Politics & Government


3
Sep 10

What if Ahmadinejad Fell Down the Stairs?

I saw this comment by retired Army Col. Peter Mansoor in a post over at Tom Rick’s blog

Not a pretty picture to contemplate, but a likely scenario. Despite the crowd of academics in the United States that says we can live with an Iranian bomb, Israel will not allow the Iranians to go nuclear — at least, not while a Holocaust denier who has made pointed threats against the Jewish state remains in power.

Now I’mjust thinking out loud here… Makes me wonder if someone is saying something along the lines of, “Listen, we can avoid dorpping bombs.  All we have to do is take out this Ahmadinejad nut job.  So lets get someone on making sure that he accidentally falls down the stairs on purpose.”

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2
Sep 10

The Guardian’s Tomasky on Iraq

This goes along with another post I wrote today.  In it I continue to sort of think out loud about the long term stability of Iraq…

Michael Tomasky has a great article today in The Guardian about the withdrawal of US combat troops from Iraq.

There’s a lot of big-think, big-picture stuff I could be saying about Iraq today, looking back over the whole arc of the thing, but I’ll leave that for another time, or leave it to you all to debate among yourselves.

What I wish to raise this morning is this question: what conditions would have to obtain for the US to have to resume combat operations there one day? Because this is the bottom-line question, right?

Mr. Tomasky goes on to state that he believes that as Iraq comes into its own politically it is very likely things will become violent.  (He uses points made by Tom Ricks of Foreign Policy to further to back his opinion).  Tomasky seems to be suggesting that the level of violence could, and and probably will, force the US military to become involved in combat.

However, Mr. Tomasky (rightly) suggests that Shi’a militias will be looking to set up a fundamentalist regime in Iraq.

I find this disturbing for two reasons…

1. If the Shi’a militias deliberately draw the US into combat that can help them politically.  i.e. it will give the Shi’a a chance to capitalize on anti-US feelings in Iraq and win political power.

2. If the Shi’a militias don’t draw the US back into combat, such an event can help them politically.  i.e. it will give the Shi’a a chance to use violence unchecked to win political power.

In short: I really hope that the US has gamed this sucker out ad nauseum and has some creative solutions in mind for the about 50,000 non-combat (but combat ready) troops that will still be hanging out in Iraq.  Because if there is not a damn good plan for how to proceed when shit gets nasty it is only a matter of time before people are saying things like, “If only we had just finished the job we started back in 2010, we would not be needing to deal with [insert catastrophe here] today.”

Unfortunately, this is an election year, and as Mr. Tomasky also points out:

Back in 2006-2007, as Congress debate the question of a “date certain” for withdrawal, Republicans said that if the baddies know the pull-out date, they’ll obviously start planning mischief for immediately thereafter, while Democrats said, well, you gotta pull out sometime (and our base wants us out, although that part they didn’t much say).

Our elected officials have a different set of priorities that focus on shot term electoral victories rather than long term geopolitical stability.

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2
Sep 10

Abdul Rashid Dostum, One Hell of a Right Hand

A paragraph this good -and by good I mean packed with information that most people don’t know- just needs top be shared.  Notice the area that I bolded..

The inner circle includes but is not limited to the Hazara Vice President, Karim Khalili; Kabir Mohabat, an Afghan with American citizenship; “Marshal” and now Vice President Muhammad Qasim Fahim, a Tajik; and “Marshal” Abdul Rashid Dostum, the Uzbek warlord who disdains any government post but is the President’s “right hand.” (Dostum deserves an Olympic gold medal for opportunism. A leader of the Uzbek people of the North, he fought the Russians, then joined them to fight the insurgents; then he joined the insurgency to fight the Russians; next he joined the Taliban; then he switched sides again to join the anti-Taliban “Northern Alliance” and is infamous for suffocating in steel lift vans in the sweltering summer captured Taliban soldiers. Now – for how long? – he is a supporter of President Karzai.) It also includes Zara Ahmad Mobil who ran what is regarded as the most corrupt organization in Afghanistan, the Ministry of Interior, and (as an editorial in The Guardian put it) “is now in charge of the opium industry;” and, of course, the Karzai family. [Source, first paragraph on the page.]

My reaction to this was to read the paragraph three times in a row.  Sit back and think about it for a a few seconds, then read it a forth time. 

I can’t make up someone that shady!  And yet… Un-fucking-believable. 

Time to get some lunch.

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2
Sep 10

The Surge (+) the Sunni Awakening = Not in Afghanistan

I heard a great bit on NPR as I drove into work today where Stephen Biddle, a defense analyst who has advised the U.S. military on Afghanistan, was interviewed.  During the interview Biddle was asked to compare the surge in Iraq with the surge in Afghanistan

The surge — President George W. Bush’s decision to deploy an additional 30,000 troops to Iraq — is often credited for the turnaround there. But [Biddle says that was only one piece of the puzzle. He says it was the Sunni Awakening — when Sunni leaders stopped fighting the Americans and joined with them against al-Qaida — that ultimately tipped the scales in favor of the U.S. and its allies.

"The Awakening without the surge would have died under an al-Qaida counterattack," he said. "The surge without the Awakening wouldn't have been nearly large enough to suffocate an insurgency the size of Iraq's. It was the two coming together that made the difference."

Link: Text & audio of the story.

[Disclosure: I think it is important that Mr. Biddle is far more qualified to provide an analysis of the current effects of US foreign policy than I am.  However, being less than qualified has never stopped me from shooting off my mouth...]

I totally agree with Mr. Biddle that the Sunni Awakening played a major role in the initial success of the surge in Iraq.  However it remains to be seen if Sunni Awaking, which is also known as the Sons of Iraq, will have a positive effect on Iraq long term.

Consider the following two groups of information:

Group One: Minority status + privilege = Sunnis

  1. The Sunni Muslims make up the minority of the Muslim population in Iraq.
  2. The Sunnis live in the more oil rich section of Sothern Iraq.  Having access to oil allowed the Sunnis to enjoy a level of privilege.
  3. In addition to this Saddam Hussein was a Sunni, and he provided the Sunnis with a level of privilege not enjoyed by the Shi’a majority.
  4. The combination of oil privilege, Saddam privilege, and a minority status did not make the Sunnis any friends among the Shi’a majority who now-a-days controls the government of Iraq.

Group Two Armed Sunnis + Shi’a controlled government – US funding = Potential Problem:

  1. During the Sunni Awakening a group of Sunni Sheikhs banded together because they realized that doing so was in their best interest.
  2. After banding together under the name “the sons of Iraq,” and they worked with the US to reduce the threats caused by insurgents.
  3. The US paid the sons of Iraq for their assistance.
  4. The Shi’a majority has expressed concerns about an armed group of Sunnis.  The current Shi’a controled government has absorbed about 1/3rd of the Sons of Iraq into the regular Iraqi Army, leaving about 2/3rds of the group out in the wind.
  5. The US army is departing from Iraq, and it would not be unreasonable to assume that the funding of Sunnis will be far less (perhaps non-existent?) in the future.

My point:

The Sunni Awakening was one of the things that undoubtedly lead to the success of the surge in Iraq.  However, even though I hope it is a long lasting success, it remains to be seen if this success will carry into the future.  i.e. it is very possible that hooking up the Sunnis was great short term, but could backfire long term.

So the fact that there is no equivalent of the Sunni Awakening in Afghanistan is going to mean that the US is going to have to employ the surge differently.  My guess is that the surge in Afghanistan will not enjoy the same level of initial (short term) success that it did in Iraq.  I won’t make any long term projections as to how the surge will work out over the aggregate (long term) in Afghanistan… that region is just so unstable, and I don’t have anywhere near enough information to feel comfortable saying what things will look like in a week, let alone what they will look like in six months or a year.

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1
Sep 10

Interesting, but I’m Not Sure I Agree…

From the 60 Second Expert: The Divergence of America and Israel, over at FPIF.

In reality, Israel offers limited value in the most important areas of the U.S. foreign policy agenda: stabilizing Iraq and Afghanistan.  Additionally, given the ongoing expansion of Iran’s power in the Middle East, Turkey will likely become a more instrumental U.S. ally, as it is capable of balancing Iran’s inevitable influence among Iraq’s Shiite majority.

The full article is also very illuminating.

I agree that Turkey (and the Kurds) are becoming very important allies of the United States, however I don’t think that they have become more important than Israel.  As evidence I offer the following four things…

  1. Israel’s military is the most mighty in the Middle East.
  2. The Mossad is one of the most bad ass intelligence agencies in the world.
  3. Isreal has nuclear weapons.
  4. Every US President has a desire to make the “peace process” between Israel and the Palestinians part of his legacy.

It will be interesting to see where things lie in ten years, but for the time being, I’d say Israel will remain the country to which the United States stays the closest.

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1
Sep 10

Long Term Human Security Should Be the Focus

~Point One: Complex problems are hard to solve~

In a world where wars are being fought between nongovernmental groups (drug cartels, insurgencies, fundamentalist groups like Al Qaeda and the Taliban, etc.) the major powers of the globe need to rethink how to achieve meaningful and sustained victories rather than short term (politically advantageous) victories.

The thing about the sort of victories that I believe the United States and Europe need to focus on is that they require a huge investment upfront, which is exactly the kind of investment elected officials are — more often than not — unwilling finance.  The “global economic downturn,” or whatever today’s economic woes are being called now, make such an investment even less likely.

In other (my own) words: In order to establish a period of time where citizens of the West and the world will be more secure requires that the West take on complex problems that  don’t have any silver bullet solutions.  Said complex problems will take a lot of time, energy, and money to solve.

A  recent FPIF review of the book The Ultimate Weapon is No Weapon, by Mary Kaldor and Shannon D. Beebe has convinced me that, at the very least, other people are thinking about this as well.  The review states…

According to Kaldor and Beebe, the West needs a paradigm shift in how it views security when contending with global crises and terrorism. They argue that because poverty, limited political rights, or threats of physical violence drive insurgencies and violence, the United States and Europe should not emphasize “defeating enemies,” but rather prioritize the economic, political, and physical needs and rights of people, namely human security. Then and only then will the West achieve a truly sustainable security for itself and countries such as Afghanistan, Somalia, and Iraq.

The Ultimate Weapon Is No Weapon is a guide for Western policy-makers and activists on how to form what the authors call global civilian-military “engagement brigades,” which would specialize in enhancing physical security and political and economic development. These brigades would be deployed to conflict zones to implement a multilateral human security approach, as opposed to the conventional unilateral military response.

As I talk about these ideas with people who I work with many of them say that this is a “good idea” but that it has “never been tried before.”  That simply is not true.  Taking the longer and initially more expensive road which seaks to create human security by developing the economy and infrastructure of struggling nation states has not only been tried, it has worked remarkably well.

From the Wikipedia article on the Marshall plan that helped Europe recover after being ravaged by WW II…

The Marshall Plan (officially the European Recovery Program, ERP) was the primary program, 1947–51, of the United States for rebuilding and creating a stronger economic foundation for the countries of Europe. The initiative was named for Secretary of State George Marshall and was largely the creation of State Department officials, especially William L. Clayton and George F. Kennan. Marshall spoke of urgent need to help the European recovery in his address at Harvard University in June 1947.[1]

The reconstruction plan, developed at a meeting of the participating European states, was established on June 5, 1947. It offered the same aid to the USSR and its allies, but they did not accept it.[2][3] The plan was in operation for four years beginning in April 1948. During that period some US $13 billion in economic and technical assistance were given to help the recovery of the European countries that had joined in the Organization for European Economic Co-operation. This $13 billion was in the context of a U.S. GDP of $258 billion in 1948, and was on top of $12 billion in American aid to Europe between the end of the war and the start of the Plan that is counted separately from the Marshall Plan.[4]

The ERP addressed each of the obstacles to postwar recovery. The plan looked to the future, and did not focus on the destruction caused by the war. Much more important were efforts to modernize European industrial and business practices using high-efficiency American models, reduce artificial trade barriers, and instill a sense of hope and self-reliance.[5]

By 1952 as the funding ended, the economy of every participant state had surpassed pre-war levels; for all Marshall plan recipients, output in 1951 was 35% higher than in 1938.[6] Over the next two decades, Western Europe enjoyed unprecedented growth and prosperity, but economists are not sure what proportion was due directly to the ERP, what proportion indirectly, and how much would have happened without it. The Marshall Plan was one of the first elements of European integration, as it erased trade barriers and set up institutions to coordinate the economy on a continental level—that is, it stimulated the total political reconstruction of western Europe

Unfortunately people don’t really understand the Marshall pan as well as they think they do.  Be that as it may, it remains a strong data point in the arsenal of people who, like me, argue in favor of making the investments necessary to create human security.

~Point Two: The problem is the voting public~

When human security is not a priority and things go wrong people are often very quick to place blame on the shoulders of our elected officials, and sometimes that is indeed where they blame should be placed.  However, sometimes the blame needs to be placed on the shoulders of a greedy short sighted voting public.

Here is an analogy for you.  Picture the United States as a company.   The President is a CEO of sorts and the Congress is a bunch of department heads/managers.  The voting public are the shareholders.  Let’s say the CEO and the department heads say to the shareholders, “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a plan that will create long term profits, but in order to get those long term profits we will need to lose money in the short term.”

I believe when something like this goes down what tends to happen is the shareholders say, “Did you say lose money?  FUCK THAT SHIT!  Dude, you are such a fucking asshole.  In fact you’re so much of an asshole that we need to seriously consider firing you.”

~Point Three: Thinking long term needs to be **the** subject of public discourse~

Outside of the ivory tower, no one really talks about long term thinking.  Why is that?  Seriously, it is not a rhetorical question.

Regardless of the answer, I believe that it is the responsibility of the intelligentsia, the wonks, and new media types to bring up thinking’s merits as often as humanly possible.

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26
Aug 10

More Thoughts on Iran, Israel, Hezbollah, and Nuclear Weapons

Over at The Atlantic there is an article  by Karim Sadadpor called “5 Minutes With Benjamin Netanyahu.”  In this article Sadadpor states:

With its own arsenal of over 100 nuclear weapons — not to mention the unconditional support of the world’s greatest superpower — Israel needlessly elevates Iran by labeling it an “existential threat.”

I’ll grant that — given what seems to be public knowledge — calling Iran’s nuclear ambitions an “existential threat” may be somewat hyperbolic at this stage in the game, and I agree that the use of this term has elevated Iran’s actions.  However, I believe that elevating Iran is precisely what is called for due to reasons I have previously stated.

Sadadpor goes on to say…

Given that Israel’s underlying problem with Iran has more to do with the character of the revolutionary regime than with its nuclear ambitions (after all, Israel seems unconcerned about the Pakistani bomb), then the mathematics of an Israeli strike don’t make sense.

I wish to humbly disagree with this statement.  Iran’s relationship to the heavily armed Lebanon situated group Hezbollah (and visa-a-versa) makes Iran fundamentally different from Pakistan.  In addition, Iran’s dubious “democracy” is a far cry from the democracy which exists in Pakistan, as evidenced by the election of the late Benazir Bhutto, which is something that would not happen in Iran today.  i.e. Even if Ahmadinejad does lose an election, that does not mean he will stop being the President of Iran.

There are two points Sadapor makes that I do agree with.  The first, which I totally agree with, is that Iran’s nuclear program is costing its government lots of money and has yet to produce any nuclear weapon.  If this spending of money and getting nothing for it other than economic sanctions, the ill will of the rest of the world, and the threat of being bombed continues, the citizens of Iran and the “green movement” in particular can use it to motivate people to push Ahmadinejad out of power.

The second point I agree with, but I think it is important to point something out:

To put things in perspective, a $1 drop in oil prices is approximately $600 million in lost annual revenue for Iran. Military action that would send oil prices skyrocketing makes it far less costly for Iran to continue supporting Hezbollah and Hamas, not to mention expand the ranks of bassij militia and Revolutionary Guards who rule by terror.

This is indeed something that should, and I believe does, weigh heavily on the minds of decision makers in Israel.  My guess is that the Israelis are thinking along the lines of, “It stands to reason if Iran does get access to the protective umbrella having nuclear weapons provides, that umbrella will extend to Hezbollah, which will in turn be far more likely to start firing rockets into Isreal with greater frequency.”

So giving Iran more money to fund Hezbollah is much better than allowing Iranian access to nuclear weapons with which it would protect Hezbollah.

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23
Aug 10

“The Point of No Return” by Jeffrey Goldberg Will Knock Your Socks Off

There seems to have been a great deal of speculation in regards to what Israel may or may not do to prevent Iran from continuing down the road to acquiring nuclear weapons.  Yesterday I happened to read an article in the Atlantic about this very thing.  The article was titled  The Point of No Return, and it was written Jeffrey Goldberg, and I’d go so far as to say that it was one of the best pieces of long form journalism that I have read in recent years. 

The article basically lays out the facts that make it seem very obvious that if the United States does not do something more drastic than create sanctions against Iran, then the nation state of Isreal will take it upon itself to use force to “rectify” the situation. 

From the cover of this Month’s Atlantic…

Here’s the scenario: one day next year, Isreal’s national-security adviser and defense minister will simultaneously telephone their counterparts at the White House and the Pentagon to inform them that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has just ordered roughtly 100 Israeli air-force jets to fly east toward Iran.  The Israelis will say they are attacking because a nuclear Iran poses the gravest threat since Hitler to the survival of the Jewish people.  They will tell the Americans that Israel was left with no choice.  They will not be asking for permission because it will be too late to ask for permission. 

They stand a good chance of changing the Middle East forever…

If that caught your attention (as it did mine), if you’re concerned about the price of oil / gas in the future, if you’re interested in the possibility of the United States becoming involved in some sort of military operation in the land situated in between Iraq and Afghanistan, or if you care about the relationship the United States has with the Nation State of Israel, I highly recommend that you read the rest of the article.  It will knock your socks off!

For what ever they may (or may not) be worth, here are a few of my thoughts on this issue: 

1. I don’t want the nation state of Iran to have nuclear weapons because they are a nation which at this point in time (and for many years now) has been lead by a group of religious fundamentalists (please note the use of the word religious as opposed to the use of the word Islamic). 

Full disclosure – I’m a light weight Athiest.  Meaning that I don’t believe in God, but at the same time I don’t have any problem with people who do, so long as their religious behaviors don’t cause harm, or appear to be getting ready to cause harm, to others. 

In the case of Iran I believe the current (fundamentalist controlled) government has made it clear that they see it as their personal, political, moral, and spiritual duty to cause harm to the Jewish people and/or the nation state Israel and the citizens who live there.  Feel free to disagree with me if you like, but religious fundamentalists all over the world have shown time and time again that when they get their hands on a weapon -any weapon- they have far fewer qualms about using said weapon than those people (religious and non-religious alike) who are not fundamentalists.  This time the religious fundmentlists happen to be in control of the nation state of Iran, and they have their sites on the nation state of Isreal. 

2. If Isreal does bomb Iran their government will have to deal with backlash from numerous political, economic, and ethnic groups. 

Backlash, by its definition, is not something that can’t be prepared for.  Be that as it may,  I really believe that Isreal needs to be as ready as they can be by having a bunch of smart people sitting in a room with lots of coffee gaming this thing out as much as they can, for as long as they can. 

The more time Isreal spends on (please forgive the term) pre-game preperation the better this will be for them. 

3.  No matter what Isreal should keep its “bomb in the basement” in the basement.

If Isreal were to publicly state that it has nuclear weapons, which is something that has never been stated but is totally understood, it would place Israel at a disadvantage in the short and long terms. 

The short term disadvantage – Iran would look more justified in pursuing a nuclear weapons program.

The long term disadvantage – an increase in animosity directed towards Israel, and by proxy, Jewish people all over the world. 

~~~

I plan to keep up with this issue and blog about it throughout the next week, possibly longer.

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16
Aug 10

The “Pocket Veto” Explained

The Set Up:

Once again I shall regale you with an exciting tale from the life of an American High School history teacher because I’m sure that is exactly what you wanted me to do for you today.  Right?  Right!

In 1864 the Congress sent the Wade-Davis Bill to President Lincoln.  This bill proposed that Congress, not Lincoln, would be responsiblefor overseeing the set of policies known as Reconstruction.  Unlike Lincoln, many Republicans in the Congress felt that the Southern states who had broken away from the United States needed to be punished by making it difficult for them to “re-join the Union”.  Lincoln had issues with this notion…

Lincoln’s objections was that the idea that the Southern states needed to “re-join” the Union permeated the whole bill. The philosophy of the war from Lincoln’s point of view was that the Southern states were not constitutionally allowed to secede in the first place and therefore were still part of the Union, even though their return to a full participation in the Union would require the fulfillment of some conditions. But he didn’t think the war was being waged against “treasonous” States as such (since the refusal of the Union to recognize their right to secede made the ordinances of secession null) but merely to “compel the obedience of rebellious individuals”. The problem was that the language of the bill was at times undermining the Northern rationale for the war by plainly asserting for instance that the Southern states were not part of the Union anymore. [Source]

If Lincoln would have vetoed the bill it might have made him look like he was not respecting the seperation of powers outlined in the Constitution, but Lincoln was able to use a pocket veto to kill it without looking like a tyrant.

Goal of Today’s Post:

To have you (the reader) be able to demonstrate how “pocket veto” works.

Pocket Veto Explained:

I’m just going to rip off the Wikipedia here, because they explain this so well…

If the President approves of the legislation, he signs it (sign into law). If he does not approve, he must return the bill, unsigned, within ten days, excluding Sundays, to the house of the United States Congress in which it originated, while the Congress is in session. The President is constitutionally required to state his objections to the legislation in writing, and the Congress is constitutionally required to consider them, and to reconsider the legislation. This action, in effect, is a veto.

If the Congress overrides the veto by a two-thirds majority in each house, it becomes law without the President’s signature. Otherwise, the bill fails to become law unless it is presented to the President again and he chooses to sign it.

A bill can also become law without the President’s signature if, after it is presented to him, he simply fails to sign it within the ten days noted. If there are fewer than ten days left in the session before Congress adjourns, and if Congress does so adjourn before the ten days have expired in which the President might sign the bill, then the bill fails to become law. This procedure, when used as a formal device, is called a pocket veto.

The Pocket Veto Explained Further:

The fact is that the Congress has to be in session (present) in order to consider the objections to the bill that the President has put into writing for them.  Adjournment means that Congress is out of session; it is closed to business.  Ergo, if Congress is adjourned it obviously can’t consider the objections the President had to the bill.

If something is not done by the close of business the Congress has to start over from square one when they re-open with a new session.

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14
Aug 10

Thaddeus Stevens, 1792-1868


While preparing to teach a US History class on reconstruction I came across the name Thaddeus Stevens.  That name rung a bell. I knew I had learned about this man at some point, and I knew he was important. I just could not remember what made him important.  So I looked him up.

It turns out that not only was Thaddeus Stevens really important, he was also really interesting!  From the Wikipeida article on Stevens…

Thaddeus Stevens (April 4, 1792 – August 11, 1868), of Pennsylvania, was a Republican leader and one of the most powerful members of the United States House of Representatives. As chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, Stevens, a witty, sarcastic speaker and flamboyant party leader, dominated the House from 1861 until his death and wrote much of the financial legislation that paid for the American Civil War. Stevens and Senator Charles Sumner were the prime leaders of the Radical Republicans during the American Civil War and Reconstruction. A biographer characterizes him as, “The Great Commoner, savior of free public education in Pennsylvania, national Republican leader in the struggles against slavery in the United States and intrepid mainstay of the attempt to secure racial justice for the freedmen during Reconstruction, the only member of the House of Representatives ever to have been known, as the ‘dictator’ of Congress.”

Other information I have gathered about this guy makes me think that he is one of those extremely interesting personalities who is only well known with in the niche of American history buffs and those who study the American Civil war in particular.

In an effort to bring this fascinating figure to your attention, here are a few little things that I think are interesting:

  • The discription of Stevens in the text book my students sometimes use says “[Stevens] had a commanding physical presence- piercing eyes, a thing-liped mouth, and a tall thin body.  In spite of a deformed foor, he was an expert horseman and swimmer.  He was also famous for his quick wit and sarcasm.”
  • Stevens wanted to prevent former slave owners from being able to have political power by making / supporting legislation that would prevent wealthy plantation owners from taking the oath needed to regain the right to vote after the end of the American Civil War.
  • Stevens was a uber-abolitionist, who saw anyone who would permit slavery to continue as an institution as “a traitor to liberty.” In addition to this, I found out that Stevens had his last will and testament state he was to be buried in an integrated cemetary to show “the principles which I advocated throughout a long life: equality of man before his Creator.”

What a guy, eh?

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