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Program:
Club
Assembly
Visiting Rotarians:
Happy Marshall
told us about the wine and cheese tasting party for November 9. we
had a turnout of 11, including four Rotarians (Mark Whitfield, his son
Nate and Nate's girlfriend; also Paul Rutter; Tineke Cunning from the
breakfast club and her husband and Rotarian Jack from the Tyrone Rotary)
for the football game as a fundraiser. Rotarians helping over the season
included George Trudeau, Paul Rutter, Mark Whitfield, Bob Williams, Hugh
Mose, Tammy Miller and Tineke Cunning from Sunrise Rotary, and Bill Bell
and Jack Cunning from Tyrone.) Thanks for all your help! We raised over
a thousand dollars and had fun!
Bryan Rodgers spoke to us today. University Park Airport serves Central Pennsylvania, Penn State University and the world! With connection flights to/from major hubs in Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Detroit and Washington/Dulles, University Park Airport is the convenient and customer-friendly way to travel. It's a big world. We can help you get there. Read more on our services and how you can make your travel with us run as smoothly as possible, or follow the links to the left for more information, weather forecasts and more. http://www.statecollegeairport.org/ is the link to the State College airport. The airport is university owned. It is the 7th busiest in the state and the 196th busiest in the country. It is the busiest airport without a control tower. Bryan said that the airport contributes 90 million dollars to the local community. Possible future cities for connections include Orlando, Chicago, San Francisco, and San Diego becasue they are the most popular destinations of travelers from the UP airport. Note Taker: Gary Brytczuk
Martella,
Nov 5th; Turley, Nov 26th; Geise,
Nov 30th;
Reminders on makeup's:
NEIGHBORING CLUBS-
check out the web
site listing or one of the E-clubs
all over the world
today | future | previous | announcements | speaker | birthday | etc. | assignments
district 7350; club 24095 State College Downtown Rotary; P.O. Box 10742; State College, PA 16805- 0742
Contact club webmaster & newsletter editor: Paul Rutter How Lincoln Saved the World (Only
a free America could have fought for global freedom.) November, 2007 In 1861, free institutions seemed poised to carry all before them. In Russia, Tsar Alexander II emancipated 22 million serfs. In Germany, lawmakers dedicated to free constitutional principles prepared to assert civilian control over Prussias feudal military caste. In America, Abraham Lincoln entered the White House pledged to a revolutionary policy of excluding human bondage from the nations territories. The new machinery of freedom, though Anglo-American in design, was universal in scope. At its core was the idea, as yet imperfectly realized, that all human beings possess a fundamental dignity. This was a truth that, Abraham Lincoln believed, was applicable to all men and all times. In 1861, the faith that all men have a right to life, liberty, and the fruits of their industry was invoked as readily on the Rhine and the Neva as on the Potomac and the Thames. But in the decade that followed, a reaction gathered momentum. Around the world, privilege rose up to defend its prerogatives. In Russia, in Germany, and in America, grandees with their backs against the wall met the challenge of liberty with a new philosophy of coercion. It was founded on two ideas. The first: paternalism. Landowners in Russia and in the American South argued that their domestic institutions embodied the paternal principle: the bondsman had, in his master, a compassionate father to look after him, and thus was better off than the worker in the cruel world of free labor. In Germany, Prussian aristocrats sought to implement a paternal code designed to make the masses more subservient to the state. The paternalists, Lord Macaulay wrote disapprovingly, wanted to regulate the school, overlook the playground, fix the hours of labour and recreation, prescribe what ballads shall be sung, what tunes shall be played, what books shall be read, what physic shall be swallowed. The second idea was militant nationalismthe right of certain (superior) peoples to impose their wills on other (inferior) peoples. Planters in the American South dreamed of enslaving Central America and the Caribbean. Germanys nationalists aspired to incorporate Danish, French, and Polish provinces into a new German Reich. In Moscow and Saint Petersburg, Panslav nationalists sought to rout the Ottoman Turks and impose Russias will on Byzantium. Lincoln recognized that the West had reached a turning point. The decisive question of the epoch, he said, was whether free constitutions could survive and prosper in the world, or whether they possessed an inherent, and fatal weakness that doomed them to a premature degeneration. Could Americaor any nation conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equallong endure? It was not improbable, Lincoln said, that if the new philosophy of coercion were permitted to advance, human bondage would become lawful in all the American States, old as well as newNorth as well as South. America would witness the total overthrow of free-state principles: it would become a country in which all men are created equal, except negroes, and foreigners, and Catholics. But it was not only in America that free institutions were threatened. Lincoln repeatedly characterized the struggle between freedom and servitude as a global one. The outcome of the American contest between the two philosophies would, he predicted, have a greatpossibly a decisiveinfluence on the future of liberty. Were the American Republic to shatter on the anvil of slavery, men and women around the world would suffer. If, on the contrary, the United States were saved on principles of freedom, millions of free happy people, the world over, Lincoln said, would rise up, and call us blessed, to the latest generations. Scholars have criticized Lincoln for exaggerating the threat to liberty; but it is important to understand how formidable, in his day, the odds against free institutions seemed. The new philosophy of coercion was dangerous precisely because it went to the heart of the free-state ideal: it attacked the principle that all men were created equal. The definitions and axioms of free society were, Lincoln said,
In the fall of 1862, when Lincoln told Congress, We shall nobly save, or meanly lose, the last, best, hope of earth, the fate of liberty hung in the balance in three great nations: Russia, where Alexander II sought to promote liberal reform; Germany, where Otto von Bismarck applied his dark genius to the destruction of the Rechtsstaat (rule-of-law state); and America itself. Those three powersRussia, Germany, and the United Stateswould go on to dominate the twentieth century. Only one did not become a slave empire. Had Lincoln not forced his revolution in 1861, American slavery might have survived into the twentieth century, deriving fresh strength from new weapons in the coercive arsenalscientific racism, social Darwinism, jingoistic imperialism, the ostensibly benevolent doctrines of paternalism. The coercive party in America, unbroken in spirit, might have realized its dream of a Caribbean slave empire. Cuba and the Philippines, after their conquest by the United States, might have become permanent slave colonies. Such a nation would have had little reason to resist Bismarcks Second Reich, Hitlers third one, or Russias Bolshevik empire. The historical probabilities would have been no less grim had Lincoln, after initiating his revolution, failed to preserve the U.S. as a unitary free state. The Southern Republic, having gained its independence, would almost certainly have formed alliances with regimes grounded in its own coercive philosophy; the successors of Jefferson Davis would have had every incentive to link arms with the successors of Otto von Bismarck. None of this came to pass. The virtue of Lincoln preserved the liberties of America. In the decades that followed, the nation that he saved played a decisive part in vindicating the freedom of peoples around the world. The author is a contributing editor of City Journal. His book, Forge of Empires 18611871: Three Revolutionary Statesmen and the World They Made,, is being published this month by Free Press. Do you have anything to share? Email me (Paul) and chances are it will find its way here. |