All Stevens proved was that he was for adopting a 49% tariff in order to line his own pockets.
His phony advocacy for African-Americans merely reflected an attempt to insure that his political party would remain in power for decades thereby insuring economic policies favorable to his companies and to the detriment of the American consumer.
TVK,
Many of the people who were against equality for African Americans wanted to insure that they would remain in power for decades, and keep African Americans in a state of political, economic, and social degradation. Was that a good and righteous thing? I hope you will say no...
Yes, Stevens' party did profit from the advocacy of black suffrage. But this does not take away from the righteousness of providing equality in all spheres for all Americans. Meanwhile, southerners/Democrats could just as easily have gotten the support of African Americans, by also advocating equality for all Americans. They chose not to do so, and we all know why they made that decision.
Meanwhile, let's stipulate that Stevens was acting is support of his economic interests. Question: who wasn't doing so? When the state of Georgia seceded, it stated that Republicans abolitionists endangered "$3,000,000,000 of our property." It seems that economic interests drove a lot of people to radical action.
The thing is, you are pushing the idea that people are motivated solely by economic interests, and have no moral idea of right or wrong. This is an unfortunate and cynical view of human behavior. Stevens pushed black abolition and suffrage when these ideas were politically unpopular. And as noted in wiki,
He (Stevens) defended and supported Native Americans, Seventh-day Adventists, Mormons, Jews, Chinese immigrants, and women. Until the abolition of slavery became his primary political and personal focus, however, the defense of runaway or fugitive slaves gradually began to consume the greatest amount of his time. He was actively involved in the Underground Railroad, assisting runaway slaves in getting to Canada. An Underground Railroad site has been discovered under his office in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
Thaddeus Stevens died at midnight on August 11, 1868, in Washington, D.C., less than three months after the acquittal of Johnson by the Senate. Stevens' coffin lay in state inside the Capitol Rotunda, flanked by a Black honor guard (the Butler Zouaves from the District of Columbia). Twenty thousand people, one half of whom were African American, attended his funeral in Lancaster, PA. He chose to be buried in the Shreiner-Concord Cemetery, because it was the only cemetery that would accept people without regard to race.
Stevens wrote the inscription on his headstone that reads: "I repose in this quiet and secluded spot, not from any natural preference for solitude, but finding other cemeteries limited as to race, by charter rules, I have chosen this that I might illustrate in my death the principles which I advocated through a long life, equality of man before his Creator."
If everybody who was looking out for their own economic interests did even half as much as Stevens did for the enslaved, the powerless, and the oppressed, the world would be a much better place. The only phony people I see in the Stevens story are those who might have claimed they wanted a free and fair society, but did nothing to create such a society.
- Alan