Posted on 06/05/2021 7:31:52 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson
WASHINGTON, Tuesday, June 4.
Senor HURTIDO, the New-Granadian Commissioner for the settlement of the Panama claims, was presented to the President to day. By agreement, a delay of eighty days is to occur, before the Commissioners enter upon the discharge of their duties. The condition of the Government of New Granada, threatened to be overthrown by a revolution, is the reason assigned by the Minister for asking the delay, and our excuse for granting it. By the way, it is probable that Gen. HERRAN will again be sent as Minister to this country, in the event of the success of Gen. MOSQUERA.
Col. BARTLETT, who arrived in Washington, today, denies that his brigade has been ordered back to New-York. Indeed, he represents it as standing high in the estimation of Gen. BUTLER.
Parson BEECHER left for New-York this P.M., having succeeded in securing the acceptance of the Brooklyn Phalanx.
Preparations for repelling an attack, were made at Fort Corcoran, last night. Information of the probable attack of a rebel column, had been officially communicated to Col. CORCORAN, with instructions to hold his force in readiness to repel it. In accordance with orders from the War Department, the Fifth New-York fell back to a position abreast of the Sixty-ninth, and the Twenty-eighth, New-York, was placed as a reserve in position from the tete-de-pont of the Sixty-ninth to the Aqueduct Bridge. The Thirteenth, New-York, crossed the river, and was divided into two battalions, one of which was held in reserve at the foot of Corcoran Hill, with orders to support the right of the Sixty-ninth in case of a general attack. The other battalion of the Thirteenth took position in the rear of the Fifth, to support that regiment and to skirmish from the foot of Corcoran Hill to the tete-de-pont.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
First session: November 21, 2015. Last date to add: Sometime in the future.
Reading: Self-assigned. Recommendations made and welcomed.
Posting history, in reverse order
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Link to previous New York Times thread
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3964967/posts
What’s the point of regurgitating Yankee propaganda now? They already won and got to record their version of history. :-)
Heh heh heh
Esp. Seeing what’s happening now.
You say the Yankees won, but that's only in the history books.
On Free Republic the North didn't win, can never win, because the war's not over and the South has risen again to claim its victories! ;-)
So I invite you to read the entire piece:
"Editorial: Hatred to the South – 6-7"
It addresses something often claimed on these threads and says, in part:
The history of the past proves this, and the instincts of every true heart attest it.
The North has always been in the majority, and yet the honors and emoluments of official place have been enjoyed by the South to an extent greatly beyond their numerical proportion..."
But the loyal army will march to the Gulf, if that be necessary to save the Union.
It will march there not in hatred of the South, but to save the South even from itself.
Its progress may be slow, and reverses may be encountered, but when a soldier falls two will take his place, and it will march to the Gulf."
As it happens, one of my great grandfathers did, literally, march to the Gulf, where he was wounded in battle and nearly died from the infection, at the war's very end.
“So I invite you to read the entire piece:
“Editorial: Hatred to the South – 6-7””
I did read the entire piece - and that section about hatred of the South - that was exactly the part I was calling yankee propaganda - because it WAS yankee propaganda.
Your “entire piece” tells only one side - the Yankee side.
Do you deny it?
enumerated: "I did read the entire piece - and that section about hatred of the South - that was exactly the part I was calling yankee propaganda - because it WAS yankee propaganda."
No, it's an editorial, an opinion piece -- an argument in support of some idea or cause, and clearly labeled as such.
An honest editorial is not "propaganda" and this particular editorial seems entirely honest to me.
The editorial addresses a claim made innumerable times on FR CW threads -- that Northerners "hate" the South and Southerners.
The editors rightly say, in effect: that's nonsense, that Northerners showed the highest respect for Southerners before 1861 and even in 1861 tolerated secessionist seizures of Federal properties, until Fort Sumter.
Now that the Confederacy declared war on the United States, Northerners require Southerners to give up loyalty to Confederates and return to the Constitution, or face Union armies marching to the Gulf.
Those are the Times' strong editorial opinions, but they were also facts, not propaganda.
“No, it’s an editorial, an opinion piece — an argument in support of some idea or cause, and clearly labeled as such.”
I don’t care how it’s labeled; the only “argument” being supported here is the North’s argument - claiming that the South’s argument is a myth and a lie.
You can call it whatever you want - I call it pre-war propaganda.
The South’s claim of anti-South hatred was a legitimate reaction to hit pieces like this one, where Northern “editors” were attempting to turn Northern opinion against the South, leading up to the war.
So let's start here: the Confederacy formally declared war against the United States on May 6, 1861.
"Today" is June 6, so that is hardly "pre-war".
Second, this Northern editorial addressed only one of the South's arguments -- the one from "rebel leaders" which claimed "Northern hatred to the South".
The editorial argues, entirely correctly, that claim is, as you say here, a myth and a lie.
It was a lie in 1861 and still is in 2021.
Third, back to the definition of your word "propaganda".
So it's not hard to find dictionary definitions which refer to normal commercial advertising as "propaganda", thus rendering the term harmless & meaningless.
But the truth is that in political discourse propaganda is always understood to mean lies, deceptions, misdirections & biases.
I don't see any of those in this particular editorial.
enumerated: "The South’s claim of anti-South hatred was a legitimate reaction to hit pieces like this one, where Northern “editors” were attempting to turn Northern opinion against the South, leading up to the war."
Except, first, that you've reversed the sequence -- this editorial is in response to "rebel leaders" claims of "Northern hatred to the South", not the other way around.
Second of course, that "today" we're not "leading up to the war", but rather Confederates have already provoked war, started war, formally declared war and begun to wage war against the United States.
Under such circumstances that Northern editorial was entirely appropriate and unusually kind to average Southern citizens.
In case you missed them, here is a listing of Civil War engagements "so far", meaning through June 6, 1861.
There have been eight, producing about 150 casualties (plus an unknown number of Baltimore civilians wounded), of which killed total around 60:
| Date | Engagement | Military Units | Losses | Victor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| April 12-14 | Fort Sumter, SC | Confederate artillery, Union garrison | None | CSA |
| April 15 | Evacuation of Fort Sumter, SC | Union garrison | Two Union soldiers killed, four wounded by accidental explosion | N.A. |
| April 19 | Baltimore Riots, MD | MA 6th, PA 26th vs secessionist crowd | 4 Union soldiers killed, 12 civilians killed, hundreds wounded | USA |
| May 10 | St. Louis Riots, MO | Union forces vs secessionist crowd | 4 Union soldiers killed, 3 prisoners, 28 civilians killed | USA |
| May 18-19 | Sewell's Point, VA | Union naval squadron vs Confederate shore artillery | 10 total | inconclusive |
| May 29- June 1 | Aquila Creek, VA | Union naval squadron vs Confederate shore artillery | 10 total | inconclusive |
| June 1 | Fairfax Court House, VA | detachments from CSA & USA armies | 8 on each side, 1 each killed | inconclusive |
| June 3 | Philippi, WVA | Union Dept of Ohio (McClellan), CSA infantry | Union 4, CSA 26 (killed or wounded) | USA |
Everything you say supports the North’s side - and that’s Ok.
But remember, not everyone agreed - hence the war.
You should feel good though - the North won, so you get to present their side as if it’s the only side, even though there were obviously two sides.
Everything I say is intended to support the truth of the matter, which in this case is expressed by the Times editorial opinion:
enumerated: "But remember, not everyone agreed - hence the war."
Right, but to the degree that Confederates based their war on alleged "hatred of the South", it was based on a lie.
enumerated: "You should feel good though - the North won, so you get to present their side as if it’s the only side, even though there were obviously two sides."
Sure, but both sides on this issue were not equally true.
If only you had been around back then to judge which side was right and which side was wrong. You could have prevented the war with your profound wisdom .... all wars for that matter. LOL
There was plenty of wisdom around in, say, 1861, but it was not enough to prevent Southern Fire Eaters from first declaring secession (to defend slavery, they said) and then pushing for Civil War.
Sober, informed Southern politicians like Jefferson Davis opposed secession, but then did nothing to prevent or stop Civil War.
Indeed, during the war Davis refused to consider any peace offers better than Unconditional Surrender.
Wisdom had nothing to do with it.
Did you ever wonder if the generals of the south read the NYT?
So far, most of the Times looks like good intel.
5.56mm
I’m sure Lee subscribed. At least to the on line version.
You are continuing to do a fine job of arguing the North’s case against the South.
But it is totally unnecessary - the North won the war over 150 years ago and one of the greatest spoils of war is the privilege of writing a favorable version of history and teaching it to future generations.
The North has enjoyed that privilege to the fullest ever since.
At this point you are just beating a dead horse. I get it: North good - freed the slaves. South bad - loved owning and abusing slaves.
Look, try to get over yourself for a minute and consider the following hypothesis:
The Fake News of today becomes the Fake History of tomorrow.
Let’s imagine a wonderful scenario where President Trump and the MAGA Movement make a big comeback, retake the House, the Senate, the White House, and convict a couple dozen top Democrats of high treason.
Let’s say we convince the public...
...that the 2020 Election was indeed stolen
...that the MSM lied about everything
...that there was no MAGA “insurrection” on January 6th
...that both impeachments were complete hoaxes
...that President Trump was right about everything and a national hero.
If that happens, that is the version of history that will be taught a hundred and fifty years from now.
But what if President Trump and MAGA are not victorious - what if the public is not convinced the MSM accounts of recent events are all lies? What happens to all these conflicting narratives then?
You know the answer.
If the enemies of Trump and MAGA prevail - the fake news narratives of the Left will prevail as well, and will become codified over time into a version of “history” that depicts Trump as worse than Benedict Arnold, worse than Adolf Hitler. We MAGA patriots will be described as ignorant racists who allowed ourselves to be incited to violence for an evil cause.
In other words, we will be viewed by history the same way Southern Confederates are viewed right now.
And in 150 years, will there be people like you who just accept the one-sided version of history handed down to them, and fail to recognize that of course there were two sides - but that history is written by the winning side?
Potentially imagine only in the wettest of my wet dreams, and I'm way too old for those now.
But your basic problem is that you have the civil war narrative backwards -- it's not "Northerners" here trying to impose their "revisionist" history on others, we're only here to defend the truth against tons & tons of lies our FR pro-Confederates keep blasting us with, including this one:
enumerated: "At this point you are just beating a dead horse.
I get it: North good - freed the slaves.
South bad - loved owning and abusing slaves."
But it's not me who's flogging any kind of meat, it's you, FRiend.
And the truth is just a bit more complicated than your narrative: in fact, Republicans fought first to preserve the Union and then, as a necessity of war, to destroy Confederate slavery.
At war's end they abolished all remaining slavery, because nothing else made sense.
enumerated: "In other words, we will be viewed by history the same way Southern Confederates are viewed right now."
Ah, but the truth is Civil War history has been rewritten a good many times since 1865, sometimes with more dedication to the whole truth, and nothing but, than at other times.
Our pro-Confederate Lost Causers on Free Republic are dedicated to a version of history which is only tangentially attached to the whole truth.
They distort the Constitution's original intent, leave out the role of slavery, forget who demanded Fort Sumter's surrender, then launched an assault to force it, they ignore Confederates' declaration of war (5/6/61) and which side refused to stop fighting for any peace terms better than "Unconditional Surrender".
They also go out of their way to demonize Union behaviors which they are happy to accept when done by Confederates.
We are only here to defend the truth of history, not to condemn the South.
You are just repeating yourself and I’m getting bored.
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