Monday, February 18, 2013

Don't Count On It

James Wagner, President of Emory College, has gotten himself into a bit of hot water.  In a column praising political compromise, he gave as his example the "three-fifths" clause of the Constitution.  A typical response in Salon states "under Wagner’s formulation, one of the basest and demeaning political deals of American history, if not the basest, is an example of working toward a 'highest aspiration.'"

But such complaints seem to be missing the point.  What was base and demeaning was slavery itself.  The clause was not about the worth of slaves as people--that issue was decided when their rights were taken away through their enslavement.  The political compromise dealt with an ugly subject, but had nothing to do with the personhood of anyone--it was about how to count the population to figure out states' representation in Congress. (In the same sentence non-tax paying Indians don't get counted at all.)

Slaveholders would have preferred slaves count as full persons, not because they thought slaves were their equal, but because it gave them more power. Those against slavery would have preferred they not be counted. So they compromised.  Compromise can be ugly, and is almost by definition unprincipled (at least in some ways), but out of it can come good.  In this case, while neither side got what they wanted, the "base and demeaning deal" allowed the Constitution to be ratified.  I consider that a good thing, and if writers at Salon or elsewhere don't agree, they should state it clearly.

5 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Everyone's missing the real point. With the Democrats in charge and the Republicans barely holding the line, suddenly some college president is singing the praises of compromise. Was he so big on compromise when George Bush was in charge and dissent was patriotic and all that?

1:08 AM, February 18, 2013  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

it depends what it is you are compromising on and what the greater good and what the alternative is. In each and every case

4:58 AM, February 18, 2013  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Next up, entries on the use of "niggardly" and "begs the question."

5:34 AM, February 18, 2013  
Anonymous Lawrence King said...

I wonder if he realizes that if slaves had counted as a full person, abolition would have been more difficult, not less, because the slave states would have gotten more representation as a result.

But although this is an example of compromise, it's an even better example of chutzpah. When slaveowners want more Congressional representation based on the number of their slaves, that's a lot like the patricide who asks for mercy because he's an orphan.

11:08 AM, February 18, 2013  
Blogger LAGuy said...

I've already done a post on "begs the question," but that phrase is so often used to mean "raises the question" that it may be time to give up on it.

1:59 PM, February 18, 2013  

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