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The Civil War's Tragic Legacy
Walter E. Williams, George Mason University ^ | January 1999 | Walter E. Williams

Posted on 01/06/2005 8:00:30 AM PST by cougar_mccxxi

The Civil War's Tragic Legacy

The Civil War produced at least two important outcomes. First, although it was not President Lincoln's intent, it freed slaves in the Confederate States. Second, it settled, through the force of arms, the question of whether states could secede from the Union. The causes of and the issues surrounding America's most costly war, in terms of battlefield casualties, are still controversial. Even its name the - Civil War - is in dispute, and plausibly so.

A civil war is a struggle between two or more factions seeking to control the central government. Modern examples of civil wars are the conflicts we see in Lebanon, Liberia and Angola. In 1861, Jefferson Davis, the President of the Confederate States, no more wanted to take over Washington, D.C. than George Washington wanted to take over London in 1776. George Washington and the Continental Congress were fighting for independence from Great Britain. Similarly, the Confederate States were fighting for independence from the Union. Whether one's sentiments lie with the Confederacy or with the Union, a more accurate characterization of the war is that it was a war for southern independence; a frequently heard southern reference is that it was the War of Northern Aggression.

History books most often say the war was fought to free the slaves. But that idea is brought into serious question considering what Abraham Lincoln had to say in his typical speeches: "I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the states where it exists. I believe I have no lawful right to do so, and I have no inclination to do so." Slavery makes for great moral cause celebre for the War Between the States but the real causes had more to do with problems similar to those the nation faces today - a federal government that has escaped the limits the Framers of the Constitution envisioned.

South Carolina Senator John C Calhoun expressed that concern in his famous Fort Hill Address July 26, 1831, at a time when he was Andrew Jackson's vice-president. Calhoun said, "Stripped of all its covering, the naked question is, whether ours is a federal or consolidated government; a constitutional or absolute one; a government resting solidly on the basis of the sovereignty of the States, or on the unrestrained will of a majority; a form of government, as in all other unlimited ones, in which injustice, violence, and force must ultimately prevail."

Calhoun's fear, as well as that of Thomas Jefferson, was Washington's usurpation of powers constitutionally held by the people and the states, typically referred to as consolidation in their day. A significant bone of contention were tariffs enacted to protect northern manufacturing interests. Referring to those tariffs, Calhoun said, "The North has adopted a system of revenue and disbursements, in which an undue proportion of the burden of taxation has been imposed on the South, and an undue proportion of its proceeds appropriated to the North." The fact of the matter was that the South exported a large percentage of its output, mainly agricultural products; therefore, import duties on foreign products extracted far more from the South than the North. Southerners complained of having to pay either high prices for northern-made goods or high tariffs on foreign-made goods. They complained about federal laws not that dissimilar to Navigation Acts that angered the Founders and contributed to the 1776 war for independence. Speaking before the Georgia legislature, in November 1860, Senator Robert Toombs said, ". . . They [Northern interests] demanded a monopoly of the business of shipbuilding, and got a prohibition against the sale of foreign ships to the citizens of the United States. . . . They demanded a monopoly of the coasting trade, in order to get higher freight prices than they could get in open competition with the carriers of the world. . . . And now, today, if a foreign vessel in Savannah offer [sic] to take your rice, cotton, grain or lumber to New York, or any other American port, for nothing, your laws prohibit it, in order that Northern ship-owners may get enhanced prices for doing your carrying."

A precursor for the War Between the States came in 1832. South Carolina called a convention to nullify new tariff acts of 1828 and 1832 they referred to as "the tariffs of abomination." The duties were multiples of previous duties and the convention declared them unconstitutional and authorized the governor to resist federal government efforts to enforce and collect them. After reaching the brink of armed conflict with Washington, a settlement calling for a stepped reduction in tariffs was reached - called the Great Compromise of 1833.

South Carolinians believed there was precedence for the nullification of unconstitutional federal laws. Both Thomas Jefferson and James Madison suggested the doctrine in 1798. The nullification doctrine was used to nullify federal laws in Georgia, Alabama, Pennsylvania and New England States. The reasoning was that the federal government was created by, and hence the agent of, the states.

When Congress enacted the Morrill Act (1861), raising tariffs to unprecedented levels, the South Carolina convention unanimously adopted and Ordinance of Secession declaring "We assert that fourteen of the States have deliberately refused for years past to fulfill their constitutional obligations. . . . Thus the constitutional compact has been deliberately broken and disregarded by the nonslaveholding States; and the consequence follows is that South Carolina is released from her obligation. . . ." Continuing, the Ordinance declared, "We, therefore the people of South Carolina, by our delegates in Convention assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, have solemnly declared that the Union heretofore existing between this State and the other States of North America is dissolved and that the State of South Carolina has resumed her position among the nations of the world, as a separate and independent State, with the full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce and to do other things which independent States may of right do." Next year war started when South Carolinians fired on Fort Sumter, an island in the harbor of Charleston, South Carolina.

The principle-agent relationship between the states and federal government was not an idea invented by South Carolina in 1861; it was a relation taken for granted. At Virginia's convention to ratify the U.S. Constitution, the delegates said, "We delegates of the people of Virginia, . . . do in the name and on the behalf of the people of Virginia, declare and make known, that the powers granted under the Constitution being derived from the people of the United States, may be resumed by them whensoever the same shall be perverted to their injury or oppression, and that every power not granted thereby remains with them, and at their will. That therefore no right, of any denomination, can be canceled, abridged, restrained or modified by the Congress, by the Senate, or House of Representatives, acting in any capacity, by the President, or any department or officer of the United States, except in those instances where power is given by the Constitution for those purposes." The clear and key message was: the powers granted the federal government, by the people of Virginia, "may be resumed by them whensoever the same shall be perverted to their injury or oppression" and every power not granted to the federal government by the Constitution resides with the people of Virginia. The people of Virginia, through their delegates, set up a contractual agreement, along with the several sovereign states (emerging out of the 1783 Treaty of Paris ending the war with Great Britain), created the federal government as their agent. They enumerated the powers their agent shall have. When the federal government violates their grant of power, then the people of Virginia have the right to take back the power they granted the federal government, in other words, fire their agent.

The War Between the States, having settled the issue of secession, means the federal government can do anything it wishes and the states have little or no recourse. A derelict U.S. Supreme Court refuses to do its duty of interpreting both the letter and spirit of the Constitution. That has translated into the 70,000 federal regulations and mandates that controls the lives of our citizens. It also translates into interpretation of the "commerce" and "welfare" clauses of our Constitution in ways the Framers could not have possibly envisioned. Today, it is difficult to think of one elected official with the statesman foresight of a Jefferson, Madison or Calhoun who can articulate the dangers to liberty presented by a run amuck federal government. Because of that, prospects for liberty appear dim. The supreme tragedy is that if liberty dies in America it is destined to die everywhere.

Walter E. Williams


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KEYWORDS: civil; civilwar; confederacy; confederate; dammyankee; dixie; legacy; the; tragic; walterwilliams; wars; williams
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To: neoconjob

WELL, Whatever would all those Susie Sunshine perfect Northern ancestors who kept slaves have done with THEIR slaves? Perhaps the Southerners could have given their slaves a horse to ride North and offered the thousands of Northern sweatshop and factory workers good healthy outside work planting and picking cotton in the great outdoors instead of being locked up in Mr. Yankee Bigshot's widget factory with the painted over windows with pittance pay.


201 posted on 01/06/2005 4:36:38 PM PST by Twinkie (STILL NOT AT 100% YET?? ANTE UP, FREEPLES!!)
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To: Who is John Galt?
. Justice Thomas noted only a few short years ago:

"The Constitution simply does not recognize any mechanism for action by the undifferentiated people of the Nation."

Not true if we had fully informed jurors, allowed to establish both the facts and the application of the law, in the cases before them.
Juries judging the Constitutionality of law in the case at hand would provide the mechanism for action 'by the people'.. -- [And impartial juries are guaranteed by the 6th Amendment]
Which is precisely why jury nullification is not allowed in most of our 'justice system'.

Clearly, the federal union is much less a union of the undifferentiated 'American people' than it is a union of the several States.

Why does anyone want States to have sovereign power over individuals, - over their rights to life liberty or property?
-- It's a counterintuitive puzzle.

202 posted on 01/06/2005 4:39:06 PM PST by jonestown ( Tolerance for intolerance is not tolerance at all. Jonestown, TX)
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To: Don Simmons
Lincoln's intent was to cause uprisings in the South to undermine the Southern commanders' abilities to fight the war. He cared practically ZERO about the slaves. He made that abundantly clear when he told a delegation of freed slaves in Washington, DC (paraphrasing) "I do not consider you to be my equal, nor will I ever."

Lincoln said and wrote a lot of things about slaves. For example: "If slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong." To suggest as you have that Lincoln cared practically zero about them simply because he did not view them as equals is not surprising but inaccurate.

203 posted on 01/06/2005 4:49:14 PM PST by mac_truck (Aide toi et dieu l’aidera)
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To: Electrowoman

Walter Williams for President!!


204 posted on 01/06/2005 4:59:06 PM PST by southland (If Ted Kennedy had driven a volkswagen he would be president)
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To: Who is John Galt?
That hardly qualifies as 'admitting that he was violating his oath of office to defend the US Constitution,' now does it?

Sure reads like that to me..

Rather, it is a declaration by a Southern legislator that the Constitution itself (Amendment X) reserved the right of secession to the States and their people...

Nothing in the 10th reserves the right to break an oath to defend our Constitution. They should have fought to preserve the Constitution in court, not to violate it by secession & war.

205 posted on 01/06/2005 5:02:09 PM PST by jonestown ( Tolerance for intolerance is not tolerance at all. Jonestown, TX)
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To: Who is John Galt?
Ain't buyin' it. I have ancestors who were North Carolina abolitionists. No legislature or convention of North Carolina had any legal right to strip them of their U.S. citizenship and tell them if they wanted to keep it they'd have to flee to the north as refugees. They fought in the Union Army to preserve their constitutional right to keep both their United States and North Carolina citizenship. The secessionist action was illegal and unconstitutional.

So, the South seceded over a thirty year old tariff and the fact that this happened within two months of the election of an anti-slavery President was just one of those loopy one in a million coincidences? Right. And Kerry won Ohio in 2004.

206 posted on 01/06/2005 5:11:55 PM PST by colorado tanker (The People Have Spoken)
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To: Who is John Galt?

Well looky who showed up! And a new tag line for the new year


207 posted on 01/06/2005 5:33:58 PM PST by stainlessbanner
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To: jonestown
Why does anyone want States to have sovereign power over individuals, - over their rights to life liberty or property?

Please tell me a Marxist liberal took control of your keyboard and posted this.

208 posted on 01/06/2005 5:38:36 PM PST by stainlessbanner
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To: jonestown
They should have fought to preserve the Constitution in court

Because the Supreme Court is always right and there is no such thing as activist judges.

209 posted on 01/06/2005 5:41:16 PM PST by stainlessbanner
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To: stainlessbanner
Why does anyone want States to have sovereign power over individuals, - over their rights to life liberty or property?
-- It's a counterintuitive puzzle.
202 jones

Please tell me a Marxist liberal took control of your keyboard and posted this.

Please tell me why a Marxist liberal took control of your keyboard to call me a Marxist liberal for defending our Constitutional rights to life, liberty, or property.

210 posted on 01/06/2005 6:05:51 PM PST by jonestown ( Tolerance for intolerance is not tolerance at all. Jonestown, TX)
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To: jonestown
Mr. Justice Thomas: "The Constitution simply does not recognize any mechanism for action by the undifferentiated people of the Nation."

j: Not true if we had fully informed jurors...

What on earth are you talking about – some theoretical jury composed of the entire ‘American people?’ As even Mr. Chief Justice Marshall recognized, when the people act, they act in their individual States – not as a united or “undifferentiated” national mass.

Why does anyone want States to have sovereign power over individuals, - over their rights to life liberty or property?
-- It's a counterintuitive puzzle.

You seem to be pursuing a ‘straw man’ argument. I never suggested that I “want States to have sovereign power over individuals, - over their rights to life liberty or property.”

;>)

211 posted on 01/06/2005 6:22:21 PM PST by Who is John Galt? ('Secession was unconstitutional' - the ultimate non sequitur...)
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To: jonestown
WIJG: That hardly qualifies as 'admitting that he was violating his oath of office to defend the US Constitution,' now does it?

j: Sure reads like that to me.

Be specific: what article, section and clause of the Constitution was he proposing to violate? If there was no violation of the Constitution, then there was no violation of his oath...

;>)

Nothing in the 10th reserves the right to break an oath to defend our Constitution. They should have fought to preserve the Constitution in court, not to violate it by secession & war.

Again, please be specific: what article, section and clause of the United States Constitution prohibits secession? Hmm? Absent that prohibition, or a delegation of power to prevent State secession to the federal government (feel free to quote that article, section and clause as well – if you think it exists), the 10th Amendment does indeed reserve the right of secession to the States and their people...

;>)

212 posted on 01/06/2005 6:29:45 PM PST by Who is John Galt? ('Secession was unconstitutional' - the ultimate non sequitur...)
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To: colorado tanker
The secessionist action was illegal and unconstitutional.

Really? Then you won't have any problem quoting the exact article, section and clause of the Constitution that specifically prohibits secession - will you?

Have at it, sport!

;>)

So, the South seceded over a thirty year old tariff and the fact that this happened within two months of the election of an anti-slavery President was just one of those loopy one in a million coincidences? Right.

Sorry, but I never said it was unrelated to Lincoln's election. Unlike you, however, I would not ignore documented historical fact, and claim that secession was the result of only a single cause.

;>)

And Kerry won Ohio in 2004.

Only if you treat the Constitution and the rule of law the way Mr. Lincoln's government and the Northern States did...

;>)

213 posted on 01/06/2005 6:39:01 PM PST by Who is John Galt? ('Secession was unconstitutional' - the ultimate non sequitur...)
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To: stainlessbanner
Well looky who showed up! And a new tag line for the new year...

Happy New Year!

;>)

214 posted on 01/06/2005 6:48:06 PM PST by Who is John Galt? ('Secession was unconstitutional' - the ultimate non sequitur...)
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To: Who is John Galt?
Justice Thomas noted only a few short years ago:

"The Constitution simply does not recognize any mechanism for action by the undifferentiated people of the Nation."

Not true if we had fully informed jurors, allowed to establish both the facts and the application of the law, in the cases before them.
Juries judging the Constitutionality of law in the case at hand would provide the mechanism for action 'by the people'.. -- [And impartial juries are guaranteed by the 6th Amendment]
Which is precisely why jury nullification is not allowed in most of our 'justice system'.

What on earth are you talking about – some theoretical jury composed of the entire 'American people?'

No, I'm answering the Thomas question as posted. The Constitution recognizes a mechanism for 'the people' to speak, -- through trials by jury. - Fully informed impartial juries that can nullify unconstitutional applications of law.

As even Mr. Chief Justice Marshall recognized, when the people act, they act in their individual States – not as a united or "undifferentiated" national mass.

Why does anyone want States to have sovereign power over individuals, - over their rights to life liberty or property?

You seem to be pursuing a 'straw man' argument. I never suggested that I "want States to have sovereign power over individuals, - over their rights to life liberty or property."

Suit yourself.. If you want to deny you support the 'states rights' position, it's fine with me.

215 posted on 01/06/2005 6:49:01 PM PST by jonestown ( Tolerance for intolerance is not tolerance at all. Jonestown, TX)
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To: jonestown
No, I'm answering the Thomas question as posted. The Constitution recognizes a mechanism for 'the people' to speak, -- through trials by jury. - Fully informed impartial juries that can nullify unconstitutional applications of law.

Wrong. Mr. Justice Thomas referred to “undifferentiated people of the Nation.” Unless you are proposing some kind of ‘jury’ composed of approximately 300 million people, your post is both nonsensical and completely irrelevant.

Suit yourself.. If you want to deny you support the 'states rights' position, it's fine with me.

And if you want to assume, without any basis in fact, that my States rights position indicates that I "want States to have sovereign power over individuals, - over their rights to life liberty or property,” it’s fine by me. It simply indicates that you are having some trouble grasping reality...

;>)

216 posted on 01/06/2005 6:56:47 PM PST by Who is John Galt? ('Secession was unconstitutional' - the ultimate non sequitur...)
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To: Electrowoman

ing


217 posted on 01/06/2005 6:57:15 PM PST by southland (If Ted Kennedy had driven a volkswagen he would be president)
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To: Don Simmons
[Don Simmons #72] Mary and Abe married in 1842. Robert Smith Todd died in 1849. I don't think the subject of a "dowry" was ever an issue. Inheritance, however, might have been.

Yep, might have been.

SOURCE: Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, Allen C. Guelzo, p. 23

[F]rom 1850 until 1862, Lincoln and his wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, were embroiled in litigation in Kentucky over the settlement of the estate of Mary's father, litigation that net­ted the Lincolns a share in the proceeds of selling the Todd family slaves.

218 posted on 01/06/2005 7:19:29 PM PST by nolu chan
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To: joebuck
Now hold on! That depends on just what those laws may be. Suppose the state decides that all men named Joe can be owned by somebody else and must do only what they're told. And any Joe leaving his owner's residence without said owner's permission would be considered a runaway that could legally be apprehended up to and incuding the use of deadly force?

Kind of hard for any Joe to move to another state if he'll be hunted down and killed for it.

So tell me, what's the difference between someone named Joe and a Negro? Are either of them NOT a human being? If both ARE human beings, do they or do they not have unalienable rights? Can a state restrict an unalienable right?

219 posted on 01/06/2005 7:20:29 PM PST by Alas Babylon!
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To: Who is John Galt?

Well said my friend, I'm enjoying your posts, you are so clearly defeating your opponents, that they are the only ones that don't realize it.


220 posted on 01/06/2005 7:23:28 PM PST by antisocial (Texas SCV - Deo Vindice)
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