Even free blacks were not allowed to form regiments to fight for the Confederacy unlike those formed to fight for the United States though some mulattos may have tried to pass as white and join. Slaver leaders were unalterably opposed to Black soldiers since they would contradict the entire theory of slaver culture. This idea was maintained until the very end.
There have been many posts attempting to prove your claim none have been successful except to those who want it to be true.
There was NO threat of emancipation that was a Slaver lie. Abolitionists were NEVER in charge of the federal government even after the War started.
The ONLY reason the Slavers attacked the US was because of slavery. Emancipation was not an issue for the United States until well into the war and was not popular among many of those fighting to preserve the Union. The war was not fought between those wanting to get rid of slavery and those wanting to keep it but between those wanting to preserve the Union and those wanting to keep slavery. Read what the Slaver leaders said. They were very clear and totally unapologetic about it. At least in that they were honest.
Nor was the tariff much of an issue though the apologists keep trying to claim it was. Tariffs were universally acceptable as a means of financing the federal government and had always been. And the rate in 1860 was not at a historic high or going up. It is simply another attempt to excuse an unprovoked attack upon the United States by pretending that the Slavers had a just excuse for their idiotic attempt to destroy the Union.
There are too many inconsistencies and inaccuracies in your post to bother responding to.
“There was NO threat of emancipation that was a Slaver lie.”
Several years before the war, a bill to abolish slavery failed in the Virginia State Legislature by one vote.
One vote.
“Abolitionists were NEVER in charge of the federal government even after the War started.”
Just another indication that slavery was about fourth or fifth down on the list of reasons for the war.