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Dont dishonor Calhoun

BY H. LEE CHEEK JR.


and SEAN R. BUSICK
Jul 3 2015 12:01 am

The John C. Calhoun statue can be seen alongside the steeple of Citadel Square Baptist Church in Marion Square.
(Leroy Burnell/File)

We understand and sympathize with peoples anger and frustration about recent events, but the
misguided effort to damage the statue of Vice-President John C. Calhoun in Marion Square is a
sign of how we as contemporary Americans have a tendency to forget who we are and engage
in what has become known as political correctness. The advocates of political correctness want
to corrupt history for temporary political gains more than they desire to keep or restore it, and
their efforts are, sadly, a disease on the body politic.
The operatives of political correctness have met with some success of late. With Orwellian irony,
they succeeded in having a U.S Navy ship named for a person who hated the Navy (Cesar
Chavez) and have imposed speech codes (with the actual purpose of restricting speech) on
many college campuses as well as more destructive examples of assaulting First Amendment
rights and redefining history.
The greatest threat to political correctness is an environment in which free and uninhibited
discussion and disagreement can take place. In fact, diversity of thought is the opposite of
political correctness, and is at the heart of a free society.
The proponents of political correctness and those who wish to vandalize public monuments
stand on the side of censorship against free and diverse discussion. Equally misguided, the
defacers want to misrepresent and vilify one of Americas greatest statesmen, John Caldwell
Calhoun. Born in 1782 near Abbeville, S.C., Calhoun graduated from Yale College and

Litchfield Law School. It should also be remembered that the monument itself was erected from
the contributions of dimes and nickels from impoverished Southern people after Reconstruction
to show their support for their state and Calhoun.
He served two terms in the South Carolina Legislature until elected to the U.S. House of
Representatives in 1811. As a congressman, Calhouns reputation was that of a moral statesman
who regarded limited government and patriotism as synonymous.
President James Monroe asked Calhoun to assume the helm at the War Department (later given
the more politically correct title of Department of Defense) in 1817, where he served until 1825,
and he is described as the ablest war secretary the country had before the Civil War, while
offering a fairer and more humane approach to Native American affairs than his predecessors.
While spending most of his public life in the United States Senate, he was also vice president
under both John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson and he served as secretary of state to
John Tyler. He is generally regarded as one of the greatest senators ever, part of the Great
Triumvirate with Henry Clay and Daniel Webster and each supported the Fugitive Slave Act.
What the deliberate destructors of the monument do not want you to know is that Calhoun was
not only one of Americas greatest statesmen, but also one of its greatest thinkers. His two
treatises on American politics, the Disquisition and Discourse (published after his death),
demonstrate his hope that America could avoid the pending conflict of the Civil War. His
persistent fear was that unpatriotic sectionalism would lead to civil war and a dissolution of the
union. His last years were spent attempting to unify the country. On March 31, 1850, Calhoun
died in Washington, D.C.
In Calhouns interpretation, Americas greatest hope lay in the interposing and amending power
of the states, which was implicit in the Constitution. This alone could save the country by
allowing for a greater diffusion of authority and undermining the cause of sectional conflict.
Calhouns purpose was the preservation of the original balance of authority and the fortification
of the American political system against the obstacles it faced.
The vandals may have good intentions, but as Shakespeare warned, men are men; the best
sometimes forget. John Calhoun was imperfect, but he remains one of the greatest statesmen in
American history.
Leave Charlestons monuments for posterity, and for the rising generation.
H. Lee Cheek Jr. is dean of the School of Social Sciences at East Georgia State College in
Swainsboro. Sean R. Busick is professor of history at Athens State University in Alabama.

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