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On the decadent Republicans of means: “What a price our country and the world will pay … because those Americans most richly blessed failed so completely in their duty as citizens.“
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Since election day, over 700 incidents of “hateful harassment.”
- Trump as the oracular personification of the post-literate age.
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Did you know Lincoln wanted to “create a new American race”? He didn’t, but that’s what newspapers reported in 1864, almost ruining his re-election chances.
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Hate crimes are on the rise; already hard to prosecute, it’s likely even fewer will get charged in the future.
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An argument that Clinton lost, in essence, because she was transparent and told the truth.
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Next time you’re in Tokyo, stay at this bookstore-themed hostel.
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Yep, that’s Helen Mirren in the new Fast and the Furious flick.
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“None of their heroes are elected”; only 19 percent of millennials think it’s a bad idea for the military to take over the country.
- La La Land, Hamilton, Crazy Ez-Girlfriend, and the return of the musical.
- When Castro bred a supercow.
- Print and read: Dave Eggers on what is to come: “We are headed toward a dark corridor, my friends.“
Tag: Lincoln
Reader’s Corner: Abraham Lincoln in His Day

Given the lionization and demonization that certain political figures attain after their death, it’s hard to remember that in their time, very few leaders are seen in such black-and-white terms. In England, Neville Chamberlain was not universally reviled, and Winston Churchill had enough detractors that he was quickly escorted from office after the war ended.
In America, our most sainted president after George Washington is likely Abraham Lincoln. There is good reason for this, of course, but it’s always healthy to keep in mind that in his time there were more than a few who thought the man little more than an idiot.
Mark Bowden’s recent piece on Lincoln in the Atlantic points this out. Quoting heavily from Michael Burlingame’s 2008 biography Abraham Lincoln: A Life, Bowden highlights the criticism that Lincoln received while in office, the likes of which makes modern-day cable-news shouters seem tame by comparison:
His ancestry was routinely impugned, his lack of formal learning ridiculed, his appearance maligned, and his morality assailed…. No matter what Lincoln did, it was never enough for one political faction, and too much for another. Yes, his sure-footed leadership during this country’s most-difficult days was accompanied by a fair amount of praise, but also by a steady stream of abuse—in editorials, speeches, journals, and private letters—from those on his own side, those dedicated to the very causes he so ably championed. George Templeton Strong, a prominent New York lawyer and diarist, wrote that Lincoln was “a barbarian, Scythian, yahoo, or gorilla.” … Other Northern newspapers openly called for his assassination long before John Wilkes Booth pulled the trigger. He was called a coward, “an idiot,” and “the original gorilla” by none other than the commanding general of his armies, George McClellan.
This doesn’t prove that today’s climate of commentary has advanced any from the mid-19th century; far from it. But Bowden’s article is worth thinking of when trying to assess exactly how a sitting president will be judged by history. This applies to Barack Obama, both Bushes, Clinton, and possibly even back to Reagan and Carter; their true reckoning may still need decades of perspective and multiple historical tomes to truly emerge. Remember what Zhou Enlai (1898–1976) supposedly said when asked about the French Revolution of 1789: “It is too soon to tell.”
Bowden again:
Imagine all those critical voices from the 19th century as talking heads on cable television. Imagine the snap judgments, the slurs and put-downs that beset Lincoln magnified a million times over on social media. How many of us, in that din, would hear him clearly? His story illustrates that even greatness—let alone humbler qualities like skill, decency, good judgment, and courage—rarely goes unpunished.
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