Posted on 05/04/2018 6:42:25 AM PDT by Bull Snipe
Leading elements of Union Major General George G. Meade's Army of the Potomac cross the Rapidan River. With a few hours they would clash with General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia in the Battle of the Wilderness. Lieutenant General Grant's Overland Campaign had begun.
“And we’ll ignore for now the fact that Castro was very popular among average Cubans, in the beginning.”
Sounds like you are contemplating a future combining of the Marxist Card with a Castro-length argument.
jeffersondem: "Probably was just a member of the supposed in-group trying to influence you to establish a disqualifying out-group stereotype. "
No, least we so soon forget, jeffersondem's "logical lutz" refers to the airborne turns by which he converts the Great Emancipator into "racist Lincoln" and such ultimate racists as, say, John Wilkes Booth, into "freedom fighters".
Related but more difficult is the triple axel whereby secession declared to protect slavery is turned into "freedom from tyranny" -- IOW typical Democrat propaganda.
Depending on your ethnicity, it's not clear if 1861 slavers were masters preferable to 1961 Commie Cubans.
I'd have to think about that, long & hard.
Which is why I don’t even bother arguing with you or reading your rants.
Nothing against Ford, I'm a Chevy guy (that's Chevy, not chivvy), my 2006 Silverado 2500HD has been pulling trailers over highways, back roads, mud & snow, powerfully, quietly and with a minimum of repairs for 12 years.
Duramax & Allison -- what a beautiful combination!
I contend that even without Powhatan the Lincoln/Fox plan could succeed if Anderson held out a few days longer, allowing resupply boats to approach Fort Sumter at night, under cover of darkness & even fog.
When the former owners despoil the place by bombarding it into rubble with the current owners in it, you have to expect the current owners to be a bit miffed about it, don't you?
Except that's not really what Capt. Doubleday said, as you've now been reminded several times.
Instead, Doubleday said, in effect, "that's why resupply had to be done by small boats at night."
And that was the Doubleday/Fox/Lincoln plan, in a nutshell.
DiogenesLamp: "So we have two military experts with knowledge of the situation saying this mission was literally impossible and would have resulted in the loss of many men and all the ships who engaged."
No, none of those who said "impossible" referred to the plan recommended by Doubleday and adopted by Fox & Lincoln: small boats to resupply at night.
DiogenesLamp: "So was President Lincoln some sort of blithering idiot? Had the mission went as the men aboard those ships (and the Southerners) had been led to believe, it would have been an utter and humiliating disaster."
Seems to me Lincoln's people made a major effort to keep others from understanding their plans.
Maybe you've heard somewhere: "Loose lips sink ships"?
DiogenesLamp: "To quote David Dixon Porter above, 'a more foolish expedition was never dispatched.' "
But Porter was assigned to the Fort Pickens mission, which did not fail.
So you are misusing the Porter quote to indict Lincoln's Fort Sumter mission.
DiogenesLamp: "Yeah, it was very foolish, but it somehow managed to achieve everything Lincoln wanted in giving him power to stop the Confederates from becoming independent of the Washington DC/New York "establishment." "
You conveniently forget the fact that Jefferson Davis had issued orders to Beauregard at Fort Sumter and Bragg at Fort Pickens to take those Union outposts, one way or another, by hook or by crook, by starvation & surrender or military assault -- whatever it took, whether it started civil war or not was immaterial to Davis.
That's why all DiogenesLamp's nonsense about "Lincoln's secret plan" is irrelevant.
In taking Union forts Davis was waging war, period.
There's no evidence I know of that Lincoln, in your words, did "plan to 'fight a war to free the slaves,' the key word being "plan".
There are suggestions that former President John Quincy Adams mentored young Congressman Lincoln in 1847 on the subject of abolition.
But the reality is that Lincoln opposed emancipation for the war's first year hoping for an early peace.
When that didn't happen, Lincoln took note of the tactical & strategic military advantages to doing the moral right thing: emancipation, abolition & suffrage for slaves.
Sure, "secession" from the old Articles of Confederation in 1788, by mutual consent of all parties was totally peaceful, lawful and endorsed by our Founders.
But no Founder ever endorsed unilateral unapproved declaration of secession at pleasure, which is what Deep South Fire Eaters did in 1860 & '61.
Fire Eaters then followed up their secessions with provocations, acts & formal declaration of war against the United States.
jeffersondem: "War started after U.S. Navy vessels were sent on the prod in the Gulf of Tonkin incident.
I mean, the Ft. Sumter incident."
"On the prod"?
So you chivvy your tally books while "on the prod", right?
Hmmmmm
.
But sure... civil war started after Jefferson Davis was ready for military assault on Forts Sumter & Pickens, and realized nothing could be gained by any delay.
;-)
Sorry for "typo".
"Steward" = William Seward, Lincoln's Secretary of State.
;-)
Just as no state today allows slaves to vote, but that doesn't imply conditions are even remotely the same.
In fact, in 1787 there were three (not just two) Southern slave-states where freed-blacks could vote: Delaware, Maryland and North Carolina.
There were also four Northern states: New Hampshire, New York, Massachusetts & Pennsylvania.
By 1860 all voting by freed-blacks was eliminated in Southern states, so Confederate "freedom fighters" were fighting for a much different vision of "freedom" than our Founding Fathers had.
Military discipline has always been... tough.
General Washington himself had some mutineers hanged, or shot.
Had the soldier in the incident been white, the results may well have been the same.
But we might also notice that by war's end "colored" troops received the same pay as their white fellow soldiers.
We don't know how much that particular incident had to do with it.
So tell us how many colored troops in the Confederate army received the same pay as their white fellow soldiers?
Yes, it's a trick question, so be careful.
It is surprising you would return to doing your end-zone victory dance in your own end-zone.
{sigh}
Sorry, but your posts are pure nonsense and you just can't deal with the truth.
By the way, he mentioned that someone was just a member of the supposed in-group trying to influence me to establish a disqualifying out-group stereotype."
You wouldnt do something like that to me would you? :)
Why are you here? Is it to pretend that youve spanked someone (and then run and hide from their rebuttal)?
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