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Bubblehead1980
04-14-15, 09:16 PM
A great tyrant fell.

Torplexed
04-14-15, 09:41 PM
A great tyrant fell.

What? Did Lincoln whack a Confederate vampire lord again?

http://media.cleveland.com/moviebuff_impact/photo/abraham-lincoln-vampire-hunterjpg-752425415ab77936.jpg

Oberon
04-14-15, 10:05 PM
Oh, a drive by trolling is it?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGp9P6QvMjY

Oberon
04-14-15, 10:09 PM
http://cdn.smosh.com/sites/default/files/bloguploads/lincoln-badass-matrix.jpg

CCIP
04-14-15, 10:31 PM
Oh good lord, you're not even trying now. :down:

At the very least, you already look patently stupid when many members are contributing to "x years ago" threads in ways that are meaningful and insightful. Live and learn:

http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=214193&page=48
http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=185283

Oberon
04-14-15, 10:40 PM
I think we should use this thread to celebrate old Abe. :rock:

http://daily-steampunk.com/steampunk-blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/old_ass_version_by_sharpwriter-d33u385.png

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Dlggkx6mks

Torplexed
04-14-15, 11:11 PM
I think we should use this thread to celebrate old Abe. :rock:
http://ww4.hdnux.com/photos/03/56/72/978567/0/960x540.jpg

Oberon
04-14-15, 11:28 PM
:haha: :up:

You know, I do ponder, if the likes of Lee or Jackson could have seen what their names have been put through by those of 'The Lost Cause' brigade in the years since their defeat, perhaps they (well, Lee since Jackson was killed) would have surrendered earlier. :hmmm:

Then again, I could say the same about many historical figures whose names have been used as weapons by the ignorant and foolish. How little we learn.

http://www.davegranlund.com/cartoons/wp-content/uploads/color-party-of-linc-web.jpg

Bubblehead1980
04-15-15, 06:59 AM
:haha: :up:

You know, I do ponder, if the likes of Lee or Jackson could have seen what their names have been put through by those of 'The Lost Cause' brigade in the years since their defeat, perhaps they (well, Lee since Jackson was killed) would have surrendered earlier. :hmmm:

Then again, I could say the same about many historical figures whose names have been used as weapons by the ignorant and foolish. How little we learn.

http://www.davegranlund.com/cartoons/wp-content/uploads/color-party-of-linc-web.jpg

Ignorant and foolish describes people who celebrate a man who launched a war that left 800,000 people dead, millions more wounded physically, emotionally for life.A man who launched an unjust war(slavery was on it's way out anyways) that left millions impoverished and wrecked the culture of a beautiful part of our country, which still suffers today in many ways thanks to northern aggression.Even more ignorant is many believe it was to end the stain of slavery when in fact it was about northern industrialists and money using government tyranny to further their interests.How the brave people of the south who stood up, refused to allow their rights to be violated , did their best to stop such actions.

Ignorant and foolish are those who call Lincoln a great a man when he was nothing more than a tyrant who suspended habeas corpus jailed those who dared criticize him.Facts are stubborn things, it happened.

Sorry, this was not a great man, he was a tyrant and should be remembered as such.

Bubblehead1980
04-15-15, 07:01 AM
Oh, a drive by trolling is it?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGp9P6QvMjY

No, it was short and to the point.

Bubblehead1980
04-15-15, 07:02 AM
What? Did Lincoln whack a Confederate vampire lord again?

http://media.cleveland.com/moviebuff_impact/photo/abraham-lincoln-vampire-hunterjpg-752425415ab77936.jpg


No, but Booth handled business that evening.

Sailor Steve
04-15-15, 08:52 AM
Ignorant and foolish describes people who celebrate a man who launched a war that left 800,000 people dead, millions more wounded physically, emotionally for life.
We've had this conversation before, and you conveniently forget. It was the South that fired the opening shots.

Even more ignorant is many believe it was to end the stain of slavery when in fact it was about northern industrialists and money using government tyranny to further their interests.How the brave people of the south who stood up, refused to allow their rights to be violated , did their best to stop such actions. You might want to reread the reasons why the southern states seceded in the first place. Not the reasons they've come up with since, but the reasons they themselves gave at the time.
http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showpost.php?p=1358229&postcount=44

Ignorant and foolish are those who call Lincoln a great a man when he was nothing more than a tyrant who suspended habeas corpus jailed those who dared criticize him.Facts are stubborn things, it happened. You've said that before. Opinion is nice, but you have yet to prove your case. Or even really try.

I've pointed out before that Lincoln was the product of the generation who wrote the Constitution. The Founders were forced to compromise over the question of slave importation and Southern States' representation. They believed that the country could not survive unless all 13 states were united, and Lincoln firmly believed the same. If you don't look at it within that context then your beliefs about him and his reasons are heavily biased.

Aktungbby
04-15-15, 10:47 AM
I've pointed out before that Lincoln was the product of the generation who wrote the Constitution. The Founders were forced to compromise over the question of slave importation and Southern States' representation. They believed that the country could not survive unless all 13 states were united, and Lincoln firmly believed the same. If you don't look at it within that context then your beliefs about him and his reasons are heavily biased.

:sign_yeah:But your leaving out your argument's big gun! Lincoln, ever the consummate lawyer, acted on 'precedent' as stare dicicis is always best in weighty matters. Andrew Jackson: Southern slaveowner, victorious general, Indian fighter and duelist-married to a divorcee! established Lincoln's precedent with the South Carolina Nullification Crises which challenged Federal power. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nullification_Crisis (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nullification_Crisis) Among his memorable quotes on the matter: " Yes I have(studied the matter); please give my compliments to my friends in your State and say to them, that if a single drop of blood shall be shed there in opposition to the laws of the United States, I will hang the first man I can lay my hand on engaged in such treasonable conduct, upon the first tree I can reach."..."The attempt will be made to surprise the Forts and garrisons by the militia, and must be guarded against with vestal vigilance and any attempt by force repelled with prompt and exemplary punishment."..."I consider, then, the power to annul a law of the United States, assumed by one State, incompatible with the existence of the Union, contradicted expressly by the letter of the Constitution, unauthorized by its spirit, inconsistent with every principle on which It was founded, and destructive of the great object for which it was formed....Should the exigency arise rendering the execution of the existing laws impracticable from any cause what ever, prompt notice of it will be given to Congress, with a suggestion of such views and measures as may be deemed necessary to meet it." One thing about Andrew Jackson was known given...he didn't bluff. Throw in the crushing of Shay's Rebellion in Massachusetts and the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania in support of Federal taxation by militia in which all were pardoned and Lincoln is seen following precedent to the letter with his post-war policy to "let 'em up easy" after four years of bloodshed which unfortunately was 'radicalized' by his assassination. His addition to precedent: the Emancipation Proclamation actually a partial war measure (Antietam-1862) to keep Britain or France out of the war on the Confederate side, does not hang in all Federal buildings for nothing...

Oberon
04-15-15, 12:09 PM
Ignorant and foolish describes people who celebrate a man who launched a war that left 800,000 people dead, millions more wounded physically, emotionally for life.

You could say that for any man who started any war, the people behind the American revolution for one. Besides, as Steve has already pointed out, the Confederate forces fired the first shots.
And war was inevitable, between two great forces of movement, if it had not taken place under Lincoln, it would have under someone else.

A man who launched an unjust war(slavery was on it's way out anyways) that left millions impoverished and wrecked the culture of a beautiful part of our country, which still suffers today in many ways thanks to northern aggression.

The south only suffers because it refuses to acknowledge its defeat. There are people so stuck to 'The Lost Cause' that they have kept open the wounds of a war that ended 150 years ago. For goodness sake, World War One ended a hundred years ago and we've long since forgiven each other, only the shells of war remain to blight the landscape. The English Civil War has long since faded into memory and although its after-effects still echo within the British governmental system, there are not bands of parliamentarians or monarchists arguing at each other on the internet, or if there are they are few and far between.
For the love of God, let it go already.

Ignorant and foolish are those who call Lincoln a great a man when he was nothing more than a tyrant who suspended habeas corpus jailed those who dared criticize him.Facts are stubborn things, it happened.

Sorry, this was not a great man, he was a tyrant and should be remembered as such.

It was a civil war, they are rarely civil.

In short, this comes across as little more than butthurt over a war that you, your parents or your parents parents never fought in, if I, a Brit, can forgive Germany for the Second World War, if I can make friends with people of a country who killed one of my great-grandfathers and severely wounded the other, then you can certainly pull your head out of your backside and let the events of a war that took place over a hundred years ago be consigned where they belong.
The past.

Oh, and I need to end this with a Lincoln pic:

http://media.cagle.com/99/2012/11/19/122606_600.jpg

Betonov
04-15-15, 03:37 PM
In short, this comes across as little more than butthurt over a war that you, your parents or your parents parents never fought in, if I, a Brit, can forgive Germany for the Second World War, if I can make friends with people of a country who killed one of my great-grandfathers and severely wounded the other, then you can certainly pull your head out of your backside and let the events of a war that took place over a hundred years ago be consigned where they belong.
The past.




True. Last year 4 Brits and an Aussie had an Austro-Hungarian among them on English soil :o
And the A-H descendant survived

Oberon
04-15-15, 03:39 PM
True. Last year 4 Brits and an Aussie had an Austro-Hungarian among them on English soil :o
And the A-H descendant survived

That's because there wasn't any Serbs around. :03:

Betonov
04-15-15, 03:44 PM
That's because there wasn't any Serbs around. :03:

Well, you need a Serb that would spit in my face, I'd start kicking him when a Russian would start kicking me and then a German would start kicking me and a Frechman would come in with a riot shield and the German would smack a Belgian to the ground to get around that shield and then a Brit would start kicking the German.

Schroeder
04-15-15, 04:00 PM
Well, you need a Serb that would spit in my face, I'd start kicking him when a Russian would start kicking me and then a German would start kicking me and a Frechman would come in with a riot shield and the German would smack a Belgian to the ground to get around that shield and then a Brit would start kicking the German.
To be followed by a Turk kicking the Brit and an Italian who kicks the Austro Hungarian, a Japanese who kicks remote parts of the German (what ever that would be:doh:) and an American who is too late to get much of the party (would we actually have to make a distinction whether it's a northern or southern US boy as this seem to be two different countries in some people's eyes...:o maybe it was a self righteous Northerner riding on the back of a suppressed and exploited Southerner. ) . After a short pause everybody will be at it again for round two with a few people changing sides and some having difficulties to decide on which side to stay throughout the brawl.
Or in short: I hate you all!:stare:

Bilge_Rat
04-15-15, 04:05 PM
http://www.trbimg.com/img-50c64558/turbine/bal-if-lincoln-met-limbaugh-20121210/600

Betonov
04-15-15, 04:05 PM
And at that point, nothing remains of York :o

mapuc
04-15-15, 04:24 PM
And I who have high thoughts about Lincoln. Have always seen him as one of the best President USA had.

Markus

Bilge_Rat
04-15-15, 04:31 PM
Abraham Lincoln, the One President All of Them Want to Be More Like




While confronting Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Harry S. Truman sent an aide to the Library of Congress to research Lincoln’s firing of Gen. George B. McClellan. Dwight D. Eisenhower kept a set of Lincoln’s collected works in the Oval Office and painted a portrait of him that hung in the Cabinet Room.

Sitting in the Lincoln Bedroom during the Vietnam War, Lyndon B. Johnson looked up at a picture and said, “I sure hope I have better generals than he did.” Richard M. Nixon, at age 12, was given a picture of Lincoln that hung over his bed. During his own Vietnam trials, he made a spontaneous nighttime visit to the Lincoln Memorial.

Ronald Reagan reported a couple of instances when his dog, Rex, acted oddly, which “nearly made me join the believers” that Lincoln’s ghost haunted the mansion. Bill Clinton, of course, got in trouble for inviting political donors to sleep in the Lincoln Bedroom, but once told Mr. Winik that he wanted to write his own Lincoln biography.

Few presidents revered Lincoln more than George W. Bush, who read 14 biographies of him while president and still has two paintings of Lincoln in his office in Dallas. “There was more of an affinity, or looking to Lincoln, than other presidents because Bush was a wartime president,” said Peter H. Wehner, who as an aide to Mr. Bush organized a meeting for him with Lincoln scholars like Mr. Winik.


They sit in the second-floor bedroom named for him. They stare at his picture on the walls or his bust in the Oval Office. They study his speeches, read his letters, glance at the copy of the Emancipation Proclamation (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/c/civil_war_us_/emancipation_proclamation/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier) under glass. Some have even wondered if they saw or felt his ghost. In their darkest moments, especially during war or crisis, they ask themselves what Lincoln would do. Some find an answer; others do not.

“He remains an inspiration for presidents whether they’re Republican or Democrat,” said Jay Winik, author of “April 1865,” a book about the final days of the Civil War. “When they look at him, he almost defies explanation. He sort of lives somewhere in the stratosphere.”

Mark K. Updegrove, director of the Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library and Museum, said Lincoln remained a touchstone for those who followed. “There’s no president I’ve interviewed — Ford, Carter, Bush 41, Clinton, Bush 43 — who hasn’t said that it was Lincoln that they thought of first and foremost as an inspiration during the most trying days of their presidencies,” Mr. Updegrove said. “He is unquestionably the standard.”

not a bad standard to have.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/15/us/politics/abraham-lincoln-the-one-president-all-of-them-want-to-be-more-like.html?_r=0

Bubblehead1980
04-15-15, 05:18 PM
We've had this conversation before, and you conveniently forget. It was the South that fired the opening shots.

You might want to reread the reasons why the southern states seceded in the first place. Not the reasons they've come up with since, but the reasons they themselves gave at the time.
http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showpost.php?p=1358229&postcount=44

You've said that before. Opinion is nice, but you have yet to prove your case. Or even really try.

I've pointed out before that Lincoln was the product of the generation who wrote the Constitution. The Founders were forced to compromise over the question of slave importation and Southern States' representation. They believed that the country could not survive unless all 13 states were united, and Lincoln firmly believed the same. If you don't look at it within that context then your beliefs about him and his reasons are heavily biased.


Steve, it's not an opinion, ever hear of ex parte merryman? Exactly.Lincoln acted unconstitutionally and thus as a tyrant.Lincoln jailed many of his critics.Actually, I recall he jailed those who published the book by one of his political prisoners once he was freed.Some hero, some president, no he acted as a tyrant would, therefore he was a tyrant.Facts are stubborn things.Call it an opinion, but documented facts of his actions show who he was .While the mindless sheep see him as some hero.Lincoln was a terrible tyrant, the end.

Lincoln was not alive during the revolution nor was he an adult, he was child in rural podunk IL that had no clue.Sure, he made something of himself but he was not the benevolent man.I swear the way some people are about Lincoln is same way many Germans would be about Hitler if war had ended differently for them.The blind would think he was still some great figure, SMH.


I will clarify my argument about the cause of the war.Sure, south fired first but Lincoln CHOSE to launch a massive, bloody war after tying the souths hands of the south.Increased tariffs on cotton etc. Why were these tariffs passed(albeit morrill tariff came about under previous admin, it was increased under Lincoln) was because his industrial masters in the north wanted this Basically, Lincoln forced the hand of the south, and reacted as a tyrant once they answered his provocation.

The war was not directly about slavery, it was about not having a centralized power in a whole other part of the country tell them how to live.Yes, at the time slavery was part of southern society and held dear as it was imperative to the economy.Slavery was on the way out, it's a fact.Sure, it would have been around a bit longer but it would have died out.The was of northern aggression was unnecessary and nothing more than Lincoln's lust for power and dominance of a part of the country that refused to suddenly give up their way of life.No man has the right to do that, something mos tof us agree on.

I love our country and what it was meant to be but it's garbage now because of some things that have happened in last century, but fully understand why the south wanted out, I wish we could get out now, it just is not worth it anymore for most of us.Too many people, too much centralized power.We should go our ways, stay friendly and all but go different ways so we have a real right to self determination .Much like a bad relationship, time comes to cut ties.Sadly we have tyrants in waiting who would go Lincoln's route so we are stuck with what is the equivalent of a fat, lazy, haggy wife we are miserable with.

The south was no different than the founders, they wanted to be free from abusive, centralized power who was threatening their way of life.The northern industrialists pushed the war, Lincoln used the moral cause of abolishing slavery as his cause to get many to join the fighter.The tactic of getting humans to not think with logic or rationality but emotion is not a new one, sadly it still works.

I will close by saying one good thing about Lincoln was he did not favor the abuse and revenge of reconstruction, he wanted a post civil war america to reunite and move on.Even Hitler had some admirable qualities I suppose.

Oberon
04-15-15, 05:19 PM
To be followed by a Turk kicking the Brit and an Italian who kicks the Austro Hungarian, a Japanese who kicks remote parts of the German (what ever that would be:doh:) and an American who is too late to get much of the party (would we actually have to make a distinction whether it's a northern or southern US boy as this seem to be two different countries in some people's eyes...:o maybe it was a self righteous Northerner riding on the back of a suppressed and exploited Southerner. ) . After a short pause everybody will be at it again for round two with a few people changing sides and some having difficulties to decide on which side to stay throughout the brawl.
Or in short: I hate you all!:stare:

http://o.onionstatic.com/images/8/8783/original/700.jpg?4075

Betonov
04-15-15, 05:24 PM
And food for thought.
Say the USA and CSA existed side by side. How would history unfold.

If the south had won and gained independence, what are the chances those two sides would come in to conflict again (history teaches us the chances were good)
Spanish American war, would a divided nation be able to win that conflict and
WWI, wouldn't Germany influence one side against the other to keep them out of Europe and one side would join Central powers out of sheer spite for the other and we'd have another trench system along the Mason-Dixon line.

He could have been a tyrant, but the USA and CSA would be less today than just the USA

Oberon
04-15-15, 05:29 PM
And food for thought.
Say the USA and CSA existed side by side. How would history unfold.

If the south had won and gained independence, what are the chances those two sides would come in to conflict again (history teaches us the chances were good)
Spanish American war, would a divided nation be able to win that conflict and
WWI, wouldn't Germany influence one side against the other to keep them out of Europe and one side would join Central powers out of sheer spite for the other and we'd have another trench system along the Mason-Dixon line.

He could have been a tyrant, but the USA and CSA would be less today than just the USA

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Victory_Series

Betonov
04-15-15, 05:32 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Victory_Series

I really got to get my hands on a copy.
I love alternate history.

Kptlt. Neuerburg
04-15-15, 05:49 PM
I really got to get my hands on a copy.
I love alternate history.
I've read those and a few other books by Turtledove, all of which are well written and very much worth reading.

Bubblehead1980
04-15-15, 06:20 PM
You could say that for any man who started any war, the people behind the American revolution for one. Besides, as Steve has already pointed out, the Confederate forces fired the first shots.
And war was inevitable, between two great forces of movement, if it had not taken place under Lincoln, it would have under someone else.


The south only suffers because it refuses to acknowledge its defeat. There are people so stuck to 'The Lost Cause' that they have kept open the wounds of a war that ended 150 years ago. For goodness sake, World War One ended a hundred years ago and we've long since forgiven each other, only the shells of war remain to blight the landscape. The English Civil War has long since faded into memory and although its after-effects still echo within the British governmental system, there are not bands of parliamentarians or monarchists arguing at each other on the internet, or if there are they are few and far between.
For the love of God, let it go already.



It was a civil war, they are rarely civil.

In short, this comes across as little more than butthurt over a war that you, your parents or your parents parents never fought in, if I, a Brit, can forgive Germany for the Second World War, if I can make friends with people of a country who killed one of my great-grandfathers and severely wounded the other, then you can certainly pull your head out of your backside and let the events of a war that took place over a hundred years ago be consigned where they belong.
The past.

Oh, and I need to end this with a Lincoln pic:

http://media.cagle.com/99/2012/11/19/122606_600.jpg


No, the founders were justified and sorry but the British tied their hands with their tyranny, much as Lincoln and the North did with the South.Rather arrogant to think people should just accept the status quo when it is unacceptable. Colonists had a right to self determination and not to be ruled, same for the south.

South has suffered and generations later still suffers due to Lincoln's War of Aggression.Many one affluent southerns lost everything and thus had nothing to pass on.Suddenly, generations of wealthy and even just normal people who had something in this world, were left destitute and it set in motion several genertions of poverty and all the ills that come along with it.Many were already poor and were made even more so.That along with the physical and emotional scars and the nearly one million dead on both sides, it really is one of the greatest crimes in history and he was punished for it.However, his legacy at the minumum should be questioned and not celebrated as it is.Very sad so many Presidents talk of their admiration of him, but then again most presidents we have had last 50 or so years have traits and tendencies of a tyrant, especially Bush and Obama.

I would not expect you to understand as you are not a southerner, you are from a people who still have a monarch(ceremonial) and have a much more subjugated mentality than we do.Thus why your nation is more of a police state and just accept things, which is sad because it is a lovely place overall.

Forgiving a foreign enemy is a bit easier than forgiving your supposed countryman.Especially when THE man responsible for so much misery and death is celebrated the way he is.An grandiose memorial, an aircraft carrier, countless fanbois and a populace who is ignorant of the terror and cruelty of this man.

Also, sure don't know anyone who was alive there, but stories run deep of how the events of that time caused much pain in the family.Also, we are now in a moment not unlike time prior to the civil war.We have a bloated, abusive centralized government who overtaxes us and condones the denigration and eradication of many cultural and social institutions.I understand how they felt and they were not wrong.Opinion aside, government does not have the right to treat us they way they do.

Sad fact is, we don't work as one country and will never work again, this country is a failure.We are too diverse, no uniting bonds.Sorry but I feel not bond or connection to someone from New York, New Jersey, etc I feel a bond with my southern brothers, that is it.Truth is, many in other parts feel the same.We want different things, different cultures etc, we would be better off to split and just stay friendly but the greed and thirst for power would never allow it.Best we can do right now is just not accept the tyranny and try to win elections but I fully understand how the southerners of that time felt and as said, they were not wrong.

razark
04-15-15, 07:02 PM
I would not expect you to understand as you are not a southerner...
As someone born and raised in the south, let me say "Shut up and stop making us look bad."

u crank
04-15-15, 07:13 PM
Sad fact is, we don't work as one country and will never work again, this country is a failure.We are too diverse, no uniting bonds.Sorry but I feel not bond or connection to someone from New York, New Jersey, etc I feel a bond with my southern brothers, that is it.Truth is, many in other parts feel the same.We want different things, different cultures etc, we would be better off to split and just stay friendly but the greed and thirst for power would never allow it.Best we can do right now is just not accept the tyranny and try to win elections but I fully understand how the southerners of that time felt and as said, they were not wrong.

Keep talkin'. We're starting to understand.:nope:

Oberon
04-15-15, 07:29 PM
No, the founders were justified and sorry but the British tied their hands with their tyranny, much as Lincoln and the North did with the South.Rather arrogant to think people should just accept the status quo when it is unacceptable. Colonists had a right to self determination and not to be ruled, same for the south.

Some would argue that Lincoln was justified too, if not for freeing slaves but for keeping the Union together and thus ensuring Americas relevance in the next century. I think a divided states of America would very likely have not become the global superpower that the United States has.

South has suffered and generations later still suffers due to Lincoln's War of Aggression.Many one affluent southerns lost everything and thus had nothing to pass on.
Suddenly, generations of wealthy and even just normal people who had something in this world, were left destitute and it set in motion several genertions of poverty and all the ills that come along with it.Many were already poor and were made even more so.That along with the physical and emotional scars and the nearly one million dead on both sides, it really is one of the greatest crimes in history and he was punished for it.However, his legacy at the minumum should be questioned and not celebrated as it is.Very sad so many Presidents talk of their admiration of him, but then again most presidents we have had last 50 or so years have traits and tendencies of a tyrant, especially Bush and Obama.

I see what you mean about the poverty and chaos of the aftermath of war. The end of our civil war resulted in famine and disaster and lead directly to the massacres in Ireland. You say Lincoln was a tyrant, try choosing between King Charles I and Oliver Cromwell. In comparison you got off lucky.

I would not expect you to understand as you are not a southerner,

Try telling that to Jimbuna. :O:

you are from a people who still have a monarch(ceremonial) and have a much more subjugated mentality than we do.Thus why your nation is more of a police state and just accept things, which is sad because it is a lovely place overall.


:hmmm: A what now? You've been watching Fox News again, haven't you?

Forgiving a foreign enemy is a bit easier than forgiving your supposed countryman.Especially when THE man responsible for so much misery and death is celebrated the way he is.An grandiose memorial, an aircraft carrier, countless fanbois and a populace who is ignorant of the terror and cruelty of this man.

http://uboat.net/allies/warships/ship/12636.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cromwell_tank
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BR_standard_class_7_70013_Oliver_Cromwell
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statue_of_Oliver_Cromwell,_Westminster

Also, sure don't know anyone who was alive there, but stories run deep of how the events of that time caused much pain in the family.

War does cause pain, but hatred leads to war which causes more pain.

Also, we are now in a moment not unlike time prior to the civil war.We have a bloated, abusive centralized government who overtaxes us and condones the denigration and eradication of many cultural and social institutions.I understand how they felt and they were not wrong.Opinion aside, government does not have the right to treat us they way they do.

:hmmm:

Sad fact is, we don't work as one country and will never work again, this country is a failure.

For a failure it's been doing pretty well for a hundred and fifty years.

We are too diverse, no uniting bonds.

You're American.

Sorry but I feel not bond or connection to someone from New York, New Jersey, etc I feel a bond with my southern brothers, that is it.Truth is, many in other parts feel the same.We want different things, different cultures etc, we would be better off to split and just stay friendly but the greed and thirst for power would never allow it.Best we can do right now is just not accept the tyranny and try to win elections but I fully understand how the southerners of that time felt and as said, they were not wrong.

There's a reason the south lost, and it wasn't just due to poor leadership. The south cannot work without the North and the North cannot work without the south. All these divides of over a hundred years ago are just silly, you fought, you lost, get over it. Stop whining and suck it up. Nations went through far far worse than the CSA, take a look at Germany if you want to know what defeat is like. You don't see Germans coming on here and complaining that they lost the war, do you?
What about Betonov? His region had a civil war in your lifetime, and yes, there are people who are still bitter about it...because it happened only twenty-five years ago...not a hundred and fifty years.

Or should I start hating people because their great-great-great-great-great-great-(insert relevant number of greats here)-grandfather supported the Cavaliers or Roundheads?

As someone born and raised in the south, let me say "Shut up and stop making us look bad."

I think that's what a lot of the GOP is saying at the moment. :O: :haha:

In short:

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CCl6C1DWAAA8zpf.jpg:large


Oh, and of course, the required picture:

http://itmakessenseblog.com/files/2013/11/quote-america-will-never-be-destroyed-from-the-outside-if-we-falter-and-lose-our-freedoms-it-will-be-abraham-lincoln-112618.jpg

Sailor Steve
04-15-15, 07:34 PM
Steve, it's not an opinion, ever hear of ex parte merryman?
Yes.

Exactly.Lincoln acted unconstitutionally and thus as a tyrant.
Historians and Judges are still debating today whether the President has the power to suspend Habeas Corpus. When Lincoln did so, was it to further his own personal power or, as he saw it, to "get the job done"? Everything Lincoln did was bound within the same goal - to keep the Union together.

Lincoln jailed many of his critics.
Yes he did. What you consistently miss is the mindset. I'll address that in a minute.

Facts are stubborn things.
Quoting John Adams is a cute trick, but nothing more.

Call it an opinion, but documented facts of his actions show who he was .While the mindless sheep see him as some hero.Lincoln was a terrible tyrant, the end.
No, not the end. You saying it doesn't make it so, nor does it make you right. It's still just your opinion.

Lincoln was not alive during the revolution nor was he an adult, he was child in rural podunk IL that had no clue.
I didn't say he was. I said he was a product of the previous generation, the generation who fought the Revolution and wrote the Constitution. The thing that terrified them most was any split between the States. Lincoln, like them, was convinced the Country could not survive if it were not whole. Everything he did must be considered in that context to be understood. At the time of his inauguration Washington D.C. was under attack. The first chapter of Battles and Leaders of the Civil War is a personal recounting of the danger the President and the city were in from attack, and the efforts to contain those plots. As I said earlier, you can't consider someone's actions without first considering their mindset.

Sure, he made something of himself but he was not the benevolent man.I swear the way some people are about Lincoln is same way many Germans would be about Hitler if war had ended differently for them.The blind would think he was still some great figure, SMH.
Insulting people who disagree with you doesn't make them look bad, only you.

I will clarify my argument about the cause of the war.Sure, south fired first but Lincoln CHOSE to launch a massive, bloody war after tying the souths hands of the south.
How so? Lincoln did everything he could to prevent that. He closed his first inaugural with these words: " In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow-countrymen, and not in mine, is the momentous issue of civil war. The Government will not assail you. You can have no conflict without being yourselves the aggressors. You have no oath registered in heaven to destroy the Government, while I shall have the most solemn one to "preserve, protect, and defend it.""


Increased tariffs on cotton etc.
Please elaborate.

Why were these tariffs passed(albeit morrill tariff came about under previous admin, it was increased under Lincoln)
Yes and no. The tariffs of 1846 and 1857 were of greatest benefit to the South. The North wanted to increase the tariffs. the South did not. Lincoln's part was that without support for Morrill he and his party had no chance of winning the election. In 1859 Morrill was first presented. It passed the House but failed in the Senate. In 1860 the Republicans' support for Morrill helped get backing from industrialists, and with their vote Lincoln won the White House. Of course the fact that the Democrats were split into several factions didn't hurt.

Once the election was decided the Southern States immediately started seceding. I will repeat that while the Morrill Tariff is cited by Southern Apologists to this day, the Documents of Secession almost unilaterally cite slavery as their main cause for leaving the Union.

Once the Southern States had seceded there was no way to prevent Morrill from passing. If they had stayed in place they likely would have won that fight.

Contrary to opinion you seem to hold, Morrill was not about keeping the South down, but about Trade Protection. After Secession was fact and the War started, Morrill authored two more Tariff Acts, both in an effort to raise money for the war. Since the South had already seceded, these raises affected only the North.

was because his industrial masters in the north wanted this Basically, Lincoln forced the hand of the south, and reacted as a tyrant once they answered his provocation.
Yes he did force their hand. That doesn't change the fact that they started the war, not him. If they had refused to fire on Fort Sumter, what could he have done? Any direct action would have made him the monster you claim him to be.

The war was not directly about slavery, it was about not having a centralized power in a whole other part of the country tell them how to live.
It was about the survival of the country. Lincoln believed the country could not survive as two separate entities. It was about secession, and the Southern States seceded over slavery. As you said, end of story.

Yes, at the time slavery was part of southern society and held dear as it was imperative to the economy.
Only because they made it so. The roots of the Civil War begin with the Constitutional Debates, specifically Slave State representation and the 3/5ths Rule.

Slavery was on the way out, it's a fact.Sure, it would have been around a bit longer but it would have died out.
Easy to say in hindsight. Not so easy from the things they wrote at the time. That "stubborn fact" makes it once again your opinion.

The was of northern aggression was unnecessary and nothing more than Lincoln's lust for power and dominance of a part of the country that refused to suddenly give up their way of life.No man has the right to do that, something mos tof us agree on.
Given what he said in his Inaugural Address and the timing of the Secession, this is again only your opinion. That you state it as fact shows nothing more than extreme bias.

I love our country and what it was meant to be but it's garbage now because of some things that have happened in last century, but fully understand why the south wanted out, I wish we could get out now, it just is not worth it anymore for most of us.
I understand why the South wanted out too, though I don't think we see the same reason and cause.

The south was no different than the founders, they wanted to be free from abusive, centralized power who was threatening their way of life.
Actually the Founders didn't want to be free. They wanted to be good Englishmen. Despite everything that happened they were still struggling to be just that right up until the day that British troops were sent to confiscate their cannons. Only after the shooting started did they actually begin discussing Independence.

The South, on the other hand, acted preemptively. They didn't even give Lincoln a chance. As soon as he was elected they assumed the worst. There is not real basis for comparison between the two.

The northern industrialists pushed the war
Please elaborate.

Lincoln used the moral cause of abolishing slavery as his cause to get many to join the fighter.
Not really. Abolishing slavery really didn't come into play until the Emancipation Proclamation, and that didn't come until the North finally managed to win a major battle, and then the main purpose was to show a moral high ground that would keep England and France from recognizing the Confederacy. It was politics, sure, but it was good politics.

The tactic of getting humans to not think with logic or rationality but emotion is not a new one, sadly it still works.
I'm sorry, but I take you as a prime example of that syndrome.

I will close by saying one good thing about Lincoln was he did not favor the abuse and revenge of reconstruction, he wanted a post civil war america to reunite and move on.Even Hitler had some admirable qualities I suppose.
Comparing the two is understandable, but only from the point of an already established hatred. What you do with your last sentence is not to compare the two, but to try to bolster your argument with more hatred. You might as well say "Even the Devil has his good points." I could just as easily counter with "Even Bubblehead1980 has his good points."

That kind of statement is not debate, it's not argument and it's not logic. It's hatred, mingled with the misplaced confidence of one's own rightness, and it has no part in so-called "reasonable" debate.

Sailor Steve
04-15-15, 07:37 PM
WWI, wouldn't Germany influence one side against the other to keep them out of Europe and one side would join Central powers out of sheer spite for the other and we'd have another trench system along the Mason-Dixon line.
Since the South could only have won with Britain and France's recognition, I think the South would have joined the war on the Allied side and the North would have stayed out altogether.

Sailor Steve
04-15-15, 07:40 PM
I really got to get my hands on a copy.
I love alternate history.
Of course my own opinion about a successful Southern secession is influenced by one of my own favorite alternate history books:
http://www.amazon.com/Wild-Blue-Gray-William-Sanders/dp/1587156482

Bubblehead1980
04-15-15, 07:42 PM
As someone born and raised in the south, let me say "Shut up and stop making us look bad."


No, cowards like yourself make us look bad.The apologists and those who stay quiet and refuse to call out the worship of a tyrant.That was the point of the post, a tyrant fell 150 years ago last night.Never forgive and never forget.

razark
04-15-15, 07:47 PM
...cowards like yourself...
You mean people who disagree with you? Last time, you said that made me an idiot.

Make up your mind.

Sailor Steve
04-15-15, 07:57 PM
Sorry but I feel not bond or connection to someone from New York, New Jersey, etc I feel a bond with my southern brothers, that is it.
You have no idea what you're missing. I feel a bond with the people of Utah, where I've lived for the past forty-four years. I feel a bond with the people of southern California, where I was raised from the age of two. I feel a special bond with the people of Texas, where I was born, especially with my dozens of cousins with whom I still communicate, and with Neal, who always makes me feel like a Texan, whether I think like one or not. If have a bond with my friend Jim from England, despite the differences of two hundred years ago. I feel a bond with several other Subsim members I've talked with personally over the years.

Truth is, many in other parts feel the same.We want different things, different cultures etc, we would be better off to split and just stay friendly but the greed and thirst for power would never allow it.Best we can do right now is just not accept the tyranny and try to win elections but I fully understand how the southerners of that time felt and as said, they were not wrong.In a lot of ways I agree. I often wonder whether America might be better off as separate regions, and I certainly complain about certain acts of the Federal Government. I agree with you about a lot of things. The main difference is that I want to discuss it, debate it, dissect it and have fun with it. You, on the other hand, seem to want only to preach your gospel of hatred.

Sorry to be so harsh, but your language this time shows no serious thought at all, just venom. In fact your first post seemed to me to be very close to doing nothing more than celebrating a murder.

Betonov
04-16-15, 01:20 AM
Since the South could only have won with Britain and France's recognition, I think the South would have joined the war on the Allied side and the North would have stayed out altogether.

A lot can happen in 50 years.

Example is the turmoil that happened around the German unification.
Sardinia Piedmont attacked Austria with the backing of France (1859) and took Lombardy. In 1866 Prussia attacked Austria and Italy was there to help Prussia. Fearing the rise of Prussia, France started talks of an alliance between them, Italy AND Austria. The Austrians were ready to ally themselves with a side that took away from them north Italy only 10 years prior.

Camaero
04-16-15, 03:25 AM
History is a scary thing when people can view the past with entirely conflicting eyes. Everyone has their own truth.

I could fill a book showing Lincoln to be a terrible person, and fill another showing him a saint, and they could both be entirely half true. Of course, the same could be said about almost anyone.

If you stare too far off into only one direction, you may fail to see all of the truths that lie opposite.

Not that this adds anything to the discussion, but I am personally a fan of Mr. Lincoln when all is said and done.

Cheers all!

GoldenRivet
04-16-15, 04:15 AM
I'm a southerner from the Republic of Texas

I had family fight on both sides of that war

I agree that we should all be entitled to our opinions - and regarding Lincoln - i do have my own.

I choose to keep them to myself because what i have to say about the man a century and a half after the fact wont to amount to a mound of mouse turds

the only constructive thing i have to say about Lincoln at this point is that i did have fun playing with his logs (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lincoln_Logs) when i was a kid


but can someone remind me why we are entertaining this thread by continuing to discuss this?

with respect to Bubblehead1980 - this thread was clearly started as a measure of trolling, instigating and generally perpetuating a game of grab-ass-shenanigans

so whats the point really?

why do we tolerate this? :doh:

if this was his first post he would have already been sent to latrine duty as a spammer

HunterICX
04-16-15, 04:27 AM
In a lot of ways I agree. I often wonder whether America might be better off as separate regions, and I certainly complain about certain acts of the Federal Government.

I think it wouldn't have just been that one civil war I'm affraid.
I may not like the EU at all times or agree with them but I'm grateful that countries that are under it's flag haven't gone to war with one another since WWII. Now the USA and EU are quite different but they both united countries/states with differences under one banner and that I think does help to prevent going at ones throat now and then.

I agree with you about a lot of things. The main difference is that I want to discuss it, debate it, dissect it and have fun with it. You, on the other hand, seem to want only to preach your gospel of hatred.

Sorry to be so harsh, but your language this time shows no serious thought at all, just venom. In fact your first post seemed to me to be very close to doing nothing more than celebrating a murder.

I have to hand it to you that no matter how hopeless and foul the venom is you're giving it your best in reply to show how it is done.


In 1866 Prussia attacked Austria and Italy was there to help Prussia. Fearing the rise of Prussia, France started talks of an alliance between them, Italy AND Austria. The Austrians were ready to ally themselves with a side that took away from them north Italy only 10 years prior.

http://i.imgur.com/ZosFj0m.gif

Jimbuna
04-16-15, 06:28 AM
No, cowards like yourself make us look bad.The apologists and those who stay quiet and refuse to call out the worship of a tyrant.That was the point of the post, a tyrant fell 150 years ago last night.Never forgive and never forget.

I've had an in depth read of this thread and the questions that spring to my mind are:

Are you trolling?

Are you using hate speech?

Are you insulting other forum members?

Are you resorting to name calling?

The answers to the first two are on the borderline in my opinion but the answers to the third and fourth are a definite YES.

Keep within the acceptable norms if you'd be so kind and can we ALL try to ensure that is the case for everyone.

Dowly
04-16-15, 06:54 AM
Never forgive and never forget.
There's your problem.

Sailor Steve
04-16-15, 10:56 AM
A lot can happen in 50 years.
True. It's also true that anything said in hindsight (referring to my own comments here) can never be anything but speculation.

History is a scary thing when people can view the past with entirely conflicting eyes. Everyone has their own truth.

If you stare too far off into only one direction, you may fail to see all of the truths that lie opposite.
Very good observations and advice. It adds a lot to the discussion, and not because of your admitted sentiment at the end.

I choose to keep them to myself because what i have to say about the man a century and a half after the fact wont to amount to a mound of mouse turds
Maybe not, but anybody's opinion is worth discussing if kept within the bounds of discussion rather than tirade. I'm always interested in finding out why others think what they do, and I'm always willing to try to understand why those ideas exist. I had some wonderful discussion with UnderSeaLCPL on this very subject back in the day.

but can someone remind me why we are entertaining this thread by continuing to discuss this?
For my part it's because of the reasons I give immediately above. Discussion is the only means we have to understand each other. Communication is the one advantage humankind has over all the other animals.

so whats the point really?
That is a question that only he can answer.

why do we tolerate this? :doh:
Because it's General Topics, and because as long as they stay within the rules everyone is allowed to state their opinions. The problem arises when the poster is so convinced of his own rightness that discussion ceases. I try to keep discussion alive as long as I can, in the hope that sometimes something real will be accomplished. In some cases it's not possible, but I keep trying. That's my sickness.

I think it wouldn't have just been that one civil war I'm affraid.
You may be right. I find it sad that we'll never know.

Aktungbby
04-16-15, 11:51 AM
The issue of the president's power is clearly stated in the Constitution "Article One (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Article_One_of_the_United_States_Constitution), Section 9, clause 2, which demands that "The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it." If a debate is to be held on this point by any 'enlightened' poster one cannot pick only the part of the argument that supports his side of the issue. To accuse A. Lincoln of tyranny is a one-sided view..."In the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jefferson_Davis) also suspended habeas corpus and imposed martial law. This was in part to maintain order and spur industrial growth in the South to compensate for the economic loss inflicted by its secession." both presidents were thus tyrants alike and one cannot fairly distinguish which was the worse. Sic Semper Tyrannis BBY. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/6f/Seal_of_Virginia.svg/220px-Seal_of_Virginia.svg.png (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Seal_of_Virginia.svg)As shouted by john wilkes booth at Ford's Theatre..as he literally "broke a leg" onstage':hmmm:

Oberon
04-16-15, 11:52 AM
http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m2jgb2TdSs1qcv7vc.gif

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UM1VHvpdsco&feature=player_detailpage#t=45

August
04-16-15, 12:31 PM
I think it wouldn't have just been that one civil war I'm affraid.

I think you're right. If the south had been allowed to go off on it's own then there would have been a second war within a decade over who got what in the west.

Also the southern states united against the union to fight the civil war but it was always a coalition of convenience. I doubt the Confederacy would have lasted long after a southern victory. The states were far too independent minded and with it's dissolution would come even more opportunities for conflict.

Onkel Neal
04-17-15, 06:17 AM
I'm from the South, er, Texas. In my opinion, the Civil War was a terrible waste over a bad cause that was doomed eventually. I wish Texas had followed the wise advise of Sam Houston. There are people today who romanticize the War 'Gainst Northern Aggression and the chivalry of the South. So what? Let them have their opinion. As long as they express it with tact and civility, that's their business. Tolerance and diversity. remember?

Onkel Neal
04-17-15, 06:19 AM
No, cowards like yourself make us look bad.The apologists and those who stay quiet and refuse to call out the worship of a tyrant.That was the point of the post, a tyrant fell 150 years ago last night.Never forgive and never forget.

You need to rethink calling people names. :nope:

Onkel Neal
04-17-15, 06:26 AM
I've had an in depth read of this thread and the questions that spring to my mind are:

Are you trolling?

Are you using hate speech?

Are you insulting other forum members?

Are you resorting to name calling?

The answers to the first two are on the borderline in my opinion but the answers to the third and fourth are a definite YES.

Keep within the acceptable norms if you'd be so kind and can we ALL try to ensure that is the case for everyone.

Very well put, thanks Jim.

Father Goose
04-17-15, 08:23 AM
the only constructive thing i have to say about Lincoln at this point is that i did have fun playing with his logs (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lincoln_Logs) when i was a kid

Love it! :yeah: