To: Cannoneer
Probably no Civil War had there been no slavery, but there’s always the possibility it might’ve arose over another issue, perhaps economics or other issues where there were vehement factional disagreements.
We’re bound to have another (long overdue) with respect to the forces of good vs. evil that are readily apparent today (with the substantial difference that it isn’t entirely geographically factional, but more urban vs. rural with the suburbs caught in the middle, some sadly trending towards urban depravity).
16 posted on
08/28/2019 10:49:21 PM PDT by
fieldmarshaldj
(Who will think of the gerbils ? Just say no to Buttgiggity !)
To: fieldmarshaldj
Probably no Civil War had there been no slavery, but theres always the possibility it mightve arose over another issue, perhaps economics or other issues where there were vehement factional disagreements. I disagree with this. Had there been no slavery. Had the slaves been instead working under a sharecropping system as they were after the war or had they been wage laborers, the conflict still would have happened. The Southern states' had economies geared toward producing cash crops for export. The Northeast in particular had an economy based on servicing those exports in the form of insurance, banking, shipping, etc and as time went on a growing manufacturing sector. The two regions needed completely different economic policies. The Southern states wanted low tariffs and a lot of export-import trade. The Northern states wanted high protective tariffs to build up their industries which were competing against British and French manufacturers who having gotten established first, already had economies of scale by the time the Northern manufacturers were getting started. Then there is the age old temptation to vote yourselves other people's money. The Northern states had more people and thus more votes in Congress. They used those votes to pass much higher tariffs than were in the Southern States' interest to have and to use the money raised by those tariffs to pay for critical infrastructure in the North needed to fuel industrialization. This dynamic was always destined to lead to the Southern states wanting out and the Northern states not wanting their cash cow/captive market to leave. That and not anything else was the driving force behind secession and war to prevent secession despite the fact that the country was founded on......secession.
18 posted on
08/29/2019 12:15:22 AM PDT by
FLT-bird
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