source:
http://www.britannica.com/blogs/2010/06/9261/
<b>The Civil War: Let the Sesquicentennial Begin in Solemnity</b>
Robert McHenry - June 16th, 2010
We, the people of the United States of America, are about to embark on a five-year commemoration of the Civil War, that consequence of political failure of most aweful (thus deliberately misspelled in order to recapture some of the word’s original meaning) memory. Much of what we do, or is done to us, in the coming years by way of noting the events of 150 years ago, will be trite, trivial, sentimental, and bathetic. We can count on the media, false history, and the forces of commercialism for that.
U.S. Civil War; Bettmann/Corbis But let’s begin differently. June 18 will mark the 150th anniversary of the nomination by the Democratic Party of Stephen A. Douglas for president, thus assuring the main ground upon which the campaign would be fought. The Republicans, meeting in May, had nominated Abraham Lincoln. It was two years since the two had staged a famous series of debates while campaigning in Illinois for a seat in the U.S. Senate, and nothing had happened to change the division between them or between the sections of the country that favored their views.
Scanning through the two party platforms of 1860 we look in vain for the two words that animate them both: Dred Scott. But by allusion and implication, the 1857 Dred Scott decision of the Supreme Court is clearly the central issue of the campaign. The Republican platform uses the word “slaveryâ€