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To: OIFVeteran
Of course if it was avoided we may have had slavery in the US until the early 1900s, so it’s a good thing it wasn’t.

Since Lincoln urged the passage of the Corwin Amendment, the Southern states would have supported it, and so slavery would have remained in the Union as possibly long as the 1940s, by which time agriculture machinery had been developed that could do the job better, faster, and more efficiently.

But no, it's not good that there was a "civil war" at all. It also wasn't really a civil war. The South was not trying to take over the Federal government. They were just trying to make the Federal government leave them alone.

Most of our modern problems with the government being too huge and too intrusive stem from the Civil War.

187 posted on 08/01/2019 1:57:55 PM PDT by DiogenesLamp ("of parents owing allegiance to no oither sovereignty.")
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To: DiogenesLamp; OIFVeteran; Bull Snipe; rockrr
DiogenesLamp: "But no, it's not good that there was a "civil war" at all.
It also wasn't really a civil war.
The South was not trying to take over the Federal government.
They were just trying to make the Federal government leave them alone. "

Of all the Big Lies our Lost Causers tell, this is one of the biggest, a fact that DiogenesLamp himself will admit in brief moments of lucidity.
Consider the Confederacy's very rapid growth:

  1. When South Carolinians declared secession in December 1860 they represented barely 1% of US total land and 2% of US population.

  2. When Texans seceded in February 1861, the Confederacy had grown to 15% of total US land & population.

  3. When North Carolinians seceded in May 1861 Confederates had grown to 20% of US territory and 28% of its population.
    But it didn't stop there.

  4. Confederates also claimed the Union states of Missouri and Kentucky, which would increase their territory to 23% and population to 36% of total USA.
    But they wanted more.

  5. Confederates also claimed Union territories of Oklahoma, New Mexico and West Virginia, increasing their totals to 29% of territory and 37% of the population.
    And it didn't stop there.

  6. Confederate armies also invaded Union Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Kansas which if successful combined would increase the Confederacy to 35% of US territory and 61% of US population.
And in brief moments of lucidity, DiogenesLamp readily admits Confederates wanted, intended and could have taken over vastly more of US land, leaving a rump USA with maybe New England and the Upper Midwest.

But, according to true Lost Cause Mother Church doctrine, this was never an existential threat to the USA and the US had no "right" to defend itself against such military actions.


204 posted on 08/02/2019 5:06:27 AM PDT by BroJoeK ((a little historical perspective...))
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