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To: BroJoeK
Of course not because the colonies didn't declare independence until after Britain declared war, so until then they just contented themselves with seizing and dumping tea.

Of course the Confederate government called for troops. It was the part of the duty of the Confederate congress (and any new country really) to provide an army for the public defense. The Confederate Constitution reads pretty much like the United States Constitution on this. It is the duty of Congress to "provide for the common Defense", to"To raise and support Armies," and to "provide and maintain a Navy." Lincoln's call for troops, on the other hand was "in order to suppress" the will of the sovereign States.

The South had the right to seize all the Federal forts in its property that it wanted to. After all, The states joined the union voluntarily and they could leave the same way. And all the rights they had delegated to the Federal government they rescinded in their secession. Included in this rescinding of rights was the right of the Federal government to place federal forts on state land. The Federal government was no longer their government and had no business in having forts in a foreign country.

Yes, it may have supposedly "freed" some during the war, but Lincoln himself was concerned that it would be found to be invalid after the war. After the war the status of these "freed" slaves was uncertain, since the South had rejoined the Union and Lincoln had had no Constitutional or legal right to free anybody. That is why the 13th amendment was needed. After the War was over the South ratified this amendment with pretty much no fuss. But when the North Tried to push the Fourteenth amendment through, the South kicked up a big fuss because the Fourteenth amendment deals with serious Constitutional issues. Which raises the question....If the war was as much about slavery as people like to paint it, then why did the South easily and quickly pass the 13th amendment, but dig their heels in on the one that changed the nature of the Constitution? The North eventually forced the passage of the 14th amendment by kicking the South back out of the union and declaring them to be conquered territories, and stated that they could only re-enter the union if they ratified the 14th amendment. Sounds like coercion to me. Also, do the votes of "conquered territories" count towards ratification? By the war, this kind of activity shows what we really lost in the war. The States lost their sovereign rights reserved in the 10th amendment, the Federal government became supreme. It used to be that the States stood between the Federal government and the people, but now the people are naked before the might of the federal government.

121 posted on 02/09/2015 3:48:19 PM PST by DeoVindiceSicSemperTyrannis
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To: DeoVindiceSicSemperTyrannis
By the war, this kind of activity shows what we really lost in the war. The States lost their sovereign rights reserved in the 10th amendment, the Federal government became supreme.

Do a web search on "dual sovereignty" - you'll gain a greater understanding of how our republic is put together. Hint: the federal has held supremacy since the United States Constitution was ratified.

123 posted on 02/09/2015 4:49:01 PM PST by rockrr (Everything is different now...)
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To: DeoVindiceSicSemperTyrannis; rockrr; x; central_va; Bubba Ho-Tep
DeoVindiceSicSemperTyrannis: "Of course not because the colonies didn't declare independence until after Britain declared war, so until then they just contented themselves with seizing and dumping tea."

A few chests of tea, 45 tons, worth $1.7 million today, later offered to be fully paid for by a New York merchant.
That's maybe 10% of total costs of recent Ferguson, Missouri riots, and just one tenth of one percent of the 1992 Los Angeles riots.
"Tea Party": a mere dramatic protest, by a few non-violent extremists... ;-)
Every other colony resolved that tax issue without serious incidents, and even the Boston Tea Party itself never rose anywhere near the levels of dozens of seizures of Federal properties by Confederate forces, before launching full-scale war at Fort Sumter.

So there is no comparison -- zero, zip, nada -- between our Founders in 1776, and Slave-Power secessionists of 1861.

DeoVindiceSicSemperTyrannis: "Of course the Confederate government called for troops.
It was the part of the duty of the Confederate congress (and any new country really) to provide an army for the public defense."

At a time when the entire Unites States Army totaled 16,000 troops, over half scattered in small forts out west...
The Confederacy's raising up a 100,000 man army -- on March 6, 1861, two days after Lincoln's inaugural -- could well be called an aggressive act of war against the United States, in and of itself.
Especially when we remember that pro-Confederate newspapers called Lincoln's Inaugural a "declaration of war", the instantaneous Confederate response must be viewed as a major step towards war.

DeoVindiceSicSemperTyrannis: "Lincoln's call for troops, on the other hand was "in order to suppress" the will of the sovereign States."

The Confederate assault on US troops in Fort Sumter was an unequivocal act of war against the United States, period.
In response, Lincoln's proclamation requested forces to:

Read the entire proclamation, it's not a "declaration of war" regardless of Slave-Power hyperbole.
It's a highly limited law enforcement action.

But the Confederacy's response was to formally declare war on the United States, raise up another 400,000 troops for their army (now 500,000 total), and send military aid to Confederate forces fighting in Union states.

DeoVindiceSicSemperTyrannis: "The South had the right to seize all the Federal forts in its property that it wanted to.
After all, The states joined the union voluntarily and they could leave the same way.
And all the rights they had delegated to the Federal government they rescinded in their secession.
Included in this rescinding of rights was the right of the Federal government to place federal forts on state land.
The Federal government was no longer their government and had no business in having forts in a foreign country."

So, by that same ridiculous logic, do you support Communist Cuba's "right" to assault US forces in Guantanamo Bay?
And just what do you suggest US response to such an assault should be?

DeoVindiceSicSemperTyrannis: "Which raises the question....

The North eventually forced the passage of the 14th amendment by kicking the South back out of the union and declaring them to be conquered territories, and stated that they could only re-enter the union if they ratified the 14th amendment.
Sounds like coercion to me."

As usual, your knowledge of events is highly distorted & inaccurate.
So here's what really happened:

  1. In early 1861 every Confederate state Congressman & Senator walked out of Congress (with one exception, Tennessee Senator Johnson), and few or none of those individuals ever returned.

  2. After Lincoln's assassination in 1865, former Democrat Senator Johnson from Tennessee, now Vice-President, became President.
    Johnson fully supported the 13th Amendment, and led the effort to persuade Republican dominated Southern legislatures to ratify it, which they soon did.

  3. But Southern Democrat Johnson opposed the 14th Amendment, because it granted blacks citizenship status far above anything most Southerners could imagine, so Johnson vetoed a bill which would have accomplished the same thing.

  4. Even though Johnson's veto was overridden (the 1st such override in history) it still drove Congress to pass a civil rights law as the 14th Amendment (June 1866), which could not be easily repealed.

  5. "Freedom" for slaves was one thing to Southerners, but full civil rights was something else entirely, and along with President Johnson, they opposed it.

  6. But in March 1867, Congress made passing the 14th a condition for readmission of Confederate state representatives, and so...
    One by one, the old Confederacy passed the 14th and then sent largely Republicans, some Black Republicans, back to Congress.

  7. It wasn't until 1881 that the last of these Black Republicans was replaced in Congress by solid racist Democrats:

    Mississippi Senator Blanch Bruce:

DeoVindiceSicSemperTyrannis: "...this kind of activity shows what we really lost in the war.
The States lost their sovereign rights reserved in the 10th amendment, the Federal government became supreme."

Of course, you and your racist pro-Confederate buddies "lost the war", and don't you ever forget it!
You will never again have the "rights" your ancestors enjoyed under the original Constitution, to "own" people, or suppress their God-given civil rights as human beings.

It ain't goin' to happen, not now, not ever, so quit your whining, quit your crying over it and quit slobbering in your beer.
Man-up and get on with your life, dear FRiend.

As for "states' rights", the states will have no rights they don't consistently assert, promote and defend.
And, near as I can tell, 100% of states today are 100% happy & content being toady-lackeys sucking at the Federal sow's te*ts.

Yes, I agree that's a sad state of affairs, but it's a separate discussion, and imho, your post-Civil War Southern-Socialist-Racist-Democrat ancestors had as much to do with it as anybody.

124 posted on 02/10/2015 6:50:18 AM PST by BroJoeK (a little historical perspective.)
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