Posted on 01/06/2006 12:05:39 PM PST by stainlessbanner
If the war was over slavery, why did thousands of Southerners fight barefooted, armed with squirrel rifles, in freezing weather so a few rich folks could keep their slaves? It was much more than slavery.
I wouldn't go so far as to say he achieved his goal; I haven't read the book and don't plan to. You?
Were you typing this as you were hiding out in your bunker? Get a frickin' life.
There are no KFC's north of Dixie?
"I suggest you read a very fine volume, "Lincoln's Virtues", on the development of Lincoln's moral code and viewpoint prior to the Civil War."
I will do that, thank you. I really don't want to lose site of the Lincoln I grew up knowing.
The way things are in education, I just don't know where to cut the wheat from the chaff. I was in college before I found out the whole cherry tree thing with Washington was just 'propaganda.' LOL.
No, but it was probably spotted by the attorney for the school board, who then fired off a message to the principal PDQ.
"There are no KFC's north of Dixie?"
I don't know. I try not go north of Dixie.
what an ugly bag
check this out:
http://www.warchronicle.com/terrorwar/historiantales/autumnofwar.htm
Hanson's An Autumn of War is a collection of essays written from 11 September 2001 to 22 December 2001. Each is valuable as a record of recent history and as a thought-provoking assessment of the way ahead.
As one example, Hanson writes compellingly of General Sherman and the American way of war. In an article written on 25 September he writes:
Often Sherman's type of war is misunderstood and said to be itself terrorist or inhumane. In that regard, contrasts can be made between Robert E. Lee and Sherman. The former, who wrecked his army by sending thousands on frontal charges against an entrenched enemy and whose family owned slaves, enjoys the reputation of a reluctant, humane knight who battled for a causestates' rights and the sanctity of Southern soilother than slavery. The latter, who was careful to save his soldiers from annihilation and who freed thousands of slaves in Georgia, is too often seen as a murderous warrior who fought for a causefederalism and the punishment of treasonother than freedom.
Lee crafted the wrong offensive strategy for an outmanned and outproduced South that led to horrendous casualties. Yet Sherman's marches drew naturally on the materiel and human surpluses of the North and so cracked the core of the Confederacy with few killed on either side. Lee wrongly thought the Union soldier would not fight as well as the Confederate; Sherman rightly guessed that the destruction of Southern property would topple the entire Confederacy. The one ordered thousands to their deaths when the cause was clearly lost; the other destroyed millions of dollars of property to hasten the end of bloodshed. Yet Shermanwho fought on the winning side, who promised in the abstract death and terror, who was unkempt, garrulous, and bluntis usually criticized. Leewho embodies the Lost Cause, who wrote of honor and sacrifice, and who was dapper, genteel, and manneredis canonized.
The lesson? By attacking the infrastructure of our enemies and thereby saving lives in the long run, we must, as Machiavelli warned, expect not to be lauded, but rather caricatured and even despised as cruel. Sherman also had a keen sense of sociology. In his view, the rich and landowning class of the South had instigated hostilities; yet more often the poor free whites of the Confederacy, who did not own slaves, were dying. In Sherman's view it was far more humane to attack the property of those responsible for the conflict than to end the lives of those who were not. Only that way could the entire population learn the wages of supporting a reckless but impotent Confederate government.
Henry Hitchcock, an officer on Sherman's staff, summed up his general's use of psychological warfare.
Not we but their leaders and their own moral and physical cowardice three years ago are responsible. This Union and its Government must be sustained, at any and every cost; to sustain it, we must war upon and destroy the organized rebel forces,must cut off their supplies, destroy their communications, and show their white slaves (these people say themselves that they are so) their utter inability to resist the power of the U.S. To do this implies and requires these very sufferings, and having thus only the choice of evilswar now so terrible and successful that none can dream of rebellion hereafter, or everlasting war with all these evils magnified a hundred fold hereafterwe have no other course to take.
What can we learn in the present age from General Sherman about the waging of war? The real morality in war hinges not on damage wrought but rather concerns the moral imperative to reduce the number of dead and so end the killing as quickly as possible. To accomplish that goal an army must attack in overwhelming strength and be imbued with a clear moral sense. The presence of sixty-two thousand infantrymen in the heart of the South shocked the citizenry of the Confederacy and prevented various forces under Generals Bragg, Wheeler, and Hardee from offering any defense. Yet the Army of the West wrought such cruel material damage because it believed its cause was justthe South had prompted the war and owned slaves while midwesterners were ending it and freeing the unfree.
In the present context, General Sherman would advise our military planners to use crushing force against our enemies in the Middle East, targeted especially against those who started the war, the personal assets of the terrorists, and the government and military infrastructure of the Taliban and Iraq. And he would urge that we must wage such a full-fledged war constantly with the refrain that an attacked United States was seeking to end terrorism and to overturn the political hierarchy of those guilty illegitimate governments. Cheering in the streets of Arab capitals and posters of bin Laden will disappear only when the ignorant understand the terrible costs of supporting the murderers of Americans. Only with a spiritual element to our battle can a humane society stomach the sheer devastation its army unleashes. There is a soul to an army, Sherman wrote, as well as to the individual man, and no general can accomplish the full work of his army unless he commands the soul of his men, as well as their bodies and legs.
Awful lot of people died for something they didn't own.
Why bother when the Mexican flag is way more prevalent here in TX?
Do you have one that says "Viva La Raza?"
I'm not sure you would get much agreement for this proposition from the Blacks.
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.