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To: LouAvul
Years ago I would have thought this concept was bogus. As I see the Federal govt encroaching upon my life, however...........

Something to remember in dark times -- if people are not careful, their actions will be ascribed to bad motivations, by future generations.

I believe that the South could have been more politically wise and more clearly fought in favor of states rights and economic liberty. However, because of a number of factors, they are forever tagged with "fighting in favor of slavery". The truth -- whatever it might be -- is inconsequential. History's judgment has been made.

People who now see their Federal govt encroaching would be wise to always keep their own motivation on the clearly moral side. Otherwise, our next civil war will be fought "because the Republicans hated women and homosexuals, and wanted to bring back slavery".

57 posted on 01/20/2014 2:16:27 PM PST by ClearCase_guy (Anti-Complacency League! Baby!)
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To: ClearCase_guy
Here's a quote from Confederate North Carolina governor Zebulon Vance which suggests that the Confederate experiment was more a cheap political power grab than an admirable reaction of an oppressed people:

"….I have always believed, that the great popular heart is not now, and never has been in this war. It was a revolution of the Politicians; not the People."

69 posted on 01/20/2014 2:23:43 PM PST by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: ClearCase_guy

The US Treasury and Congressional Borrowing in 1859

In preparation for the President’s state of the union report, Howell Cobb (of Georgia), the Secretary of the Treasury (Buchanan Administration), reported to Congress that based on projected spending, there would be dramatic increases in the debt of the government.

In his state of the Union report of December 5, 1859, President Buchanan’s Secretary of the United States Treasury issued his report stating that for fiscal year 1859, the total revenue of the US Treasury was $88,090,787. This was misleading, because $28,185,000 was ‘income’ from government borrowing. The actual total revenue from tariffs, and sale of public lands was $53,486,000. Tariff revenue contributed 92% of the total revenue of the country.

But the Congress spent $69,071,000, which was 29% more than it took in.

“I regret, as much as any member, the unavoidable weight and duration of the burdens to be imposed; having never been a proselyte to the doctrine, that public debts are public benefits. I consider them, on the contrary, as evils which ought to be removed as fast as honor and justice will permit.” —James Madison

The value of total US exports for the year was $278,392,000. The value of the exports grown or produced in the South was 74% of the total.

In order to understand the contribution of Southern agriculture to the trade, and thus tariff and taxation structure of the entire country, the following chart shows the percentage of the total value of exports contributed by the South for the year of 1859:

U. S. Department of Commerce
International Transactions and Foreign Commerce
Agricultural Production of the South
Yearly Detail 1859

Value of : Cotton $161,434,000
Tobacco 21,074,000
Rice 2,207,000

Naval stores 3,694,000
Sugar 196,000
Molasses 75,699
Hemp 9,227
Other 8,108,000
___________
Total $196,797,926

Value of Southern manufactured 4,989,000
Cotton exports
Value of cotton component of Northern 3,669,000
Manufactured cotton exports (60%) ___________
$205,455,926
Percentage of Southern Production to
the total US exports for 1859 of
$278,392,000. 74%


84 posted on 01/20/2014 2:35:18 PM PST by PeaRidge
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