The movie, Lincoln, depicts an accurate image of the time period of the 12th president, Abraham Lincoln’s term. The nation being entangled in a civil war, and the number of American deaths each day had motivated Lincoln, greatly, to push towards his goal of uniting the country and abolishing slavery completely. The ending of the movie had not been great, due to the assassination of Lincoln, but he had fought courageously in order to achieve his goal and essentially had died for it. However, I believe that it was all worth it. He will always be an unforgettable president and one of the people who had tried to put an obstacle in the way of racism. I believe that one of the most important scenes in the movie is the scene where Lincoln is speaking to his cabinet, and how he wants the 13th amendment to go through the House immediately, so it can be ratified. Lincoln came to see the amendment as a way to resolve the tension between slavery and the ideals of the Declaration of Independence. He also recognized it as a way to protect federalism from more radical proposals that threatened it. He reminisces about the hardships he faced as he passed the Emancipation Proclamation, stating that all enslaved people in certain towns of the South were issued free. …show more content…
All the work they had done in order to get the 13th amendment passed would go to waste. Before he even proposed the amendment, he knew that it was merely impossible to get it out of the House, but it was worth fighting for. So, there was a higher possibility of the amendment passing if it happened before the Confederate states joined. This strategy actually worked because even in the Union it was so hard to get the people to vote for it, but in the end, they finally get it over