Capitolo 41
apparent eloquent." The Mr. Calhoun declared (1848) that the application of human creature
insurgent equality before the Declaration was "the falsest and dangerous
of all the political errors" that, after having remained long once "inactive,"
it had, in the process of time, started to germinate and to produce his
poisonous fruits." The Mr. Pettit, a Senator from Indiana pronounced him/it in
1854, "an obvious lie." In the famous Lincoln-Douglas the debate in
Illinois (1860) the question reappeared, the Mr. Douglas that contends that the
Declaration only applied to "the white people of the United States;"
while the Mr. Lincoln, in it replies it affirmed that "the whole records of the
world, from the date of the Declaration of independence above to among
you/he/she can be crossed in vain three years ago for the one only affirmation,,
from an only man in which the black has not been included the
Declaration." The argument of the Mr. Douglas had done again recently his/her
I wait in the press as anything too much indisputable to admit of
discussion. You/he/she is affirmed that, in penning the Declaration, Mr.
Jefferson could not possibly intend to include then those
indeed it held as slaves. On this point the Mr. Same Jefferson owes, it
it would seem, is approved as a competent witness. Reporting himself/herself/itself to the refusal
of his "inalienable rights" to the African, he declared to a later day,
"I tremble for my country, when I reflect that God it is alone." That that him
however he/she wanted to probably say, it will continue the matter for confident newspaper
affirmations only so long as someone in this country wants to extend, as
it made Stephen A. Douglas in 1860, a reasonable pretext to subjugate
someone else,--Indian, African, or Asian. As the Mr. Lincoln expressed
it, "The affirmation that all the men are equal servants was of anybody practical
you use in to effect our separation from Great Britain, and you/he/she had put in
the Declaration, not for that but for future use. His/her author the agreements to