Hillary Tells it Like it Is ...

Abraham Lincoln took the same risk, nay, an even greater risk, in his historic Cooper Union speech in New York City in February, 1860, when he was a low-odds candidate for the Republican presidential nomination against Stephen Douglas who, three months earlier, had already soundly defeated Lincoln in their run for the Illinois senate.

Abraham Lincoln took the same risk, nay, an even greater risk, in his historic Cooper Union speech in New York City in February, 1860, when he was a low-odds candidate for the Republican presidential nomination against Stephen Douglas who, three months earlier, had already soundly defeated Lincoln in their run for the Illinois senate. He took a controversial stand against the "immorality of slavery," and posed a direct challenge to the 40 percent of US voterswho resided in the 15 slave-owning states, along with many others who favored expanding it to the territories: "... you have a specific and well-understood allusion to an assumed Constitutional rightof yours, to take slaves into the federal territories, and to hold them there as property. But no such right is specifically written in the Constitution."

These are the kind of courageous, honest stands that make America what it is today, rare as they are. Lincoln was putting a divided nation at risk, and risking his opportunity to become president, with his position. But he prevailed, although at a dear cost: a mere five weeks after he took office the first shots were fired at Ft. Sumpter, igniting the Civil War, which led 650,000 Americans to their death before the north prevailed, and Lincoln was able to sign the Emancipation Proclamation.

But he was right, wasn't he? Yes, he was. At the end of the Civil War nearly four million fellow humans held in bondage, were eligible for freedom.