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Truth Warrior
12-12-2008, 09:59 AM
Hamilton's Curse: How Jefferson's Archenemy Betrayed the American Revolution — and What It Means for America Today

Thomas J. DiLorenzo

Fall 2008
Volume 14, Number 3

[Hamilton's Curse: How Jefferson's Archenemy Betrayed the American Revolution — and What It Means for America Today (http://www.mises.org/store/Hamiltons-Curse-P534.aspx). By Thomas J. DiLorenzo. Crown Forum. 2008. 245 pages.]

After you read the dedication of Hamilton's Curse, you know that the book is going to be good: "Dedicated to the memory of Professor Murray N. Rothbard, a brilliant scholar and tireless defender of the free society." DiLorenzo proves to be an outstanding practitioner of a Rothbardian brand of history, a fact that should come as no surprise to readers of his earlier books, The Real Lincoln (http://www.mises.org/store/Real-Lincoln-The-P172.aspx), Lincoln Unmasked (http://www.mises.org/store/Lincoln-Unmasked-P324.aspx), and How Capitalism Saved America (http://www.mises.org/store/How-Capitalism-Saved-America-P260.aspx).[1] (http://mises.org/misesreview_detail.aspx?control=346#note1)

DiLorenzo's title, 18th century in its expansiveness, succinctly sums up his main theme. Thomas Jefferson supported the American Revolution in order to promote individual liberty. To secure this end, it was essential that the central government be strictly limited in its powers. America, in the Jeffersonian view, was an alliance of sovereign states, and the adoption of the Constitution, though it increased the power of the national government, did not fundamentally change this arrangement.

Alexander Hamilton disagreed. He bemoaned the limited powers given to the central government under the Articles of Confederation and continually agitated for a new scheme of authority. At the Constitutional Convention, it became clear how radical were his plans. He favored a permanent president and senate and wanted the federal government to have the power to appoint state governors.

What was behind this radical plan of centralization, fortunately rejected by the majority of the convention? DiLorenzo follows up the brilliant suggestion of Cecilia Kenyon that Hamilton was the "Rousseau of the Right." Rousseau thought that society should be guided by the "general will," but what exactly that concept entailed has perplexed later commentators. It cannot be equated with what the majority of a certain society wishes: it is only when the people's decisions properly reflect the common good, untrammeled by faction, that the general will operates. But if the general will need not result from straightforward voting, how is to be determined? One answer, for which there is some textual support in Rousseau, is that a wise legislator will guide the people toward what they really want. Those who dissent will "be forced to be free."

This was precisely Hamilton's view. Government, directed by the wise such as himself, would guide the people toward what was good for them. Clinton Rossiter, a Cornell political scientist,

catalogued how some version of "the general will" appears hundreds of times in Hamilton's speeches, letters, and writings… Hamilton more pointedly than any other political thinker of his time, introduced the concept of the "public good" into American thought. (p. 23, quoting Rossiter)[2] (http://mises.org/misesreview_detail.aspx?control=346#note2)

Hamilton did not secure what he wanted at the Convention, and in his contributions to the Federalist Papers, he sometimes for purposes of propaganda defended the limited government that he really rejected. But with the onset of the new government in 1789, he by no means abandoned his goal of centralized power. He had been, during the American Revolution, George Washington's military aide; and the new president appointed him secretary of the Treasury. In that capacity, he bombarded Washington with advice on interpreting the Constitution.

The powers of the central government in his view were not confined to those expressly delegated to it — far from it. The national government had also various powers "implied" by its express grants, though the logic of these implications escaped those not enamored of big government. "'Implied powers' are powers that are not actually in the Constitution but that statists like Hamilton wish were there" (p. 26). The government also had "resulting" powers: these were not even present in the Constitution by implication but "resulted" from new sitiuations. If, e.g., the government conquered new territory, it acquired sovereign power over it. "'This would be rather the result from the whole mass of the government … than a consequence of … powers specially enumerated'" (p. 28, quoting Hamilton).

As if this were not enough, Hamilton did not scruple to interpret the words of the Constitution against their plain sense. Congress was granted the power to pass laws "necessary and proper" for its enumerated powers. To Hamilton, "necessary" meant "convenient"; what was the small matter of the dictionary to stand in the way of the public interest?

In other words, such powers should be made up, even fabricated, on the whims of politicians posing as guardians of the "public good." He [Hamilton] went on to say that any act of government is to be permitted if it is not expressly prohibited by the Constitution, something he forgot to mention in The Federalist Papers. (p. 61)

Thus, in his report to Washington on the constitutionality of a national bank, Hamilton held that, since Congress had the power to coin money, and in his opinion a national bank would be helpful for a monetary system, the bank passed the constitutional test. Jefferson disagreed. Regardless of whether Hamilton was right about the desirability of a bank — and Jefferson of course rejected Hamilton's view of the matter — a bank was not "necessary" and hence had no constitutional warrant.

As his opinion on the bank suggests, much of Hamilton's centralizing plans aimed at economic goals. Once more in contrast to Jefferson, he believed that the government should guide the economy. He returned to the mercantilist system famously condemned by Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nations (http://www.adamsmith.org/smith/won-index.htm). (Murray Rothbard has noted that Smith failed completely to repudiate mercantilism; nevertheless, he strongly criticized the main planks of that system.)

For Hamilton, economics and politics were inextricably mixed. Here DiLorenzo follows Douglass Adair, perhaps the foremost 20th-century student of the Federalist Papers. By tying members of the business elite of the states to the new central government, in large part through their involvement in government debt, the power of the national government would be secured.

"With devious brilliance, Hamilton set out, by a program of class legislation, to unite the propertied interests of the eastern seaboard into a cohesive administration party, while at the same time he attempted to make the executive dominant over the Congress by a lavish use of the spoils system." (pp. 45–46, quoting Adair)

We have already alluded to two of the components of Hamilton's economic system, a public debt and a national bank. Protective tariffs in his view were also vital. By tariffs, as well as "bounties," the industrial power of the nation could be built up. But why does the growth of industry require the government's help? In Hamilton's famous argument, "infant industries" needed time to establish themselves before they were fit to face the rigors of international competition. DiLorenzo responds that in practice, the infants never reach maturity. The subsidies remain in perpetuity.

Unfortunately, Hamilton was not an aberration. He had many influential followers and successors; and DiLorenzo finds that efforts to centralize economic and political power run through our history, like the proverbial red thread in the ropes of the British navy. One of the foremost of DiLorenzo's long list of villains is John Marshall, the third chief justice and, incidentally, Jefferson's cousin. Marshall was avid to interpret the Constitution in accord with Hamilton's passion for national power. In McCulloch v. Maryland, (1819) he upheld the constitutionality of the first Bank of the United States, agreeing with Hamilton on the lax interpretation of "necessary and proper."

As the legal scholar Edwin S. Corwin pointed out, it is "well known" that for his written opinion in this case, Marshall depended on Alexander Hamilton's earlier argument about the constitutionality of the BUS [Bank of the United States], which he had written on February 23, 1791. (p. 87)

In Fletcher v Peck (1810), Marshall set aside state legislation as a violation of a valid contract, even though the "contract" in question was fraudulent. He did so in order to enhance federal supremacy.[3] (http://mises.org/misesreview_detail.aspx?control=346#note3)

Readers of our author's earlier books will not be surprised to find Henry Clay on the list of miscreants. All the basic elements of Clay's famous American System came from Hamilton: high tariffs, government promotion of industry, and investment in "internal improvements" such as canals and turnpikes. "Henry Clay, leader of the Whig Party … would adopt Hamilton's agenda as his own under the rubric of 'The American System,' a slogan that Hamilton himself coined" (p. 116). DiLorenzo points out that these programs exacerbated regional strife, since they advanced the interests of the more industrialized Northern states at the expense of the South.

Of course Clay had a follower of his own — Abraham Lincoln, who viewed himself as Clay's disciple. He too favored high tariffs, and his insistence on collecting the "duties and imposts," as he put it in his First Inaugural (http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Abraham_Lincoln%27s_First_Inaugural_Address), made inevitable the War Between the States. Once the war began, Lincoln proceeded to enact as much of the American System as he could, e.g., massive subsidies to railroads and continued high tariffs. To pay for the war and his nationalist economic program, a federal income tax was imposed in 1862.

DiLorenzo carries forward his theme to the "Hamiltonian Revolution of 1913." In that year, the 16th Amendment (http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Additional_amendments_to_the_United_States_Constit ution#Amendment_XVI), making a federal income tax was ratified; and the Federal Reserve System was established. The details of these efforts at monetary nationalism will be familiar to many readers of The Mises Review. What many will find surprising, though, is the importance of other great constitutional change of that fateful year, the 17th Amendment (http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Additional_amendments_to_the_United_States_Constit ution#Amendment_XVII). This called for the direct election of senators. At first, one might wonder what this has to do with the Hamiltonian program. Was this not simply an effort to make politicians more directly responsible to the people?

DiLorenzo shows the fallacy of this common opinion. Under the old system, senators acted as virtual ambassadors of the states. Sometimes, the state legislature instructed senators how to vote; and if the senators did not feel able to obey these instructions, they resigned. This was an important check on federal power, which the new system ended.

Our author, nothing if not consistent, sees the 20th-century usurpations of power, both in domestic and foreign affairs, by the federal government as Hamiltonian in character. America's entry into World War I, e.g., came about through Woodrow Wilson's desire to have America play a dominant role in shaping the world. Limited government and states' rights, in the style of Thomas Jefferson, was not to his liking. His insistence on a powerful nation, led of course by a strong chief executive, was quintessentially Hamiltonian. In this stress on Hamilton's continuing influence, he has support from some who view matters with decidedly different value judgments. Michael Lind, an ardent economic nationalist, sees Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson as followers of Hamilton. To DiLorenzo, but decidedly not to Lind, we suffer from the "poisoned fruits" of Hamilton's program.

Hamilton's Curse fits in very well with DiLorenzo's earlier books. He here identifies the inception of a basic and malign influence, economic nationalism, on American history. In his two books on Lincoln, he describes the main 19th-century exponent of that policy; and in How Capitalism Saved America, he discusses the system of economic freedom that economic nationalism endeavors to restrict and replace.

http://mises.org/misesreview_detail.aspx?control=346

Truth Warrior
12-12-2008, 12:45 PM
bump.

heavenlyboy34
12-12-2008, 12:54 PM
bumpity bump for good reading. (especially those people from that post the other day who have trouble reading-this is good practice ;) ):)

Truth Warrior
12-12-2008, 12:57 PM
bumpity bump for good reading. (especially those people from that post the other day who have trouble reading-this is good practice ;) ):) Bump, bump. :) Agreed!!! ;)

BenjFranklin
12-12-2008, 07:16 PM
This book is sitting under my Xmas tree in wrapping paper. Not sure if I'll be able to hold out.

Truth Warrior
12-13-2008, 05:24 AM
This book is sitting under my Xmas tree in wrapping paper. Not sure if I'll be able to hold out. Maybe the teaser OP review will tide you over till then. ;) Hang in there. :)

Here's a thought, FWIW, just go to a bookstore and sneak a peek at it between now and then. :D

Truth Warrior
12-14-2008, 03:51 PM
bump.

krazy kaju
12-15-2008, 07:06 PM
bimp?

Hamilton was totally not cool, dude.

mudhoney
12-15-2008, 07:45 PM
Thank you for the review. I will either be getting this book for Christmas or using a mises.org gift certificate I requested for Christmas to buy it.

Truth Warrior
12-16-2008, 10:56 AM
bimp?

Hamilton was totally not cool, dude. You're being way to kind to him.<IMHO>

Truth Warrior
12-16-2008, 10:58 AM
Thank you for the review. I will either be getting this book for Christmas or using a mises.org gift certificate I requested for Christmas to buy it. You're welcome. :)

:cool: Enjoy, ( if that's the right word ). ;)

Truth Warrior
12-25-2008, 04:08 PM
Editorial Reviews
Product Description

Two of the most influential figures in American history. Two opposing political philosophies. Two radically different visions for America.

Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton were without question two of the most important Founding Fathers. They were also the fiercest of rivals. Of these two political titans, it is Jefferson—–the revered author of the Declaration of Independence and our third president—–who is better remembered today. But in fact it is Hamilton’s political legacy that has triumphed—–a legacy that has subverted the Constitution and transformed the federal government into the very leviathan state that our forefathers fought against in the American Revolution.

How did we go from the Jeffersonian ideal of limited government to the bloated imperialist system of Hamilton’s design? Acclaimed economic historian Thomas J. DiLorenzo provides the troubling answer in Hamilton’s Curse.

DiLorenzo reveals how Hamilton, first as a delegate to the Constitutional Convention and later as the nation’s first and most influential treasury secretary, masterfully promoted an agenda of nationalist glory and interventionist economics—–core beliefs that did not die with Hamilton in his fatal duel with Aaron Burr. Carried on through his political heirs, the Hamiltonian legacy:

• Wrested control into the hands of the federal government by inventing the myth of the Constitution’s “implied powers”
• Established the imperial presidency (Hamilton himself proposed a permanent president—–in other words, a king)
• Devised a national banking system that imposes boom-and-bust cycles on the American economy
• Saddled Americans with a massive national debt and oppressive taxation
• Inflated the role of the federal courts in order to eviscerate individual liberties and state sovereignty
• Pushed economic policies that lined the pockets of the wealthy and created a government system built on graft, spoils, and patronage
• Transformed state governments from Jeffersonian bulwarks of liberty to beggars for federal crumbs

By debunking the Hamiltonian myths perpetuated in recent admiring biographies, DiLorenzo exposes an uncomfortable truth: The American people are no longer the masters of their government but its servants. Only by restoring a system based on Jeffersonian ideals can Hamilton’s curse be lifted, at last.

http://www.amazon.com/

nate895
12-25-2008, 04:10 PM
Just wanted to post, I got this for Christmas this morning. I'll start in on it in a couple of days, have to watch a couple marathons of The Twilight Zone first from my new DVD collection.

Truth Warrior
12-25-2008, 04:20 PM
Just wanted to post, I got this for Christmas this morning. I'll start in on it in a couple of days, have to watch a couple marathons of The Twilight Zone first from my new DVD collection. I got an Amazon gift certificate for Christmas, and am currently on a shopping and buying spree. ;) :)

Galileo Galilei
12-25-2008, 10:37 PM
I picked this book up at Barnes & Noble last month and read it. Its awesome! It really explains US economic history in simple documented fashion and is a real eye-opener.

I gave the book to my dad for Christmas and will pick another copy up for myself when it comes out in paperback.

This book is a must read.

heavenlyboy34
12-25-2008, 11:07 PM
Jeffersonians and Aaron Burr FTW! :);)

johnfloyd6675
12-25-2008, 11:20 PM
dont wanna copy paste but cf: http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?t=173217

the gist of my argument is that libertarianism and constitutionalism in the year 2008 are conservative approaches to statecraft in opposition to the statism and moralism that constitute ideological approaches to statecraft, and that Hamiltonian federalism runs parallel to constitutionalism much as Jeffersonian democracy runs parallel to modern statisms.

heavenlyboy34
12-25-2008, 11:53 PM
dont wanna copy paste but cf: http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?t=173217

the gist of my argument is that libertarianism and constitutionalism in the year 2008 are conservative approaches to statecraft in opposition to the statism and moralism that constitute ideological approaches to statecraft, and that Hamiltonian federalism runs parallel to constitutionalism much as Jeffersonian democracy runs parallel to modern statisms.

You think Jefferson had the modern State apparatus in mind when he was alive? :confused::eek:

johnfloyd6675
12-26-2008, 12:47 AM
You think Jefferson had the modern State apparatus in mind when he was alive? :confused::eek:

i can't imagine that he would have, given that modern statism requires an arsenal of technologies unimagined until the early 20th century. but at the center of all statehoods dwells a single sovereignty- sovereignty herein understood as the legitimation of violence, the abstract quality which gives the king or the people or whomever is in charge the right to make decisions- the nature of which directs the government as a whole towards given goals.

sovereignty in a conservative politics is supposed to shepherd the social order (existing outside of the state) against anarchic threats against the peace. american conservatism- or conservatism in america- seeks to defend a social order of the sort intended by the DoI and the constitution, an order defined by liberty.

Jefferson, on the other hand, wanted to direct the sovereign violence of the american government(s?) against European kingdoms, particularly his ancestral homeland in the UK, intending not to preserve liberty at home but to debase order abroad. that he lacked the military to do so is fortunate.

nate895
12-26-2008, 12:52 AM
dont wanna copy paste but cf: http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?t=173217

the gist of my argument is that libertarianism and constitutionalism in the year 2008 are conservative approaches to statecraft in opposition to the statism and moralism that constitute ideological approaches to statecraft, and that Hamiltonian federalism runs parallel to constitutionalism much as Jeffersonian democracy runs parallel to modern statisms.

You are completely clueless if you think Hamiltonianism is at all Constitutional, and that can be summed in one issue: Hamilton like the first Bank of the United States (i.e. an unconstitutional, statist, central bank), Jefferson bitterly opposed it. In order to justify their ridiculous actions that even Hamilton would have said made government too big (a high bar to jump over for sure), the socialists of today and the early twentieth century made a fake history (the only kind they could have if they didn't go directly for their European history) of their movement tracing it back to Jefferson.

johnfloyd6675
12-26-2008, 12:56 AM
You are completely clueless if you think Hamiltonianism is at all Constitutional, and that can be summed in one issue: Hamilton like the first Bank of the United States (i.e. an unconstitutional, statist, central bank), Jefferson bitterly opposed it. In order to justify their ridiculous actions that even Hamilton would have said made government too big (a high bar to jump over for sure), the socialists of today and the early twentieth century made a fake history (the only kind they could have if they didn't go directly for their European history) of their movement tracing it back to Jefferson.

you have to read the other thread. i don't categorically defend hamilton's policies, but i defend his politics. jefferson's policies were probably better than hamiltons, but they were conceived in ideology.

No1ButPaul08
12-26-2008, 12:59 AM
John, would it be fair to say you beleive we live in a Hamiltonian economy and interpretation of the Constitution, yet got there through a Jeffersonian Democracy?

nate895
12-26-2008, 01:01 AM
you have to read the other thread. i don't categorically defend hamilton's policies, but i defend his politics. jefferson's policies were probably better than hamiltons, but they were conceived in ideology.

If you wouldn't have noticed, I was one of the first (if not the first) respondents of your post. As far as Jefferson's ideology, it was grounded in English Common Law, which has been around since before William The Conqueror crossed the English Channel in 1066, though it was radically changed rights-wise by the Magna Carta.

johnfloyd6675
12-26-2008, 01:12 AM
John, would it be fair to say you beleive we live in a Hamiltonian economy and interpretation of the Constitution, yet got there through a Jeffersonian Democracy?

that's a fair way of phrasing our present situation, although i would qualify that hamiltonian protectionism and centralism were intended to give american industry a fighting chance and ensure that the federal government retained supreme authority in the context of a lightly populated coastal republic conceivably threatened by europe's empires, which is entirely different from erecting walls around the economic center of the world and granting unlimited powers to the government of the most powerful country in history.

policies are specific to a time and place; fundamental conceptions of the purpose of politics fall into the realm of philosophy.

nate895
12-26-2008, 01:19 AM
that's a fair way of phrasing our present situation, although i would qualify that hamiltonian protectionism and centralism were intended to give american industry a fighting chance and ensure that the federal government retained supreme authority in the context of a lightly populated coastal republic conceivably threatened by europe's empires, which is entirely different from erecting walls around the economic center of the world and granting unlimited powers to the government of the most powerful country in history.

policies are specific to a time and place; fundamental conceptions of the purpose of politics fall into the realm of philosophy.

To the detriment of the farmer, and the entire Southern region. It doesn't matter who benefits, if there is an undue burden placed on anyone, it is unjust. It is important to note this policy eventually led to a bloody war where more than 600,000 were killed, not including innocents and the economy of an entire region because they burned it to the ground. Ahh, the height of Hamiltonianism, if someone objects, subjugate them.

Truth Warrior
01-02-2009, 04:40 AM
Living With Hamilton's Curse


by David Gordon (http://www.lewrockwell.com/gordon/mailto:dgordon@mises.org)

Hamilton's Curse: How Jefferson's Archenemy Betrayed the American Revolution – and What It Means for America Today (http://www.mises.org/store/Hamiltons-Curse-P534.aspx?AFID=14). By Thomas J. DiLorenzo. Crown Forum. 2008. 245 pages.

After you read the dedication of Hamilton's Curse, you know that the book is going to be good: "Dedicated to the memory of Professor Murray N. Rothbard, a brilliant scholar and tireless defender of the free society." DiLorenzo proves to be an outstanding practitioner of a Rothbardian brand of history, a fact that should come as no surprise to readers of his earlier books, The Real Lincoln (http://www.mises.org/store/Real-Lincoln-The-P172C0.aspx?AFID=14), Lincoln Unmasked (http://www.mises.org/store/Lincoln-Unmasked-P324C0.aspx?AFID=14), and How Capitalism Saved America (http://www.mises.org/store/How-Capitalism-Saved-America-The-Untold-History-of-Our-Country-from-the-Pilgrims-to-the-Present-P260.aspx?AFID=14).

DiLorenzo's title, 18th century in its expansiveness, succinctly sums up his main theme. Thomas Jefferson supported the American Revolution in order to promote individual liberty. To secure this end, it was essential that the central government be strictly limited in its powers. America, in the Jeffersonian view, was an alliance of sovereign states, and the adoption of the Constitution, though it increased the power of the national government, did not fundamentally change this arrangement.
Alexander Hamilton disagreed. He bemoaned the limited powers given to the central government under the Articles of Confederation and continually agitated for a new scheme of authority. At the Constitutional Convention, it became clear how radical were his plans. He favored a permanent president and senate and wanted the federal government to have the power to appoint state governors.

What was behind this radical plan of centralization, fortunately rejected by the majority of the convention? DiLorenzo follows up the brilliant suggestion of Cecilia Kenyon that Hamilton was the "Rousseau of the Right." Rousseau thought that society should be guided by the "general will," but what exactly that concept entailed has perplexed later commentators. It cannot be equated with what the majority of a certain society wishes: it is only when the people's decisions properly reflect the common good, untrammeled by faction, that the general will operates. But if the general will need not result from straightforward voting, how is it to be determined? One answer, for which there is some textual support in Rousseau, is that a wise legislator will guide the people toward what they really want. Those who dissent will "be forced to be free."

This was precisely Hamilton's view. Government, directed by the wise such as himself, would guide the people toward what was good for them. Clinton Rossiter, a Cornell political scientist,

catalogued how some version of "the general will" appears hundreds of times in Hamilton's speeches, letters, and writings… Hamilton more pointedly than any other political thinker of his time, introduced the concept of the "public good" into American thought. (p. 23, quoting Rossiter)


Read the rest of the article (http://mises.org/story/3235)


January 2, 2009



David Gordon (http://www.mises.org/fellows.asp?control=5) [send him mail (http://www.lewrockwell.com/gordon/mailto:dgordon@mises.org)] is a senior fellow at the Ludwig von Mises Institute (http://www.mises.org/) and editor of its Mises Review. (http://www.mises.org/store/Mises-Review-P125C7.aspx?AFID=14) He is also the author of The Essential Rothbard (http://www.mises.org/store/Essential-Rothbard-The-P336C0.aspx?AFID=14). See also his Books on Liberty (http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig/gordon2.html).



Copyright © 2009 Ludwig von Mises Institute


David Gordon Archives (http://www.lewrockwell.com/gordon/gordon-arch.html)

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raiha
01-07-2009, 03:09 AM
Can't make up my mind whether to buy a silver eagle or this book. I love diLorenzo. I know he has been criticized for sloppy scholarship. I spent about six months going through "The Real Lincoln" with a fine tooth comb whilst doing battle on a forum of historians from the Cult of Lincoln. That is where i came across the lawyer James Ostrowski who also writes for Lew Rockwell's column from time to time and who argues against Lincoln, mercantilism, Whiggery and Hamilton's Curse. DiLorenzo's sloppy scholarship charges proved to be simply mix ups in different editions to do with page numbers and one or two conclusions he drew out of his intuition as opposed to fact. The Cult of Lincolnists were really scratching around for ammo and came out wanting whilst irritating me with moral highground banter, misdirected and false.

Truth Warrior
01-22-2009, 06:51 PM
Can't make up my mind whether to buy a silver eagle or this book. I love diLorenzo. I know he has been criticized for sloppy scholarship. I spent about six months going through "The Real Lincoln" with a fine tooth comb whilst doing battle on a forum of historians from the Cult of Lincoln. That is where i came across the lawyer James Ostrowski who also writes for Lew Rockwell's column from time to time and who argues against Lincoln, mercantilism, Whiggery and Hamilton's Curse. DiLorenzo's sloppy scholarship charges proved to be simply mix ups in different editions to do with page numbers and one or two conclusions he drew out of his intuition as opposed to fact. The Cult of Lincolnists were really scratching around for ammo and came out wanting whilst irritating me with moral highground banter, misdirected and false.


Thomas DiLorenzo Archives at LRC (http://www.lewrockwell.com/dilorenzo/dilorenzo-arch.html)
Thomas DiLorenzo Archives at Mises.org (http://www.mises.org/articles.asp?mode=a&author=DiLorenzo)


Buy the silver. ;)