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 ...
Not when someone is not playing by the rules.
It’s been a few years since that decision. Perhaps the southerners should revisit it to see if that particular SCOTUS opinion has changed...
There is the problem. Which side would the military be on? I think it would almost come down to individual soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines. Each one may have a different "side" that they, as individuals, would support. Some may fire on civilians, some may not.
It had to do with a people getting out from under the statist thumb.
... because the federal government was soooo oppressive back in 1860 ...
... and the Confederacy was just soooo devoted to liberty ...
All the freedom loving NY people expressed their anger to the Civil War draft. They were met with artillery fire. Take that "freeing the slaves stuff" and tell you liberal teachers that it wasn't really about slaves.....
To your posts 188 & 189.
I agree with your statement of history. However, there is more to this history than what you have stated. The fact that for some Southern states the EXPANSION of the Federal governments power, at that time, was viewed as a threat to individual freedoms and property rights, for one.
IMHO it is a mistake to lump all Southern states or all Northern states into “North” and “South” when studying our history. Individual states did not view all the issues the same regardless of which side they eventually wound up on. I have found that state by state research of the Civil War history to be most helpful in forming my own opinions.
I don’t recall a claiminig a “high moral cause against Federal power by the South”. I simply pointed out that the Federal government was physically located in the North.
Perhaps I just don’t understand your point.
DUH!!! I misunderstood. Sorry about that!
“The war was not about slavery from the Northern point of view. Only the Southern one”.
____________________________________________________________
If you understand the history of Nullification you would not agree with your own statement above?
Glad to know it isn’t just me:)
Congress isn't the country. The political class and the people who post on Internet bulletin boards aren't the country either. I don't doubt that Congress is more divided than it's been in years, but I wouldn't conclude that the country itself is so bitterly divided. Most people just aren't that interested in politics, and they help keep the country going.
If this generation splits up the country our children and grandchildren will curse us for having thrown the country away. If the US ever does break up, we'll probably find the Chinese government had its hand in the secession movements, since the PRC will be the chief beneficiary of separation.
The revolution was not secession, this is not the 1860s and it would not succeed as it did not then. What should have been done in 1865 was to outlaw the democrat party and jail/hang their leadership. That, unfortunately did not happen. Not making the effort to take back the Constitution and the Republic and opting instead for secession fractionates any concerted effort to regain the Constitution and is the coward’s way out.
I am a Southerner and will be the first to tell you that slavery was an issue which contributed to the War. Slavery is obviously wrong so you can conclude that I believe the South was wrong on that issue.
Some Southern states had issues with the Federal government prior to the issue of slavery itself. Nullification is one example of those issues. Nullification had nothing to do with slavery.
The Civil War era itself is a fascinating subject to me.
Researching the history of the War, state by state, leads me to believe that the tensions which escalated to actual war were due to failure of leadership on both sides.
Thank God! Someone who thinks like I do:)
Your posts are a pleasure to read....even the ones I’m not sure I understand. You are obviously very knowledgeable on the Civil War and I respect your insight and opinions.
And if I could just spell things correctly before posting I wouldn’t feel quite so dumb! Don’t you just hate to read something you’ve posted and find your own typos?!?!?!
Awesome! Never thought of it that way myself. If you don’t mind I believe I will use that one in the future.
Now if you can tell this dufus how to make the italics work on my pc........
“What I don’t understand is your focus on ‘the national guard’. Wouldn’t the regular Army and Marine Corps be the ones to use?”
Wikipedia: The Posse Comitatus Act is a United States federal law passed on June 18, 1878, after the end of Reconstruction, with the intention of substantially limiting the powers of the federal government to use the military for law enforcement. The Act prohibits most members of the federal uniformed services (today the Army National Guard, Air Guard, and State National Guard forces when such are called into federal service) from exercising nominally state law enforcement, police, or peace officer powers that maintain “law and order” on non-federal property (states and their counties and municipal divisions) within the United States.
The statute generally prohibits federal military personnel and units of the National Guard under federal authority from acting in a law enforcement capacity within the United States, except where expressly authorized by the Constitution or Congress.
I think a rebellion, i.e., Secession, would see the Armed Forces quickly authorized by the Congress to be useable. At the present time, IMO, there would not be enough regular Army forces within U.S. borders to counter a Secession by multiple states. That could change after all the troops come home from Iraq; however, a conflict with Iran (which seems to be coming down the pike) would cause redeployment of the same forces.
To add to the problem of the U.S. military forces, the National Guard is currently highly mobilized to stations overseas, and so is also understrength as far as having to carry out operations within the U.S. boundaries.
And when the freedom loving women of Richmond protested the high cost of food, Davis threatened to turn the troops out on them. Link
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.