Alan Hoffmann

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Douglass wanted the conflict between the secessionists and the Union to be about slavery; Lincoln wanted it to be about states’ rights—which, in his view, included the right to permit slavery but not the right to secede. Douglass saw the struggle as essentially moral; Lincoln saw it as political. Douglass was an idealist; Lincoln, a pragmatist.
The Zealot and the Emancipator: John Brown, Abraham Lincoln, and the Struggle for American Freedom
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