Cape Breton Post

History rhymes, with presidents great and small

- JIM VIBERT SALTWIRE NETWORK jim.vibert@saltwire.com @JimVibert Journalist and writer Jim Vibert has worked as a communicat­ions adviser to five Nova Scotia government­s.

“With malice toward none, with charity for all,” the first and greatest Republican president of the United States — indeed, the greatest president of them all — called on his countrymen to “bind up the nation's wounds” after four years of bloody civil war.

The enduring words of Abraham Lincoln's second inaugural address were delivered March 4, 1865, in the dying days of that “mighty scourge,” and just 42 days before Lincoln himself became one of its 620,000 fatal casualties, at the hand of assassin John Wilkes Booth.

Now, after four years of charity for none and malice toward all but those who do his vile bidding, the last and worst Republican president of the United States — indeed, the worst president of them all — will, by all that is still good and decent in America, not deliver a second inaugural address.

Nor will Donald Trump attend the inaugurati­on of the man who beat him, Joe Biden, who must now attempt to bind up the nation's wounds, carved deep in the American psyche by the outgoing president himself.

Trump will be the first American president to miss his successor's inaugurati­on since Richard Nixon left Washington in disgrace before vice-president Gerald Ford took the presidenti­al oath of office. That was 1974.

Trump is a disgrace who will get out of town the night before Biden swears to “faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and … preserve, protect and defend the Constituti­on of the United States."

PLENTY OF LIES

While Biden can be reliably trusted to uphold that oath every day he's in office, for Trump the oath was just the first of more than 20,000 — and counting — documented lies he told as president.

Like Trump, Andrew Johnson, the 17th president and first to be impeached, refused to attend his successor's inaugurati­on.

Like Biden, Ulysses S. Grant, who followed Johnson, was pleased by his predecesso­r's absence.

By a single vote in the Senate, Johnson was saved from the further ignominy of removal from office.

Trump, who became the first president to be impeached twice this week, survived removal from office — the first time — because, among the 53 Republican­s in the Senate, just one, Mitt Romney, could locate his backbone.

Lincoln's second inaugural address was just 701 words and delivered in just over six minutes, yet it ranks among the best and most memorable in U.S. history, alongside Franklin D. Roosevelt's first in 1933 — “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself” — and John F. Kennedy's, “the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans.”

If there is an enduring line in Trump's — mercifully — one and only inaugural address, it will be remembered only for its irony. “This American carnage stops right here and stops right now,” he said on Jan. 20, 2017.

A week ago today, miscreants misled and manipulate­d by Trump's lies about the election he lost, inflicted carnage on the U.S. Capitol itself, unlike anything you've ever seen, as the outgoing conartist-in-chief might say.

Abraham Lincoln was, of course, speaking of slavery, when he said: “To strengthen, perpetuate, and extend this interest was the object for which the insurgents would rend the Union, even by war.”

The insurgents who stormed the Capitol last week, and those who threaten more violence in support of their malevolent master on Jan. 17 and 20 — the day Biden takes office — are motivated by Trump to perpetuate and extend his only interest — himself. Personal aggrandize­ment and furthering his own self-interest was the point and purpose of the Trump presidency.

WORST EVER

Trump's inaugural address — labelled the worst ever by American conservati­ve intellectu­al George Will — was a rambling, 1,433-word study in grandiloqu­ence that went on for 16 miserable minutes.

Lincoln's eloquence came, as it must, with apparent ease. Of Americans north and south, Lincoln said: “Both read the same Bible and pray to the same God, and each invokes His aid against the other,” then, again pondering the sin of slavery, Lincoln asked how “any men should dare to ask a just God's assistance in wringing their bread from the sweat of other men's faces.”

Of Lincoln's address, Frederick Douglass, a man born into slavery, but who broke its bonds to become an iconic American abolitioni­st and social reformer, said simply, “it is a sacred effort.”

Of Trump's, George W. Bush, the 43rd president and a fellow Republican, was heard to utter, “that's some weird shit.”

American presidents are great and small; none greater than Lincoln, none smaller than Trump. History doesn't repeat itself, but as I hope the foregoing illustrate­s, it surely rhymes.

 ??  ??
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Donald Trump — "the worst president of them all."
CONTRIBUTE­D Donald Trump — "the worst president of them all."
 ?? STOCK IMAGE ?? Abraham Lincoln — "the greatest president of them all."
STOCK IMAGE Abraham Lincoln — "the greatest president of them all."

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