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Do Southerners Have the Right to be Described as "Native Americans"?
10-7-2010 | comtedemaistre

Posted on 10/07/2010 8:12:40 AM PDT by ComtedeMaistre

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To: rockrr

RE: And the losers write the mythology...

Actually the losers need to revisit history and correct the mistakes of the victors.


261 posted on 10/10/2010 5:41:21 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

There was no reason it could not have happened in the USA. Except that the group in power in the South insisted not only on the preservation of slavery, but also on its expansion.

There is some evidence that a plot was underway for the Supreme Court to declare slaveowners had the constitutional right to take their slaves not only into the territories, but also into any state. This would essentiallly have made all states slave states.

Those with this point of view in the south were the leading proponents of secession. Their POV had been gaining power for decades. As I’ve said in earlier posts, by 1860 the political elite in the Soouth saw slavery as a positive good, not as an evil to get rid of in the least disruptive way.

You can believe anything you wish, but my opinion is based on decades of studying the prewar and war periods, including a great many original sources.

I agree with you the war need not have happened. We just disaqree on who the responsible parties were for creating and environment in which the war became inevitable. I believe it is the southern fire-eaters. You believe in some nebulous conspiracy of northerners.

I happen to think the facts are on my side. You are welcome to continue believing otherwise.

BTW, every single one of the gradual and compensated emancipation plans you mention were rejected by slaveowners whenever they were proposed.

Jefferson stated very clearly that the slaveowner, due to the conditions in which he grew up and lived his life, was peculiarly susceptible to arrogance and hubris. I suspect this attitude, clearly seen in many though not all southern pols before the war, especially pretty much all the fire-eaters, was a major contributor to making war inevitable. They started believing they could push everybody around, just as they had always domineered over their slaves.

Didn’t work out that way.


262 posted on 10/10/2010 6:32:01 PM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Sherman Logan

I gave it some thought and would like to correct myself.

There was ANOTHER country where slavery was abolished by war.

The other place that relied on war to achieve emancipation was Haiti, and the results were even more dismal. French slaveholders had been brutal, but the understandably outraged slaves, who began revolting in 1790, proved to be just as brutal. The inability of slaveholders and slaves to do anything but fight each other, compounded by invasions of French, British and Spanish forces, convinced everybody that if they didn’t kill, they would be killed. The greatest champions of Haitian independence, like Toussaint Louverture, were brutal military dictators. After Toussaint was captured by Napoleon, Jean-Jacques Dessalines became president-for-life — until he was assassinated in 1806. Then there was a civil war between black generals Alexandre Péxtion and Henri Christophe. Although about 465,000 slaves were emancipated, the result of all this violence was a seemingly endless succession of bloody power struggles up to the present, rather than a free society that slaves had dreamed of when their revolt began.

Since the abolition of slavery in Haiti, the people there have had to endure some 200 revolutions, coups and civil wars. Endemic violence obliterated historical information about Haiti when, for instance, fighting destroyed government offices in 1869, 1879, 1883, 1888 and 1912. The National Palace was blown up several times. Plagued with dictators to the present day, Haiti is the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere and among the poorest nations on earth.

in 1838 Great Britain achieved the most peaceful emancipation in the Western Hemisphere. There were some 800,000 slaves in its Caribbean colonies, the largest of which was Jamaica. The first organized anti-slavery campaign originated in Great Britain during the late 18th century when that maritime nation dominated the slave trade. Great abolitionists like Granville Sharp, Thomas Clarkson, William Wilberforce and Thomas Buxton overcame the opposition of powerful interest groups, demonstrated the moral evil of slavery and gained the moral high ground. Their patient, persistent campaigning achieved perhaps the most dramatic turn-around in public opinion, securing passage of an 1808 law to abolish the British slave trade, the support of the Royal Navy that launched a remarkable 60-year campaign to help suppress it, the support of British diplomats to negotiate anti-slavery treaties with other nations, and an 1833 law to phase out slavery in Great Britain’s Caribbean colonies. Within a few decades, the British people who had been complaisant or supportive of slavery became the most implacable foes of slavery.

British abolitionists recognized that after emancipation, most former slaveholders and former slaves were going to end up in the same society together. Former slaveholders had more power, and there wasn’t anybody to protect the former slaves, so it made sense to undermine incentives of the former slaveholders to avenge their losses. Accordingly, Parliament appropriated 20 million pounds to compensate former slaveholders for their slaves. From a moral standpoint, of course, the former slaves, not the former slaveholders, deserved compensation, but this way there was more likely to be peace, and the former slaves would be safer, and that’s how it worked out.

After emancipation, many blacks preferred to farm for themselves on a small scale where they were likely to benefit from their labor, rather than remain on plantations where they had been abused. There was considerable social progress. More former slaves got married, and husbands and wives lived together. Schools were established for former slaves and their children, and the former slaves formed self-help societies.

Plantation owners had to adapt in a free labor market. Some shut down, while others turned to labor-saving technologies that should have been introduced long ago. In Jamaica, for instance, planters began using animal-drawn plows and harrows adapted for their particular soil conditions. In British Guiana, planters built elevators to bring cut sugar cane to mill houses. Planters there equipped sugar mills with steam engines. Keep in mind that steam engines had propelled the Industrial Revolution during the previous century.

In Brazil, the largest market for slaves – about 40 percent of African slaves were shipped there — abolitionists raised funds to buy their freedom. Slaveholders resisted, but here and there slaveholders found it in their interest to cash out, and gradually slaveholding areas began to shrink. There was competition among towns, districts and provinces to become slave-free. As liberated areas expanded and became closer to more slaves, the number of runaways accelerated, relentlessly eroding the slave system. Brazilian authorities, like the British, appropriated funds to compensate slaveholders who liberated their slaves. Again, this wasn’t because the slaveholders deserved compensation. If anybody deserved compensation, it was the people who had been brutally enslaved and forced to work for nothing. But compensation undermined the incentives of former slaveholders to oppress former slaves, and the former slaves were safer. So slavery was gradually eroded through persistent anti-slavery action involving multiple strategies. In 1888, Brazil became the last nation in the Western Hemisphere to abolish slavery, when there were some 1.5 million slaves remaining.

Some people have objected that the United States couldn’t have bought the freedom of slaves, because this would have cost too much. Buying the freedom of slaves more expensive than war? Nothing is more costly than war! The costs include people killed or disabled, destroyed property, high taxes, inflation, military expenditures, shortages, famines, diseases and long-term consequences that often include more wars!

Just consider some major costs of the U.S. Civil War. Altogether, an estimated 620,000 Union and Confederate soldiers died. Including the number of civilians killed – almost all of whom were Southerners – the total could exceed the 700,000 American deaths in all the other wars the United States has been involved with. In many communities, entire adult populations were wiped out. This was because of the practice of encouraging all the young men in a town to join the same fighting unit.

The financial cost of the Civil War was overwhelming. The North raised some $3 billion in taxes and loans. The Confederacy borrowed more than $2 billion. Both North and South printed plenty of paper money. People in the North endured the inflation of Greenbacks. In the South, there was a runaway inflation. An estimated $1 billion to $1.5 billion of property in the South was destroyed.

That kind of money could have bought the freedom of a lot of slaves and significantly undermined the slave system in the South!

I might add that emancipation probably could have been achieved without having to buy the freedom of all American slaves. Buying the freedom of slaves was one among several strategies for reducing the number of slaves and the area of slaveholder influence. Presumably the initial focus would have been on undermining slavery in border states, then gradually moving further south. As some point, the combined impact of many emancipation strategies would surely have led to the collapse of Southern slavery, as happened elsewhere in the Western Hemisphere.

IT WASN’T WORTH IT. THE END COULD HAVE BEEN ACHIEVED WITHOUT BLOODSHED. I STILL BELIEVE THIS.


263 posted on 10/10/2010 6:56:02 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: paristwelve

I think saying “It would have been better to have left them alone” is more demeaning, since the “them” to whom you refer is people who owned other people as property.


264 posted on 10/10/2010 9:47:26 PM PDT by drjimmy
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To: drjimmy

Them refers to the enslaved Africans and the owners in the South. It’s pretty obvious the owners needed the labor to acquire the wherewithal to provide all with food and shelter so eventually they’d work out a deal. At any rate, being an enslaved African in the South was considerably preferable to being an enslaved African in Africa, Arabia, the Caribbeans and virtually everywhere else. It was even preferable to being a Russian peasant or a European serf.


265 posted on 10/11/2010 1:17:16 AM PDT by paristwelve (m::)
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To: x

How to kill 10% of the military aged men of a country in 4 years? Lauch a crusade for the benefit of the commercial interests of a region. What is the difference between slavery and ghettoized immigrants paid sub-living standard wages? If the North could not rely Irish immigrants, the war would have been over in two years with recognition of the Confederacy. Then the absorption of MD, DE, MO, and KY into the Confederacy would have occurred, leaving the midwest wondering if they really had any ties to New England.


266 posted on 10/11/2010 6:52:28 AM PDT by equalitybeforethelaw
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To: paristwelve
Them refers to the enslaved Africans and the owners in the South. It’s pretty obvious the owners needed the labor to acquire the wherewithal to provide all with food and shelter so eventually they’d work out a deal.

Work out a deal? In an owner/slave relationship there is no "deal" to be worked out. The owner has all the power. And funny how you can claim a deal would have been worked out when the political leaders of the seceding states weren't interested in any deals with the U.S. government, but rather took up arms against the rest of the nation in order to protect their peculiar institution.

At any rate, being an enslaved African in the South was considerably preferable to being an enslaved African in Africa, Arabia, the Caribbeans and virtually everywhere else. It was even preferable to being a Russian peasant or a European serf.

How very kind of you to be so thoughtful and speak on behalf of the slaves--Massa knows best! Maybe it's just me, but I think being a free man (and woman and child) in the South would have been preferable to being a slave in any other country or a serf in Russia or Europe. By the way, serfdom was abolished in Western Europe long before the Civil War, and in Russia in 1861. So your faulty comparison--slaves here vs. slaves there instead of free men here vs. slaves there--doesn't hold any water.
267 posted on 10/11/2010 9:32:47 AM PDT by drjimmy
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To: equalitybeforethelaw
How to kill 10% of the military aged men of a country in 4 years? Lauch a crusade for the benefit of the commercial interests of a region.

I agree that it was a really pig-headed idea. I wish the south hadn't have done it and should be roundly condemned for it.

What is the difference between slavery and ghettoized immigrants paid sub-living standard wages?

Jeebus, you can't tell the difference?!

If the North could not rely Irish immigrants, the war would have been over in two years with recognition of the Confederacy. Then the absorption of MD, DE, MO, and KY into the Confederacy would have occurred, leaving the midwest wondering if they really had any ties to New England.

Irrelevant and unprovable. There's no way you could know that any more than if Lee had done the honorable thing and not turned his back on his country, killing the rebellion before it could take hold.

268 posted on 10/11/2010 10:48:50 AM PDT by rockrr (Everything is different now)
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To: equalitybeforethelaw
How to kill 10% of the military aged men of a country in 4 years? Lauch a crusade for the benefit of the commercial interests of a region.

True enough. That's exactly what the slaveowning leaders of the Confederacy did.

What is the difference between slavery and ghettoized immigrants paid sub-living standard wages?

Spoken like a true Marxist. Even low wage jobs provided people with the income to work their way out of poverty, and you could move around if you didn't like any particular job.

A highly skilled slave could buy his or her way out of slavery if his or her master would agree, but most couldn't. That's quite different from the condition of the Northern poor at the time.

In any case, you're railing against the wrong people. Blame the English who kept the Irish in destitution, not the Americans who gave them jobs. Or maybe the comparison between the British in Ireland and the slaveowners int the Old South is too close.

If the North could not rely Irish immigrants, the war would have been over in two years with recognition of the Confederacy. Then the absorption of MD, DE, MO, and KY into the Confederacy would have occurred, leaving the Midwest wondering if they really had any ties to New England.

Sort of like they wondered in 1860 if they really had any ties to the South? Ties between East and West were more solid than those between North and South by that point, yet the rest of country still wasn't willing to write off the South.

In any case, would it have been a good thing for the country to shatter, for North and South, East and West to go their separate ways? That you apparently think so, says a lot about you.

269 posted on 10/12/2010 1:02:57 PM PDT by x
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To: x

“In any case, would it have been a good thing for the country to shatter, for North and South, East and West to go their separate ways? That you apparently think so, says a lot about you.”

That you support a war that consumed an entire generation and achieved nothing but the destruction of half the country says a lot about you. Bite me.


270 posted on 10/12/2010 1:29:29 PM PDT by equalitybeforethelaw
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To: equalitybeforethelaw
That you support a war that consumed an entire generation and achieved nothing but the destruction of half the country says a lot about you.

That war did put an end to slavery. But your premise is mistaken. Most people didn't intend war. It was an unintended result of other actions.

Then again, a lot of secessionists were willing to risk a massively destructive war in order to get their own way. They got their war, but just didn't like the result.

Bite me.

That also says a lot about you.

271 posted on 10/12/2010 1:49:15 PM PDT by x
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To: x

“Then again, a lot of secessionists were willing to risk a massively destructive war in order to get their own way. They got their war, but just didn’t like the result.”

No they didn’t. They seceeded from the union. They did not invade the union, that was Lincoln who could not own up to his own failure.

You remind me of the pro-affirmative action types who claim they are ending discrimination by discriminating. Shoosh.


272 posted on 10/13/2010 6:32:30 AM PDT by equalitybeforethelaw
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To: drjimmy

Everyone knows slavery was bad, wrong, yawn!
Being refereed to as “Massa” is boring.
Whatever. 600,000 dead for that! What a waste!


273 posted on 10/17/2010 9:14:50 AM PDT by paristwelve (m::)
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