A Viewer’s Guide to Steven Spielberg’s‘Lincoln & the American Civil War’
(FinalCall.com) - Steven Spielberg’s
Lincoln opened last week, and many have flocked to see this Hollywood
version of one of the nation’s most tumultuous times—the American Civil
War. The film purports to recount the last months of the life of Abraham
Lincoln as he lobbied to achieve the passage of the 13th Amendment to
the Constitution, which is said to have ended legal slavery in
America—at least on paper.
Spielberg is the master of American propaganda, and there is no one
since the notorious director D.W. Griffith who has more successfully
exported to the world a utopian vision of America as a Caucasian
paradise. And while his White characters—from Jaws to ET to Amistad—show
a range of virtues, his Black characters have been limited to cardboard
portrayals of simplistic and racially clichéd stereotypes.
This is the inescapable context with which one must approach
Spielberg’s Lincoln, a film that is no more accurate in its depiction of
a critical period in history than George Bush was about the so-called
weapons-of-mass-destruction lie that brought a world of nations to
endless war.
First, let us take a couple of paragraphs to dispose of some
well-entrenched historical myths.
No war in the 6,600-year history of
the White man has ever been fought for the benefit of Blacks—never has
happened and never will. If the North fought to “free the slaves,” then
why did the war start with the slaveholding South attacking the Union at
Fort Sumter? Should it not have been the reverse?
This mural shows Frederick Douglass asking President Abraham Lincoln to
allow black soldiers to serve in the Union army during the Civil War.
Gideon Welles, the Secretary of the Navy, and Salmon P. Chase, Secretary
of the Treasury, are the two men standing in the back. The image surely
depicts a fictional event: although Lincoln and Douglass met three times at the White House, those meetings took place after Congress approved the use of blacks as soldiers in the Union armed forces. This was missing from Spielberg's Lincoln.
The Civil War was
fought between two sets of White people to see which one would benefit
most from the multitude of products America derived from Black slave
labor. Southerners realized that the engines of the American
economy—cotton and slaves—were in their territory. They resented that
the big banks in the North were making most of the profits from their
plantations. They decided to end that one-sided relationship and
SEPARATE from America. Abraham Lincoln knew that America would collapse
without Southern slavery and reluctantly fought the war to maintain the
UNION of North and South—and, most important, to keep the slavery wealth
flowing from South to North.
No one fought to free Black people, and, indeed, before a single shot
was fired both sides agreed to the Crittenden Resolution, which made it
clear that the war would not target what they called “established
institutions,” namely, Black slavery.
Here are a few more points:
• While still engaged in the war, Union General Benjamin F. Butler
placed his troops at the disposal of the governor of Maryland to repress
a rumored slave insurrection.
• In 1861, when General John C. Fremont freed all slaves in the state
of Missouri, Lincoln fired him. When General David Hunter freed the
slaves in three states, Lincoln cancelled and reversed the order.
• Union military camps were closed to runaway slaves, and some poor
Black souls were actually captured by Union soldiers and returned to
their rebel owners!
• Most abolitionists were White workers who HATED Blacks but wanted
an end to slavery so that they—Whites—would not have to compete with
Black workers.
• Lincoln had no intention of establishing “integration” and in 1862
sent 450 “freed” slaves to an island off the coast of Haiti in an
ill-fated colonization scheme. The navy had to be sent to retrieve the
beleaguered Blacks.
• Lincoln publicly voiced support for the Fugitive Slave Law, which
made every American citizen—North and South—responsible for catching
runaway slaves.
***
Contrary to popular belief, Lincoln’s famous Emancipation
Proclamation did not “free” a single Black person from chattel
slavery—not one. When it looked like the Union was losing the war,
Lincoln “freed” slaves in the South so that they could fight against
their masters. In that same document he made sure that slavery was not
disturbed where it existed in the North!
These are hardly the acts of a Saviour or of a Salvation Army. But they
are truths that dirty the image of Lincoln, whom Spielberg is posing as
America’s very own Christ figure—the man who died for the racial sins of
a nation.
Spielberg is intent on hiding these important facts, portraying his
subject as the avuncular oracle of racial kindness. But Spielberg is not
so charitable with the Black characters that appear throughout his
wartime fairytale. It opens with a combat scene, but the first death we
see is a Black man stabbed in the chest with a bayonet—Spielberg
preserves an honored Hollywood tradition that Blacks must be the first
to die.
President Lincoln is then shown in the midst of a Union camp
earnestly listening to the battlefield accounts of two Black soldiers.
Spielberg puts them with the Second Kansas Colored Regiment, an actual
Black military unit, though their encounter with the President is
totally fictional. What is troubling is that one of the soldiers
describes a combat event in which, he says, his colored unit “killed
them all”—every last one of them. This is a description of a war
atrocity—not a battle in which the enemy was beaten badly—and it is
Spielberg’s way of making the Black race responsible for the extreme
brutality of America’s deadliest war (750,000 dead). The Jenkins Ferry
battle was indeed brutal and bloody, but if an order were given to “kill
them all” it would have had to come from the White leader of the
“colored” unit.
Spielberg’s other Black soldier presses the President for equality in
an unrealistically brash dialogue that would have earned him time in a
dungeon after many lashes. Yet Spielberg’s brazen Negro has the temerity
to ask Lincoln for a job! This again is a bold falsehood that misstates
the actual condition of the Black race. Blacks were not asking for
jobs—because during slavery and for a time after the war they dominated
all of the skilled crafts in the South and were capable builders,
inventors, and independent-minded believers in their own talents and
skills. The fact is, Whites feared that freeing Blacks would leave
Whites totally stranded and uncared for. In many cases, the Black slave
of a White family was the only breadwinner in that family! If America
were to actually allow the ex-slave 40 acres, a mule, and the vote,
Whites would be homeless, friendless and hopeless in a matter of days.
From there, Spielberg gives us Black caricatures direct from the set
of Gone With The Wind. We see Mrs. Lincoln’s mulatto maid, Mr. Lincoln’s
dutiful butler, the trusty carriage driver, the obligatory Blacks
praising God for the White man’s largesse, and the Lincolns’ child oddly
playing with slavery photos like they are baseball cards. Jewish writer
Tony Kushner puts “nigger” in the mouths of too many whiteys, but not
in the mouth of Lincoln, who actually used the word with chilling
regularity.
And then there is the last scene, when Thaddeus Stevens, played by
Tommy Lee Jones, grabs the original copy of the 13th Amendment and
brings it home, where he is greeted by his Black housekeeper Lydia
Smith, played by S. Epatha Merkerson. He presents it to her with the
words “a gift for you,” whereupon the satisfied servant crawls into bed
with the White man, for a night of emancipation fornication, one
assumes.
Centuries of slavery meant the daily debasement and brutal rape of
the Black woman (see Legitimate Rape: A Truly American History). In his
nauseating reconstruction Spielberg shows us what he feels are the
“benefits” of the legal end of slavery—even more of the White man’s
sexual debasement of the Black woman!
In reality, Abraham Lincoln is no hero for the Black man. Ebony
Magazine editor historian Lerone Bennett wrote a landmark 652-page book
titled Forced Into Glory that really ends all debate in the matter. But
Hollywood would have to hold its nose in reading the true history of
Lincoln’s racial words and deeds. And then there’s the forgotten fate of
the Native American, whose Holocaust was accelerated by Lincoln’s
murderous expansionist policies, which unleashed violent White
settlement on Indian lands in the West.
In analyzing the insufferable idolization of this supreme White
supremacist, one is reminded of the words of Elijah Muhammad: “Abraham
Lincoln was not instrumental in trying to free you….The truth will make
you free.”