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Old 01-08-13, 10:27 PM   #1
Armistead
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Originally Posted by Sailor Steve View Post
"Political Correctness"? Were the Southern States being politically correct when they seceeded?

You're right, the war wasn't about slavery. It was about Secession vs preserving the Union. Secession, on the other hand, was all about slavery.
Secession was about lack of representation and taxation, with the south paying the majority of taxes. Lincoln could've resolved this, but was a pansey of the northern capitalist who didn't want to pay taxes. Lincoln could've perserved the union and ended slavery in a fair way like most nations of the world did without almost destroying our nation. Lincoln is a hero because it worked out in the end, but it could've went the other way and almost did. There were several meetings to resolve these fiscal conflicts, but Lincoln wouldn't budge. The north overall didn't want slavery to end, it supplied the tariffs to the government, the north simply wanted to control the souths wealth for their benefit through control of congress.

Slavery was dying in the south, only about 8% of families owned slaves. Had Lincoln not been so hard headed many southern states would've remained in the union and the few that left would've folded in a few years.

The fact is both sides were racist, slavery wasn't the issue, it only became an issue. Course it did resolve and create much of the tax code we have today, when the south left, we saw the creation of income tax in the north and the federal govt continued to go nuts with taxes, tariffs during and after the war and grew into the monster it is today.

Like Grant said..."if the war was about slavery, I would've changed sides"

The fact will remain modern history is built on many myths because the union won. There was little about this era where anyone can claim moral high ground, just shrewd politicians and rich greedy people/
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Old 01-08-13, 11:08 PM   #2
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Originally Posted by Armistead View Post
Secession was about lack of representation and taxation, with the south paying the majority of taxes.
Can you show that at all?

I guess you missed the last big Civil War thread, though you were a member at the time. I'll save myself a lot of trouble by pasting what I wrote last time.
http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/show...9&postcount=47

To repeat the bottom line of what I said then: Every State that published their reasons put slavery at the very top of the list. How many of them mention the taxation you spoke of?

Quote:
Like Grant said..."if the war was about slavery, I would've changed sides"
When exactly did Grant say that? here is a link to actual quotes from the man, including his memoirs, in which he did indeed attribute the war to slavery.
http://www.freedomsgateway.com/LinkC...BQ%3D&tabid=79
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Old 01-09-13, 07:46 PM   #3
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Can you show that at all?

I guess you missed the last big Civil War thread, though you were a member at the time. I'll save myself a lot of trouble by pasting what I wrote last time.
http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/show...9&postcount=47

To repeat the bottom line of what I said then: Every State that published their reasons put slavery at the very top of the list. How many of them mention the taxation you spoke of?


When exactly did Grant say that? here is a link to actual quotes from the man, including his memoirs, in which he did indeed attribute the war to slavery.
http://www.freedomsgateway.com/LinkC...BQ%3D&tabid=79
I don't have time to respond in detail or read your threads, but will later.
I have found arguing the CW is much like arguing religion or what bible verses mean. If we're not able to put ourselves into the culture and mindset of the time, we'll never understand it. Today historians and people debate, calling the other side false and claim facts as myths. Most important we must know slavery was economic wealth and we can understand the southern mind set better if we replace the word slavery with "economic wealth"

Few are aware that there was a large movment to gradually end slavery in the south before the war, just like up north, but along came the radical
abollitionists. Buchanan stated, "Before [the abolitionists] commenced this agitation, a very large and growing party existed in several of the slave states in favor of the gradual abolition of slavery; and now not a voice is heard there in support of such a measure."

Many southern politicains made strong statements regarding tariffs, you'll find more facts simply searching "tariffs of the 1800's." Compare the number, you'll see the south paid the majority of tariffs and this money was used mostly to support northern industry, fishing, RR's, etc...

The big issue for the South was the loss of equal representation, they were already far behind in the electoral vote, with new states being free, they felt they would soon face economic ruin. Lincoln won, even though he wasn't even on the ballot in most southern states.

When Lincoln won, his call for troops to invade the south nailed the coffin shut. Most felt only congress could do such. The remaining southern states refused to send troops called upon, calling this action illegal, then one by one they left the union and the rest is history.

Slavery wasn't a southern institution, it was a US one that existed since our conception, there was a wrong and right way to deal with it.
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Old 01-09-13, 10:17 PM   #4
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Originally Posted by Armistead View Post
If we're not able to put ourselves into the culture and mindset of the time, we'll never understand it. Today historians and people debate, calling the other side false and claim facts as myths. Most important we must know slavery was economic wealth and we can understand the southern mind set better if we replace the word slavery with "economic wealth"
Which is why I directly quoted what they said, not someone's interpretation of it.

Quote:
Many southern politicains made strong statements regarding tariffs, you'll find more facts simply searching "tariffs of the 1800's." Compare the number, you'll see the south paid the majority of tariffs and this money was used mostly to support northern industry, fishing, RR's, etc...
That's nice, but they said it was because of slavery. What that may or may not have entailed, it does not excuse Southern Apologists for saying it had nothing to do with slavery, or that slavery was a secondary issue.

As John Adams said during the Boston Massacre trial, "Facts are stubborn things." What one side or the other thinks or says, what they said is the bottom line, and you can read exactly what they said.

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The big issue for the South was the loss of equal representation, they were already far behind in the electoral vote, with new states being free, they felt they would soon face economic ruin. Lincoln won, even though he wasn't even on the ballot in most southern states.
I don't know whether he was really excluded from Southern ballots or not, but if he wasn't, why not? The only logical explanation would be that the Southern legislatures had already decided that would be the case, which means that they were against Lincoln from the start. Why?

Four years earlier, in 1856, Republican candidate John C. Fremont recieved no votes at all in the South. Why? Because the Republican Party was created to oppose the Kansas-Nebraska act, which would repeal the Popular Sovereignty issue of the Missouri Compromise. Yes, the Southern States felt they were being cheated. They wanted a new Slave State to be created for every new Free State. They hated the fact that pretty much all the potential new States wanted nothing to do with slavery. Oh, there's that word again. So they solidly opposed any Republican as being an Abolitionist. They opposed Fremont in 1856, because of his party's attitude toward slavery. They opposed Lincoln in 1860 because of his party's attitued toward slavery. For them it was all about slavery. Yes, slavery was an economic issue, which made it also about economics, but it was also the major economic issue, if not the sole one.

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When Lincoln won, his call for troops to invade the south nailed the coffin shut. Most felt only congress could do such. The remaining southern states refused to send troops called upon, calling this action illegal, then one by one they left the union and the rest is history.
What? Lincoln didn't call for any troops when he won. He had no authority at all. He didn't call for troops to put down the rebellion (of course Southerners called it "invading the South") until they opened fire on Fort Sumter. But the Southern States started seceding long before Lincoln took office; in fact shortly after his election. They refused to be in the same country with him, long before his call for troops and long before the beginning of what they called "Lincoln's War". They seceded as soon as he was elected. Why? Because he was a Republican, and the Republican Party was the Abolition Party. It was, as they said when they did it, because of Slavery.

Quote:
Slavery wasn't a southern institution, it was a US one that existed since our conception, there was a wrong and right way to deal with it.
Yes it was, and when the Framers of the Constitution tried to limit it, the Southern States said that any limiting of Slavery would lead to them refusing to sign. They wanted to have slaves be counted toward their representation in Congress, even though they refused to count said slaves as anything other than property. They forced the Northern States to bow to their will, since everyone was sure that, as Ben Franklin had said at the signing of the Declaration of Independence, "If we don't all hang together we will most assuredly all hang separately." The Southern States forced the rest to bow to their will on that point, and we ended up with the highly controversial '3/5 Rule'. All the struggle from that point on was directly concerned with slavery.

Yes there was a wrong way and a right way to deal with it. Secession just because a guy you didn't like got elected was definitely the wrong way.
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Old 01-10-13, 02:29 AM   #5
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Which is why I directly quoted what they said, not someone's interpretation of it.


That's nice, but they said it was because of slavery. What that may or may not have entailed, it does not excuse Southern Apologists for saying it had nothing to do with slavery, or that slavery was a secondary issue.

Yes there was a wrong way and a right way to deal with it. Secession just because a guy you didn't like got elected was definitely the wrong way.

You're thinking slavery, the south was thinking economic wealth and your ignoring the host of other serious issues that connected to how the south operated. Yes, the two are connected, but it was more than slavery in itself. In fact, a small percentage owned slaves.

The bigger issue, it really wasn't about slaves to Lincoln or most the north, they wanted it like it was, just wanted the north to have an unfair balance of power.

Many states didn't secede until after Lincoln called up troops, even asking the south for many troops, in doing so the entire south left, none of them would accept an army coming into their state. Check your fact, it was after this that the entire south left.

Lincoln got elected because a warped electoral system, like I said, he wasn't even on the ballot in most southern states.

Don't get me wrong, I deplore slavery, I'm glad it worked out like it did, the question is, another path existed before the war, numerous states were ready to do away with slavery the same as the north was doing, but radicals ended that option.

The scary thing is, what if it didn't work out, it could've gone the other way and totally ruined America, then we would be calling Lincoln a zero, not a hero. The sad fact is racism continued in full force long after the CW.
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Old 01-10-13, 04:25 AM   #6
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You're thinking slavery, the south was thinking economic wealth and your ignoring the host of other serious issues that connected to how the south operated. Yes, the two are connected, but it was more than slavery in itself. In fact, a small percentage owned slaves.
Of course slavery was tied to economics, and of course the Southern States were trying to stay alive, and of course they viewed the Northern States as trying to destroy their way of live. But the economics were tied to slavery, and that was the central issue.

My response is mostly to this statement:
Quote:
Political correctness makes the war about slavery, it wasn't.
That is a flat statement, and it is flat wrong. As I said the first time, the war was over secession and preserving the Union, and the Southern States seceded over slavery. That is what they said at the time, and I don't think they had a reason to lie about it.

Quote:
The bigger issue, it really wasn't about slaves to Lincoln or most the north, they wanted it like it was, just wanted the north to have an unfair balance of power.
Not so. I'm sure there were power-hungry politicians in the North, just as I'm sure there were power-hungry politicians in the South. Lincoln, I'm equally sure, was concerned with preserving the Union for the simple reason that he was of the second generation following the Founders, and he firmly believed that whole "Hang together or hang separately" thing. I think he was sure that the country separated could not survive.

If, as you say, they just wanted to have an unfair balance of power, then you cannot attribute strictly bad motives to them and then assign strictly pure motives to the South. It's not fair to assume only the worst of one and only the best of the other.

Quote:
Many states didn't secede until after Lincoln called up troops, even asking the south for many troops, in doing so the entire south left, none of them would accept an army coming into their state. Check your fact, it was after this that the entire south left.
I already know my fact(s). Seven States seceeded over Lincoln's election. Four (hardly "many" in the total) more seceeded after the call for troops. I don't assign any other motive than reaction to the call-up to the four. Of the seven, five listed the cause for secession, and every one of them put slavery as the primary reason.

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Lincoln got elected because a warped electoral system, like I said, he wasn't even on the ballot in most southern states.
So you're saying that Lincoln one because the election was rigged against him? Or did he win despite not beeing on the ballot in those states, which means the election must have been rigged in the northern states?

Lincoln got elected because the majority of the country voted for him. He handily won the popular and electoral votes. I used to think that he won because the Democrats were divided among several different candidates. This is true of the popular vote, but even if they were all combined Lincoln still would have carried the electoral vote. There is no evidence the election was rigged in Lincoln's favor. In fact you seem to be saying that in the South at least it was rigged against him.

And, as I said, what was the reason he wasn't on those ballots? I already gave my answer. I'm waiting for yours.

I'm also still waiting on my request for evidence to support your prior claim:
Quote:
Secession was about lack of representation and taxation, with the south paying the majority of taxes
Quote:
The scary thing is, what if it didn't work out, it could've gone the other way and totally ruined America, then we would be calling Lincoln a zero, not a hero.
Not necessarily. Lincoln may have been remembered as the man who tried to save America and failed, while Jefferson Davis might have been remembered as the man who destroyed it.

Or the South may have succeeded, and two separate countries might have survived side-by-side. I don't dismiss any possibilities.

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The sad fact is racism continued in full force long after the CW.
No one can argue against that.
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Old 01-09-13, 09:52 AM   #7
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Originally Posted by Armistead View Post
Secession was about lack of representation and taxation, with the south paying the majority of taxes. Lincoln could've resolved this, but was a pansey of the northern capitalist who didn't want to pay taxes. Lincoln could've perserved the union and ended slavery in a fair way like most nations of the world did without almost destroying our nation. Lincoln is a hero because it worked out in the end, but it could've went the other way and almost did. There were several meetings to resolve these fiscal conflicts, but Lincoln wouldn't budge. The north overall didn't want slavery to end, it supplied the tariffs to the government, the north simply wanted to control the souths wealth for their benefit through control of congress.
Are you suggesting the Civil war was fought and 1,000,000+ persons died over Tariffs?

Congress had passed a low Tariff law in 1857 which especialy favored the South. Republicans may have run on a high tariff platform in 1860, but that was politics as usual. The law could not be passed as long as Southern Senators were there to block it. The Morrill Tariff of 1861 could not have been passed if the Confederate states had not withdrawn from the Union.
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