Posted on 03/31/2010 6:36:03 AM PDT by kingattax
After 230 years, are the American people coursing toward eventual divorce?
Our polarized society increasingly ponders what would happen if American conservatives and liberals simply agreed that their differences had become irreconcilable, and redivided the nation to go their separate ways.
Which side would prosper and experience an influx of migration from the other? Conversely, which side would likely become a fiscal and socio-political basket case?
Any reasonable person already knows the likely answer. One need only compare the smoldering wreckage wrought by liberal governance in such states as California or Michigan with the comparative prosperity created by conservative governance in such states as Texas or Utah.
We can also examine the past 400 years, during which immigrants abandoned Europe for an America founded upon the fundamental principles of limited government and individual freedom.
(Excerpt) Read more at biggovernment.com ...
I live in Texas. I Chinese ship a lot of stuff through *their* ports in Mexico. (which is closer)
I don’t like it but, thanks to NAFTA...
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1667854/posts
I think I understand and agree with your first statement: the Federal Government would not be able to act like Lincoln did because it's now dominated by Liberals. Liberals believe every little group has a right to self-determination. They believe in Democracy. The support the rights of Palestianians for self-rule, etc. So if the people of Wyoming, by a significant margin, voted to leave the USA would liberals REALLY abandon ALL their beliefs, counter all their rhetoric, and FORCE poor Wyoming to stay in the Union? Would the same Senators voting for the Akaka bill to grant more autonomy and speical rights to Hawaiians (which is destined to end in Hawaiian independence) really support SENDING IN THE ARMY TO CASPER? I think not, I agree with you. Their own logic, emotion and oft stated beliefs will compell them to reluctantly admit Wyoming may leave the union.
As for your second point, it seems to have two point. While the Congress (dominated by leftists) might not want to fight a way to force states to remain in the union, the President might well want to. Then it would depend on the Army agreeing to do the fighting, possibly without legal approval from Congress.
What I don't understand is your focus on 'the national guard'. Wouldn't the regular Army and Marine Corp. be the ones to use?
I can think of one-- the Czech Republic and Slovakia. There may be others.
Response to your #175.
To me it is more than that. IMHO it is inexcusable the way this part of American history is taught. Not only are large parts of what led up to the Civil War omitted from what is taught, some of it is revisionist history.
Then, as now with the deathcare bill, the issue is States rights (individual rights) v Federal government.
It wasn’t about Northern authority or a problem with the North per se. It was about Federal authority. It just so happened that the Federal authority was located in the North.
Yes, you are right.
I was mainly responding to FReeper Non-Sequitur. We’ve had several conversations about this subject.
You have to feed him/her a little at a time.
“the U.S. was considered by the confederacy to be a foreign country, and imports of slaves from there was specifically protected.”
Yea, Just a bunch of god loving, anti-slave Union people that gave life and limb to free the slaves.....I notice you never mention the drafts.
I was being sarcastic and thought it might be obvious.
It really comes down to this: My conservative political philosophy does not threaten or affect the freedom of liberals. I dont ask them to sacrifice anything for me, but they DEMAND I sacrifice for them
And just what are you expecting? That the court should have ruled three years BEFORE the South seceded? Have you no concept of what a court is and how it operates?
I do. What's your point?
You can try until the cows come home. Your claim that the court has never ruled on the issues of secession is still wrong.
That trial never took place. Trials where those issues would have been forcefully put forward, that begged out for trial, such as Jefferson Davis, never took place. He was indicted for treason, but the charges were dropped.
Due, among other things, to the 14th Amendment.
There are entire books about the pros and cons of the legality of secession. I have read them, and it changed my thinking on the subject. Perhaps you should do the same if you are interested in this topic. (As we all know, too, the Supreme Court has been known to be wrong or change their mind occassionally, too.)
I've read two out of three. And my opinion hasn't changed.
Southerners also had no problem with labeling secession as treason when some northerners made a little noise about it at the Hartford Convention.
“Under the Union draft act men faced the possibility of conscription in July 1863 and in Mar., July, and Dec. 1864. Draft riots ensued, notably in New York in 1863. Of the 249,259 18-to-35-year-old men whose names were drawn, only about 6% served, the rest paying commutation or hiring a substitute.
The first Confederate conscription law also applied to men between 18 and 35, providing for substitution (repealed Dec. 1863) and exemptions. A revision, approved 27 Sept. 1862, raised the age to 45; 5 days later the legislators passed the expanded Exemption Act. The Conscription Act of Feb. 1864 called all men between 1 7 and 50. Conscripts accounted for one-fourth to one-third of the Confederate armies east of the Mississippi between Apr. 1864 and early 1865.”
Yes, the North, specifically NY, was all about morals and freeing slaves.....all 6% of them.
Are you not aware that the confederacy instituted conscription over a year before the Union did? As well as forcibly extending enlistments for the duration of the war?
True.
Those of us whose relatives fought for the South know it wasn't *just* about slavery and no one will ever convince us otherwise.
Yes we know. Southern revisionism is always in full bloom.
I am well aware of that. But that didn't change the fact that the Supreme Court found unilateral secession as practiced by the Southern states to be unconstitutional.
Just 3 years out of Civil War and the Union in control of the courts left no possibility of an unbiased outcome in the courts, IMHO.
Yes any court decision that goes against you has just got to be biased, doesn't it? </sarcasm>
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