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To: FLT-bird; x; DiogenesLamp
FLT-bird: "We know that you are not serious and are just going to keep repeating this lie ad infinitum.
WHERE a tariff is paid is not WHO pays it.
This has been explained to you over and over but you apparently have no life and live to just hear yourself talk."

Here is the absolute truth: you have never presented even one shred of evidence proving that even one Southerner paid even one import tariff directly.
Of course, I am willing to stipulate, without argument, that 8% of total US 1859 imports landed in, and the tariffs were paid directly by Southerners, in the Southern ports of Baltimore, Wilmington, Charleston, Savanah, Mobile, New Orleans and Galveston.

But 92% of US imports landed in Northern & Western ports and the tariffs were paid by Northerners and Westerners.
I've seen no scrap of evidence from you or anyone else proving that any of those tariffs were paid by any Southerners.

FLT-bird: "This has been explained to you over and over but you apparently have no life and live to just hear yourself talk.
I'm done with this.
Get a life and find something productive to do with your time.
You're not going to waste more of mine with this nonsense."

Of course you're done with it, because you have no evidence to support your ridiculous claims, so now name-calling becomes more important to you than anything else.

FLT-bird: "Again, lies and BS as the Northern newspapers themselves which I previously posted amply demonstrate."

Except you never posted even one word proving your ridiculous claims.

FLT-bird: "No.
This is a lie.
Even the northern newspapers - let alone economists who have looked at the subject - have admitted that 75% of exports and imports were owned by Southerners.
Thus, as the owners of the goods, Southerners paid 75% of the tariff."

As I said, roughly 50% of exports came from Deep South Cotton.
In 1860 cotton exports were $192 million out of $400 million total exports, according to the New York Times article I posted yesterday.
Here it is again.
There is zero evidence to support claims that any Southerners directly paid tariffs on any imports landed at any Northern or Western ports.

To cotton, we could add rice, at less than $3 million, less than 1% of the total.
Everything else, notably tobacco, was not strictly "Southern Products", but rather was mostly grown in Union states like Kentucky, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and Maryland.

Those are facts, deny or ignore them all you wish, they're still true.

FLT-bird: "reasonably fair"? Says who - you? LOL!"

I was giving you some benefit of the doubt, even though Mississippians in 1861 officially said, "by an imperious law of nature, none but the black race can bear exposure to the tropical sun."

In 1861, they said there were no white people out working in the tropical sun, now FLT-bird claims there were lots of them.
Who am I to believe, them or you?

FLT-bird: "Kentucky was a border state.
There were claims it did secede and claims it did not.
The same goes for Missouri.
Both were mostly occupied fairly early by union forces so they therefore put more men in the union army."

Both Kentuckians and Missourians voted overwhelmingly against secession.
Despite that, the governors in both states, in rump sessions, tried to declare secession, and their rump-declarations were accepted by the regime in Richmond, Virginia, making them the Confederacy's 12th and 13th stars.

Both Kentucky and Missouri were major tobacco producers, so claimed as part of "Southern Products".
However, in 1861, when the Mississippi River was blocked and Confederate products were deleted from Union exports, then Kentucky and Missouri continued to ship their products to market via Northern railroads, and so Union tobacco exports fell only 14% compared to 1860.

Therefore, tobacco was not strictly a "Southern Product" which means the total value of Southern Products exported in 1860 was not 75%, it was just 50% from one main item, namely cotton.

FLT-bird: "If you have no idea which Northern newspapers I cited, go back and read.
I posted them YET AGAIN in this thread after having posted them many many times in past such threads.
Amazing how you managed to never see it."

The truth is, in our exchanges, you've never posted a single link supporting even one of your ridiculous claims.
That's why it's impossible to take you seriously.
Further, when I do post actual facts and figures, you totally ignore them, handwave them away and respond with insults.

In short, you're behaving like a typical Democrat, for whom facts are meaningless and narrative trumps everything.

FLT-bird: "then you haven't read.
That's the only possible explanation since I've posted them over and over again including in this thread.
Its your ridiculous claims that are unsupported."

In our exchanges, you've posted nothing to support any of your own ridiculous claims.

FLT-bird: "This is the most laughable and ridiculous pile of hogwash posted in this thread yet.
The political parties have not remained the same over a century and a half.
The Republicans were concerned about money above all because their voters were concerned about money above all - as the voters always are."

Seriously?
The truth is, no Republican was more -- or less -- concerned about money than any Democrat.
The differences are in how we earn our money.
Republicans (plus Whigs & Federalists before them) have always been middle-income small businesses, family farms, skilled workers and professionals in suburbs, small towns and rural areas.
By contrast, Democrats have always been the alliance of globalist elite Washington-protected Big Business (i.e., King Cotton plantations) with Big City impoverished immigrants' bosses (i.e., Tammany Hall).
The Democrats' alliance goes all the way back to at least the election of 1800.

Those are facts, regardless of how much you mock or ridicule them.

FLT-bird: "So far I've posted several newspaper articles from the North, the South and Abroad which all say the South was paying the vast majority of the tariff.
I could also post quotes from Tax/Economics expert Charles Adams who looked at all this quite closely saying the same thing."

In our exchanges, you've posted nothing of the sort, zero, nada, zilch, ever.
Why is that?

FLT-bird: "Surely you realize that your denial of it is babbling nonsense and everything I posted is 100% true."

Nothing you've claimed here is supported by a single shred of evidence that you've posted here.
That's a fact.

FLT-bird: "The Confederate states seceded to avoid the tariff."

After further review, I stand corrected -- in the first four "Reasons for Secession" documents issued by South Carolina, Mississippi, Georgia and Texas, while slavery is listed as a major reason in all of them, tariffs, even in general terms, are not mentioned, much less the specific issues related to Morrill.

The one place tariffs are mentioned is in Alexander Stephens' Cornerstone Speech, where he remarks:

Even Stephens here refers back to the 1833 Nullification Crisis, not to the 1860 Morrill Tariff.

FLT-bird: "The Morrill tariff eventually increased rates to TRIPLE what they were and left those rates sky high until the passage of the federal income tax.
Did you see the word "eventually"?
That means they did not it all at once.
There were multiple rounds of rate hikes which everybody knew was coming once the initial tariff rate hikes went through."

Those additional tariff hikes were all caused by the Civil War.
So, for you to ridiculously claim Southerners knew those further increases were coming, they would have to have known in advance that their secession would lead to war.
And your evidence for that is what?

FLT-bird: "Once again you resort to your lying denials of the facts and once again the sources at the time all back up what I'm saying and all you have are your own cockamamie back of the envelope masturbating with numbers calculations to claim otherwise."

And yet, in all this time you've posted not even one fact to support even one of your ridiculous claims.
And so, lacking facts you do what any Democrat naturally does -- you hurl insults.

FLT-bird: "LOL at you actually trying to sell this BS.
Firstly, the money raised by the tariffs was not needed to pay for government.
These were not revenue tariffs, they were protective tariffs."

Seriously, do you understand anything real?
Do you understand why Democrat Pres. Andrew Jackson supported the 1828 Tariff of Abominations?
Do you think he was just being evil and mean?
No, it was because he used that extra money to pay off the national debt -- not just pay it down, he paid off the debt.
Then, when the debt was paid off, in 1836, then Democrats began seriously reducing tariffs, notably in the 1846 Walker Tariff and again in the 1857 Democrats' Tariff.

Reduced tariff rates did not, by themselves, reduce Federal revenues, which under the Walker Tariff rose from $32 million in 1846 to $84 million in 1854.
The problem was, being Democrats, they would not control their spending and so the national debt rose from zero in 1836 to $16 million in $1846, to $63 million in 1849 (for the Mexican War).
Under Whig Pres. Fillmore and Democrat Pres. Pierce, with rising revenues, the national debt was wrestled back down to $28 million in 1857.

So again in 1857, Democrats reduced tariffs to their lowest rates since 1820, around 17% overall.
The results were, revenues fell from $83 million in 1857 to $71 million in 1858 and remained low into the 1860s.
At the same time, Democrat spending under Pres. Buchanan rose from $79 million in 1857 to $87 million in 1858 and remained higher than revenues until 1867.
So, even before the Civil War, Democrats had more than doubled the national debt, from $29 million in 1857 to $65 million in 1860.

That is the factual reality behind the ridiculous claims you've made.

Democrats' spending -- not Whigs, not Republicans -- doubled the national debt between 1857 and 1860.
There was no excess of revenues over what Democrats believed was necessary to satisfy their voters.

FLT-bird: "Secondly, Southern cash crops did not need protection.
Southerners wanted LOW tariffs, remember?
They were in no danger of being undercut by foreign competition.
It was Northern manufacturers who were constantly clamoring for higher tariffs because they could not compete on price."

And yet, facts remain facts, however much you deny them.

  1. 25% 1846 Walker Tariff on COTTON, reduced to 19% in 1857, increased back to 25% under Morrill

  2. 30% 1846 Walker Tariff on SUGAR, reduced to 24% in 1857, increased back to 26% under Morrill

  3. 40% 1846 Walker Tariff on TOBACCO, reduced to 30% in 1857, reduced to 25% under Morrill
So Southern products were just as highly protected by tariffs as any Northern products.

FLT-bird: "Everybody knew the first round of tariff rate increases proposed by the Morrill Tariff were not going to be the end of the matter.
That was merely going to be the first bite of the apple.
Once they proved they could push the first round through, it was always going to be a one way ratchet - with rates only ever going up up up.
That's exactly what happened.
You claim it was because of the war.
No.
That was just the fig leaf put on it.
Those sky high rates stayed in place for over 60 years."

So, if supposedly, "everybody knew", then you must have lots and lots of quotes from all sides -- Democrats, Republicans, Southerners, Northerners, everybody, right? -- quotes which say exactly what you claim, "everybody knew", right?

In 1860 the National debt and Federal spending were both around 2% of US GDP.
During the Civil War the National debt rose to 31% and spending to 13% of GDP.
After the war both numbers fell very slowly, the National debt reaching a low of 7% of GDP in 1907 before beginning its inexorable rise to today's astronomical heights.
Federal spending, which included national debt reductions, also fell slowly, first reaching around 2% of GDP in 1889.

Overall tariffs (the blue line below), fell steadily after 1870, only rising temporarily to help pay for the Spanish American War, World War One and Smoot-Hawley.
By about 1914, after 50 years, overall tariffs had returned to the lowest levels achieved after 30 years in 1860.
The Civil War was vastly more expensive than the War of 1812 and the Mexican War combined, and so it took much longer for the government to recover economically.

quoting BJK's source: "Some historians in recent decades have minimized the tariff issue as a cause of the war, noting that few people in 1860–61 said it was of central importance to them."

FLT-bird: "Yes.
We call those historians PC Revisionists."

Sorry, no, by definition, "revisionists" are Lost Causers like FLT-bird who put words into the mouths of Confederates which Confederates themselves never even dreamed of saying.

Look it up, you'll see I'm right.

FLT-bird: "Let's see......compromises were offered but the one thing they did not offer to compromise on was the tariff.
The compromise effort failed.
Gosh....maybe if they had offered to compromise on the tariff.....after all, that's exactly what ended the Nullification Crisis a generation earlier......"

And yet... and yet... no Confederate "Reasons for Secession" document mentioned the Morrill Tariff.
When Mississippi's Democrat Senator Jefferson Davis was asked to concoct a "compromise bill" to keep Mississippi in the Union, his "compromise" said nothing about tariffs.
It was all about slavery, and that's a fact, deny it as loudly and often as you like, facts remain facts.

234 posted on 06/11/2023 2:20:44 PM PDT by BroJoeK (future DDG 134 -- we remember)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 231 | View Replies ]


To: BroJoeK

When it came to cotton, most of the physical labor was done by slaves, with free whites mostly in support and supervisory positions. What Northerners did to keep the cotton trade going was seen by plantation owners as exploitation and theft, but wouldn’t the same apply to Southerners who weren’t actually doing the planting, hoeing, and picking?

That’s not to say that the rest of the population wasn’t productive, but if cotton was the basis of the region’s economy and the thing to boast about, how it was produced counted for a lot. As for tobacco, secessionists hoped the Border States would join them. So from that point of view, tobacco did count as a largely Southern product. Northern states didn’t grow as much tobacco and it wasn’t valued as highly.


235 posted on 06/11/2023 2:47:14 PM PDT by x
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 234 | View Replies ]

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