Page:Nullification Controversy in South Carolina.djvu/48

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
The Origin of the Conflict
29

writer endeavored to prove that to them the tariff act was a benefit. The effect of the tariff upon prices, the writer held, was incapable of calculation, but he contended that it only steadied prices at the outset, and invariably resulted in a reduction ultimately, as had been established by experience everywhere. The aid of a reasonable tariff to support manufactiurers in the competition to supply a pre-occupied market was indispensable, he argued, and in the end would fully indemnify the consumers, for it contained in itself a counteracting influence, which, by exciting competition, secured the community against increase of price, and furnished an indenmity by communicating a value to labor of every description. Beyond all question the power of Congress had been constitutionally exercised in this instance.

This was typical of a number of pro-tariff arguments,[1] of more or less merit, all of which were characterized by writers in the Mercury as anything but convincing.[2]

A planter near Augusta, who saw at least one phase of the situation clearly, wrote that

  1. In the Gazette on August 18, 1828, "Prudence" started a series.
  2. Mercury, June 11, 1828. "The Astonished Natives" declared that "A Native" had soon "got into thick darkness from which no light could be seen."