational; Jesuit; est. and opened 1863. Actually a university, the school's Chestnut Hill campus comprises colleges of arts and sciences and business administration, the graduate school, and schools of nursing . Among his books is The Transformation of American Religion (Free Press).
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Title Annotation:Books
Author:Wolfe, Alan
Publication:Commonweal
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Sep 10, 2004
Words:1004
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