Posted on 09/27/2010 1:27:31 PM PDT by RandysRight
There was no Southern rebellion.
Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Jay and a few others would have understood secession since they did the very same thing from England.
You guys can argue all day long about slavery and the need to hold the Union together, but what it always comes down to, and why so many hundreds of thousands died, is because the Southern States believed they had the right to secession from on over-bearing northern centralized government and form "a more perfect union" once again.
Google Thomas Jefferson quotes if you want more about the right of man to dis-establish tyrannical governments.
If you look at modern day States' Rights and their legislative resolutions/laws, State constitutional amendments, and numerous lawsuits against the Fedgov regarding obamacare and illegal immigration, it is very similar to the Southern States fighting for their rights back in the 1800's. Slavery was obscene and we all give kudos to Lincoln for making that an issue. However, the "civil war" was actually more about the economics of the North and the South, and how the North kept dictating to the South. What is the noun for the verb "dictating"? It is dictator.
Once again, STATES' RIGHTS are at the forefront for restoring our Constitutional Heritage. The Fedgov must go down in the trash heap of history.
Long live the 9th and 10 Amendments!!!
No it doesn’t. Not even close. Weak example. Sorry.
Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Jay and a few others would have understood secession since they did the very same thing from England.
You guys can argue all day long about slavery and the need to hold the Union together, but what it always comes down to, and why so many hundreds of thousands died, is because the Southern States believed they had the right to secession from on over-bearing northern centralized government and form "a more perfect union" once again.
Google Thomas Jefferson quotes if you want more about the right of man to dis-establish tyrannical governments.
If you look at modern day States' Rights and their legislative resolutions/laws, State constitutional amendments, and numerous lawsuits against the Fedgov regarding obamacare and illegal immigration, it is very similar to the Southern States fighting for their rights back in the 1800's.
Slavery was obscene and we all give kudos to Lincoln for making that an issue. However, the "civil war" was actually more about the economics of the North and the South, and how the North kept dictating to the South. What is the noun for the verb "dictating"? It is dictator.
Once again, STATES' RIGHTS are at the forefront for restoring our Constitutional Heritage. The Fedgov must go down in the trash heap of history.
Long live the 9th and 10 Amendments!!!
Good stuff. Thank you.
Um, what was I saying?
Hey Non, long time no see. Remember this old thread on this subject?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1898013/posts
Some words have totally become defined by spans of time in which specific events take place. Now long ago there was a time period wherein a land called Egypt held slaves. AND if one reads the account as provided what constituted ‘slavery’ in that time period mimics darn near spot on what has come to be in this nation.... And ‘the people’ voted for ‘government’ owning us and our property.
Anyone out there think for one moment that when you pay the banker for your mortgage that you own your property???? NO, we the people have hired for ourselves lords and ladies with the notions and ideas they are our modern day task masters that own US. Lincoln did not start this nor did he end the timeless idea that one person could have ownership over another human being.
A Lincoln Ping. What we were talking about yesterday during history.
Actually, I am one of those Freepers that have been here over 10 years and I don’t call non-seq “squirter troll”. I stay off the civil war threads—have seen non-seq on some contemporary threads, and seen some of non-seqs voluminous responses in the latest posts preview. Non-seq has encyclopedic knowledge about the civil war...but I could tell it was one-sided...however, IN THIS THREAD, I felt that non-seqs responses to me were reasoned and polite enough, hence I did not respond like I would to a troll.
I’m not here to criticize—I’m here to post my opinions, read other peoples, find information and work on critical analysis skills. If someone else has a different agenda, so be it. But I won’t call someone a troll who hasn’t acted like one in a reasoned discussion. Perhaps non-seq has with you (as I said, I really don’t post on the civil war threads) and your opinion is valid...I just haven’t seen it in this thread. (Not from non-seq...thebigIF on the other hand.....)
My posts may be a little strong headed and and unkind to libertarians but this thread itself made itself an attack itself on conservatives by libertarians in the OP. It also went way over the top with it’s praise for a political assassin as well.
And there is nothing wrong with my observations about the connections between libertarians and the Marxist progressive movement. Libertarians have marched side by side with Marxists during the counter-culture movement and again today during the war against terrorism and dictatorships as well. Libertarians are also known to side with progressive Marxists on issues such as homosexulity rights, prostitution as a right, the right of drug dealers, etc.....
This thread likes to make the claim that libertarians are more in line with the Founders and yet their legacy is one of being more in line with the progressive movement. Is it a coincidence that the KKK was formed by Confederate soldiers and then later championed by the progressive movement? Same political party even. Same disdain for the Constitution as well.
Conservatives generally seek to uphold and conserve the Constitution but for the Confederates, the progressives, and other radical left-wing types are always talking about revolting. The libertarians and progressives use revolution and rebellion time and time again throughout their history as being their aim.
Then why is there a whole section limiting the power of the states in it?
2)Name another war where it's happened on this scale in the US
Name another rebellion the U.S. has gone through.
3)Sorry, was placed under martial law
And? The laws in place allowed for it and again, the legislators in question were advocating joining an armed rebellion against the government. What should the government have done?
John Merryman, for one--although, I agree, can't find much that supports Lincoln having Taney arrested.
Merryman was arrested for plotting to blow up the rail line through Baltimore. In modern terms he would be considered a terrorist and an enemy combatant and possibly locked up in Gitmo. Would you have a problem with that?
And you won't find much support for the Taney arrest claim. Not from any of his biographers.
Of course--ex parte Milligan was during Reconstruction....but it was the closest the Supreme Court came to directly ruling on Lincoln's suspension of Habeas Corpus...except for ex parte Merryman.
Ex Parte Milligan was handed down in the spring of 1865. Reconstruction didn't start until 3 years later. The decision didn't touch on the suspension of habeas corpus. Finally, Ex Parte Merryman was not a Supreme Court decision.
Specifics on just how Lincoln expanded the government beyond its intended limits would be nice.
And? Are you condemning Lincoln because he was a racist? If so, you must really be down on greater racists like Jefferson Davis or Robert Lee. Oh wait. I forget. Southern hypocrisy won’t allow you to judge others by the same standards as you judge Lincoln. You people are soooooo predictable.
They worked perfectly if you believe in anarchy. And for all we know you do.
Probative case, sorry. You lose.
The differences leading to the Nullification Crisis were economic and financial and outlined the naked desire of the Northern business class to enrich itself using government policy at the expense of the rest of society.
Open and shut.
The Northern Millocracy and their banker and merchant allies wanted to eat out the substance of the whole country, and the South objected. That is the whole argument, and it prefigures the Civil War perfectly and shows the "slavery" issue to have been a false one picked up and used by the same Northern business interests 30 years later as a wedge issue to split the West from the South, and engage a mindless, predatory "crusade" against the South.
Your vaunted failed slave empire failed and you can't resurrect it. You can't whitewash it. You can't co-opt the present states rights fight anymore than the gays can co-opt the civil rights movement. Same mentality and equally flawed.
Complete crap, but Lincoln did support voluntary colonization. So what? Monroe supported it. Robert Lee supported it, going do far as to pay passage for some of his former slaves to Liberia. Thomas Jefferson didn't support it; he was a mandatory deportation kind of guy. But I suppose all of them were motivated by a WHITE mecca as well?
So what exactly was wrong with colonization given the times and the beliefs prevalent? What was the alternative? Slavery for life for themselves and their descendants? That was the future preferred by Lee and Davis and Jackson and others but it's kind of hard on the slave. Life as free men and women in the U.S.? Where the Supreme Court ruled that you were not and could never be citizens? And that you had no legal rights a white man was bound to respect? Where you faced virulent racism in the North and even worse racism in the South? Is that the kind of life someone like you would prefer? Or would you want an opportunity to carve out a life for yourself, free from racial oppression and legal restrictions, and able to run your own show as you wished? Be honest now, MJ, if you are even able to. Which life would you prefer? Oppression? Or independence?
His Emancipation Proclamation was simply a war measure, designed to cause riots in the South, to cause blacks to rebel and strike down their evil Southern masters.
I read posts like that and I swear to God you must be dumber than a box of rocks. There is no other explanation possible.
In Saving the Union, I have destroyed the Republic, before me have I the Confederacy which I loathe, but behind me have I the bankers which I fear. Even in his own words, Lincoln the tyrant admitted he destroyed the voluntary Union of our Forefathers, and instituted an EMPIRE.
Except that Lincoln never said that. It is a figment of Southron imagination which you poached off some Lost Cause website. It's clear that most of your Southern Culture is a myth, supported by lies and fantasy.
Some of you seem to think that being anti-Lincoln = being pro-slavery. The opinions are exclusive. Lincoln destroyed States Rights and killed anyone who disagreed with him.
I notice you didn't deny the pro-slavery part, did you?
The 'coloreds'? How 19th century of you, MJ.
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