Are the Southern troops not traders?
Did they not rise up in arms against the United States of America?
Are they not nuthing more than a group of home grown terrorists?
He did the wrong thing. Are the Southern troops not traders? Did they not rise up in arms against the United States of America? Are they not nuthing more than a group of home grown terrorists?
I hear this over and over yet there is very little in ANY secession document that indicates this. As I recall only ONE of the documents spends any time at all on tariffs. All the others spend the vast majority of time discussing slavery. Slavery was THE primary issue. The words states rights got adopted AFTER the war mostly so people could distance themselves from the Slavery argument.Of course they were traders. That is why they were so adamantly opposed to the tariffs levied by the Federal government, one of the leading causes of secession.
Bad move....the whole concept of the "confederacy" treats the issue of slavery as a mere formality that would have eventually been solved (and besides, it wasn't all that important to the southern economy/way of life, and it wasn't as bad as people made it out to be). It's going to be real interesting to see if anyone is going to get a public platform to state this, and what Obama's explanation/justification will be.
I hear this over and over yet there is very little in ANY secession document that indicates this. As I recall only ONE of the documents spends any time at all on tariffs. All the others spend the vast majority of time discussing slavery. Slavery was THE primary issue. The words states rights got adopted AFTER the war mostly so people could distance themselves from the Slavery argument.
He did the wrong thing. Are the Southern troops not traders? Did they not rise up in arms against the United States of America? Are they not nuthing more than a group of home grown terrorists?
And as even you have several times pointed out, in an attempt to smear Lincoln, he had NO intent to end slavery. If anything he was going to try to help foster the slow road to manumission and repatriation rather than the extreme of emancipation. The south wrongly left the union under the mistaken belief that Lincoln was going to serupticiously end slavery.The word is "traitor" not "trader" you illiterate moron. And NO, they were not traitors, they were standing up for the principles of the Constitution and US Law, not subverting or obstructing them. They were demanding what every single American has the right to demand, and that doesn't make you a traitor or terrorist.
You may disagree with what they wanted, history may have deemed "wrong" what they sought, but at the time and under the circumstances, they merely wanted what was rightfully theirs, and didn't feel the federal government had a right to take. It was not illegal to own slaves or use slave labor, in fact, the US Supreme Court had made several rulings over the years, and "slaves" were deemed "property" by the US FEDERAL court and the US Congress, not Southerners, and not the CSA. They were merely playing by the rules as they stood at the time. To fault them for this, is unfair and unscrupulous.
I hear this over and over yet there is very little in ANY secession document that indicates this. As I recall only ONE of the documents spends any time at all on tariffs. All the others spend the vast majority of time discussing slavery. Slavery was THE primary issue. The words states rights got adopted AFTER the war mostly so people could distance themselves from the Slavery argument.
The word is "traitor" not "trader" you illiterate moron. And NO, they were not traitors, they were standing up for the principles of the Constitution and US Law, not subverting or obstructing them. They were demanding what every single American has the right to demand, and that doesn't make you a traitor or terrorist.
You may disagree with what they wanted, history may have deemed "wrong" what they sought, but at the time and under the circumstances, they merely wanted what was rightfully theirs, and didn't feel the federal government had a right to take. It was not illegal to own slaves or use slave labor, in fact, the US Supreme Court had made several rulings over the years, and "slaves" were deemed "property" by the US FEDERAL court and the US Congress, not Southerners, and not the CSA. They were merely playing by the rules as they stood at the time. To fault them for this, is unfair and unscrupulous.
It doesn't matter what they "spent their time discussing" you moron. Yes, slavery was part of the deal, yes, slaves were owned personal property according to your federal courts!
I guess he's just doing what every president's done since the memorial was first erected.
What I don't get is why this wasn't an issue when bush or the others did it.
My point exactly, they were clearly not your Courts, as you were a separate, albeit inferior, nation. Btw, I still don't agree with MY federal courts, but I don't up and run off like a fucking child. Rather than act as a man with NO honor, I uphold my commitment to the Constitution I'm sworn to protect and defend, much unlike the military officers of the South who had no honor and reneged on their sacred oaths.
And if slavery was such a small part, why does it take up most of the text of the secession documents?
Can ANYONE point to a single document of Secession where Slavery was not the overwhelming cause mentition for Secession? South Carolina talks most of the document about the history of the US and that the constitution was a contract which they could breach when they felt the ends of the government are destructive to the people of South Carolina and they they talk about nothing but slavery, how the northern states violate the Fugitive Slave Act, how slavery is a state issue how Lincoln is hostile to slave states.
http://americancivilwar.com/documents/causes_south_carolina.html
Mississippi's document literally can't get through 3 sentences without saying that Slavery is the reason they are leaving.
http://americancivilwar.com/documents/causes_mississippi.html
This is the FIRST LINE of the Georgia document: For the last ten years we have had numerous and serious causes of complaint against our non-slave-holding confederate States with reference to the subject of African slavery.
http://americancivilwar.com/documents/causes_georgia.html
By the third Paragraph of the Texas document they are on slavery.
http://americancivilwar.com/documents/causes_texas.html
The issue of slavery was the ONLY overwhelming issue that the south thought was a "State's rights issue" even though the term state's rights was rarely if EVER used early in the conflict.
I would like to further point out that the South's Constitutional rights were not being threatened, while those of the North were being threatened via the Fugitive Slave Laws and the Dred Scot decision, which undermined the sovereignty of every free state.
The North was attempting to use Constitutional methods to move the country in a direction where slavery would eventually be done away with.
Please, tell us which landmark actions "the north" (aka: US Congress, Supreme Court, President) took prior to the war, to move the country in the direction of ending slavery?
* crickets chirping * ...That's right... NADDA!
In EVERY case, in EVERY instance, when the issue of slavery came up, the United States of America failed to take the country in that direction, opting to do the more economically sound and rational thing, and maintain the institution of slavery where it already existed. In legal case after legal case, the SCOTUS found that slaves were property, and the Constitution clearly protects our property rights. You simply want to paint a picture of something that never was, and act as if that was the reality. A very small portion of liberal northeast America, mostly religious Quakers, advocated for abolition of slavery, the vast majority of America, including the justices of the Supreme Court, did not view a slave as much more than an animal owned by its master.
Your problem is, you want to pass your racist guilt off on the South, and make them your scapegoat. So you create these lies based on myths and misconceptions, even though you have studied history and know the truth. That's pretty pathetic if you ask me. I debate the Civil War with a lot of different people, and I don't have much of a problem with those who are just misinformed products of our public school system, but it pisses me off when someone who seems to have a grasp of history, wants to lie and distort the truth like you always try to do with this.
First they abolished slavery in their own region. Then they began to spread the ideology of free land out West to territories such as California and Kansas. The doctrine of Popular Sovereignty was overtaking the earlier doctrine of free and slave states based upon geographic location, allowing for every single Western state to become free, and ultimately make the pro-slavery cause a weak one politically.
Your argument also pretends that the South was not a part of the prewar political culture, and did not elect presidents from Jefferson to Buchanan into office, all of whom appointed federal judges and signed laws which often came from Southern dominated Congresses.
As a professed conservative, its also surprising that you argue that the lack of radical action and change, prewar, invalidates the entire ant-slavery movement from 1776-1861 as a pretentious idea, when conservatives are usually opposed to radical change in the pursuit of political goals.
In the mid-1800's, the #1 leading American product and exportable, was cotton. Advancements in technology and civilization, were rendering slave labor obsolete, and it could most clearly understood that slavery would eventually end because of this. Indeed, all importing of new slaves had ceased, and the predominate issue of the day was, what to do with slaves when they were freed.
Because of the climate, the deep south was the best place to grow cotton. If cotton could be grown in Boston, there would have been a lot of slaves there, because that is how cotton was harvested, and it was our #1 product and export. There was absolutely no difference in the general social opinion of the slaves, about 97% of white America agreed, they didn't want the slaves integrated into their society. Some favored shipping them off to far away places, like Haiti or Liberia, including one Abraham Lincoln.
As for the economics, the United States was benefiting from cotton in a huge way. Through tariffs on exports, often used to offset tariffs paid for imports to support the growing industries in the north. Cotton also fueled the textile industries of northern states, and again, one of our leading commodities as a nation. Cotton was at the core of our economy as much as oil is today. So, it wasn't simply racist southern plantation owners who profited from slave labor. Every shop owner who sold a pair of blue jeans, from Maine to California, profited from slave labor, and had no problem with it.
If you wish to talk about murder on blacks in unspeakable ways, please remember to include the worst examples, which followed emancipation of the slaves and the Civil War...
In Springfield, Illinois, during August 1908, a three-day riot took place, initiated by a white woman,s claim of violation by a Negro. Inflamed by newspapers’ sensationalism, crowds of whites gathered around the jail demanding that the Negro, who had been arrested and imprisoned, be lynched. When the sheriff transferred the accused and another Negro to a jail in a nearby town, white mobs headed for the Negro section and attacked homes and businesses. Two Blacks were lynched, others were dragged from their houses and streetcars and beaten. By the time the National Guardsmen reached the scene, six persons were dead—four whites and two Negroes. This riot, in the home town of Abraham Lincoln, shocked white liberals, who met the following year in New York City, with several prominent Blacks, to form the NAACP “to promote equality of rights and eradicate caste or race prejudice...”
The East St. Louis, Illinois riot in 1917 was touched off by the fear of white working men that Negro advances in economic, political and social status were threatening their own status. When the labor force of an aluminum plant went on strike in April, the company hired Negro workers. Although the strike was crushed by a combination of militia, injunctions, and both Black and white strike breakers, the union blamed its defeat on the Blacks. A union meeting in May demanded that “East St. Louis must remain a white man’s town.” A riot followed, sparked by a white man, during which mobs demolished buildings and Blacks were attacked and beaten. Policemen did little more than take the injured to hospitals and disarm Negroes. Harassments and beatings continued through June.
On July 1, some whites in a Ford drove through the main Negro district, shooting into homes. Blacks armed themselves. When a police car, also a Ford, drove down the street to investigate, the Blacks fired on it, killing two policemen. The next day, as reports of the shooting spread, a new riot began. Streetcars were stopped, Blacks were pulled off, stoned, clubbed, kicked and shot. Other rioters set fire to Black homes. By midnight the Black section was in flames and Blacks were fleeing the city. The official casualty figures were nine whites and thirty-nine Blacks, hundreds wounded, but the NAACP investigators estimated that between one hundred to two hundred Blacks were killed.14 Over three hundred buildings were destroyed.
The worst of the post-War race riots took place in Chicago, Illinois. It began late in July 1919 when a young Black “encroached” upon a swimming area that the whites had marked off for themselves, and was stoned until he drowned. By the time the riot ended, thirteen days later, thousands of both races had been involved in a series of frays, fifteen whites and twenty-three Negroes were killed, and 178 whites and 342 Blacks were injured. More than one thousand families, mostly Blacks, were left homeless due to the burnings and general destruction of property.
~~SOURCE
To pretend that 1860s America was, in any way, similar in social viewpoint regarding race, to the viewpoints of today, is absurd. To pretend the South was a bunch of racists who wanted to deny civil rights, and the North was sophisticated and educated, and had this righteous enlightenment that black men were equal to white men, is preposterous. It was not like that!
Southern farmers used what the United States laws and courts had ruled and determined to be, legitimate property, to do a legitimate deed and grow a legitimate crop, and make a legitimate profit! Acting as if they were somehow defying the United States to do this, or the will of the people, or exploiting some loophole... those are just not factual or realistic arguments.
Somehow you ignored the indisputable unspeakable horrors and turned ungodly evil into a simple business arrangement.
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