Free Republic
Browse · Search
Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article

To: Idabilly

So Lincoln’s rotten and Jeff Davis is no better? I have to salute you for going a lot farther than most fans of the Confederacy in admitting the imperfections of your big fish is Richmond. If you’ll go even further and look at how Jeff ran roughshod over the reb constitution and southern states’ rights, you might start to understand why the Confederacy was no good.


445 posted on 02/25/2010 3:37:46 PM PST by Colonel Kangaroo
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 443 | View Replies ]


To: Colonel Kangaroo
“So Lincoln’s rotten and Jeff Davis is no better? I have to salute you for going a lot farther than most fans of the Confederacy in admitting the imperfections of your big fish is Richmond. If you’ll go even further and look at how Jeff ran roughshod over the reb constitution and southern states’ rights, you might start to understand why the Confederacy was no good.”

That's interesting....

We will never know, will we? Back at ya - Lincoln unleashed this beast from it's chains! Turning our Constitutional Republic into an Empire.......

447 posted on 02/25/2010 3:50:13 PM PST by Idabilly
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 445 | View Replies ]

To: Colonel Kangaroo
“WAR CRIMES AGAINST SOUTHERN CIVILIANS” by Walter Brian Cisco

A must read for a supporter of Lincoln's actions..

My family ( Who saw the elephant) Would agree with this below. They wrote of how (noble) your beloved sniveling, Torch-wielding Yankee - Actually were! Would you disagree with this man?

“....The people of North Carolina, more perhaps than those of any of the eleven seceding States, were devoted to the Union. They had always regarded it with sincerest reverence and affection, and they left it slowly and with sorrow. They were actuated by an honest conviction...that their constitutional rights were endangered, not be the mere election of Mr. Lincoln, as others did, but by the course which subsequent events were compelled to take in consequence of the ideas which were behind him. The Union men of the State, of whom I was one, whatever may have been their doubts of the propriety of secession, were unanimous in the opinion that it was neither right nor safe to permit the general government to coerce a State.

But when Fort Sumter was fired upon, immediately followed by Mr. Lincoln's call for “volunteers to suppress the insurrection,” the whole situation was changed instantly. The Union men had every prop knocked from under them, and by stress of their own position were plunged into a secession movement. I immediately, with altered voice and manner, called upon the assembled multitude to volunteer, not to fight against but for South Carolina. I said, if war must come I prefer to be with my own people. If we had to shed blood, I preferred to shed Northern rather than Southern blood. If we had to slay, I had rather slay strangers than my own kindred and neighbors; and that it was better, whether right or wrong, that communities and States should go together and face the horrors of war in a body-—sharing a common fate, rather than endure the unspeakable calamities of internecine strife.

To those at all acquainted with the atrocities which have been inflicted upon the divided communities of Missouri, Kentucky and Tennessee, the humanity of my action will be apparent. I went and shared the fate of the people of my native State, having first done all I could to preserve the peace and secure the unanimity of the people to avert, as much as possible, the calamities of war. I do not regret that course. I do not believe there is an honorable man within my hearing to-night who, under the same circumstances, would not have done as I did...”

(Life of Zebulon B. Vance, Clement Dowd, Observer Publishing and Printing House, 1897, pp. 439-442)

449 posted on 02/25/2010 4:26:27 PM PST by Idabilly
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 445 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson