Posted on 05/17/2002 1:51:36 PM PDT by aconservaguy
CERFDOM WEEKLY COMMENTARY
GLORIFYING CONFEDERATES
There is a disturbing historical bandwagon being boarded these days by some prominent libertarians and quazi-libertarians -- people who have dedicated their lives to spreading the message of the preciousness of liberty -- people like Walter Williams, Lew Rockwell, Joseph Farah, Paul Craig Roberts, Joseph Sobran, and Charley Reese. The bandwagon that these normally liberty-friendly writers have jumped upon is that of the Southern Confederacy, and the recent disputes about the propriety of flying Confederate battle flags from state capitals have given them ample opportunity to tune up their Rebel yells in support of a political movement that was arguably more hostile to individual liberty than any other in Americas history.
To be fair to these Confederate sympathizers, they are not seeking to glorify slavery, but to make a point about federalism and big government. Their messages vary somewhat, but the essence of their claims is that the Civil War was not fought over slavery, but rather over high tariffs and states rights (i.e. federalism). Here is a sample of their contentions:
History books have misled todays Americans to believe the war was fought to free the slaves. Walter Williams, Jewish World Review, December 2, 1998.
Through no fault of their own, most Americans study American history in school. This is why they have so many misconceptions about American history. One of these misconceptions is that the Civil War was a noble struggle against slavery... Joseph Sobran, Lew Rockwell.com, January 6, 2000.
The trouble is that most people today really think the Civil War was fought over slavery. It was not. Joseph Farah, World Net Daily, January 19, 2000.
The South did not secede to preserve slavery... Charlie Reese, Orlando Sentinel, January 23, 2000.
...the Confederates had no desire to go to war...They merely wanted to secede, which means to be left alone, and went to war only to defend their homeland against brutal invasion. Lew Rockwell, World Net Daily, January 19, 2000.
The War Between the States was not fought over slavery. Paul Craig Roberts, Townhall.com, May 10, 2000.
When I was first exposed to this line of reasoning, I did what most libertarians without an intense desire to dig into history may have: I assumed that these writers had thoroughly researched the issues and had ferreted out yet another instance in which the leftist educational elite had shaded history to make their big government heroes look like knights in shining armor riding out of the District of Columbia to make the world safe for democracy.
But then a funny thing happened to me on the way to my assumptions: I discovered that my great great grandfather and two of his brothers had fought for the Union in the Civil War, and that one of my great great great uncles (with whom I happen to share a first and last name), had died in a battle occurring shortly after Gettysburg and was buried at Antietam. Now that I knew that there was a battlefield grave with my name on it where lay the body of a young Union soldier cut down by Rebel bullets in the prime of his youth, the issues of the Civil War suddenly became much more interesting to me. What was it, I wondered, that would compel young men born in Canada to English parents to leave the relative comfort and safety of their familys Northern Illinois farm to join Mr. Lincolns Cavalry.
And so suddenly I became something of a Civil War buff, rummaging through websites and generally seeking out historical records with considerable diligence. In the course of my research I found some fascinating materials, including the history of my ancestors unit (History of the Eighth Illinois Cavalry Regiment, Illinois Volunteers, During the Great Rebellion, by Abner Hard, M.D., Morningside Books 1996) . It turns out that this unit was organized at the outset of the war by a Radical Republican Congressman named John Farnsworth with the help of Joseph Medill, the renowned abolitionist owner/editor of the Chicago Tribune. In fact, this cavalry unit was given the name Farnsworths Big Abolition Regiment by President Lincoln himself.
And as I read their regimental history and another book on the cavalrymen involved in the War of the Potomac (Longacre, The Cavalry at Gettysburg), I learned of the important role that the Eighth Illinois had played in many key battles, including Gettysburg, where they fired the first shots and helped hold off the advancing hordes of Rebel infantryman until Union infantries and other cavalry units could arrive and turn the battle into what many military historians consider the turning point of the war. And I learned that it was while chasing General Lees retreating troops back across the Potomac that my great great great uncle had suffered his mortal wounds (along with Medills brother William and several other cavalrymen).
But of course that was the personal side of my inquiry and not at all dispositive as to what precipitated the War of the Great Rebellion. For these more general issues I turned to more general resources, the most intriguing and enlightening of which were (a) the declarations of secession of each of the Southern states and (b) their new constitution. What could be more directly indicative of the motivations of the Southern Rebels, I thought, that their own statements of purpose and organizing principles.
Somewhat surprisingly, what I found in these lengthy documents was precious little discussion of taxes, tariffs, and federalism, but some shockingly explicative statements regarding the institution of slavery and the value placed upon maintaining the most wicked Southern tradition.
For example, the first of the declarations of secession issued, that of South Carolina ( December 24, 1860) asserted the following:
We maintain that in every compact...the failure of one of the contracting parties to perform a material part of the agreement, entirely release the obligations of the other...
We assert that fourteen of the States have deliberately refused, for years past, to fulfill their constitutional obligations...
The Constitution of the United States, in its fourth Article, provides as follows: `No person held to service or labor in one State, under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered up, on claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be due. ... The same article...stipulates also for rendition by the several stated of fugitives from justice from the other States.
...an increasing hostility on the part of the non-slaveholding States to the institution of slavery, has led to a disregard of their obligations, and the laws of the General Government have ceased to effect the objects of the Constitution. [Thirteen Northern States] have enacted laws which either nullify the Acts of Congress or render useless any attempt to execute them... Thus the constituted compact has been deliberately broken and disregarded by the non-slaveholding States, and the consequence follows that South Carolina is released from her obligation.
Thus, by their own admission, rather than being standard bearers for states rights (as the Confederate sympathizers have asserted), the South Carolinians seceded because they felt that the Federal government had been too reticent to crack the whip on Northern abolitionists and Northern States to maintain the bonds of the Southern slaves. Rather than seeking to be left alone, the Rebels had expressed a desire for a stronger Federal government to help them perpetuate slavery. The Southern slaveholders seem to have been of the opinion that their prized institution of slavery could not continue without a massive mobilization of the Federal police state, and with the Radical Abolitionist Republicans having managed to elect a President, the Confederates seemed to have realized that their influence over Federal policy was permanently waning, as the following passages from South Carolinas declaration of secession suggest:
The ends for which the Constitution was framed are declared ... to be `to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity.
These ends it endeavored to accomplish by a Federal Government...
We affirm that these ends for which this Government was instituted have been defeated, and the Government itself has been made destructive of them by the action of the non-slaveholding states. ...they have denounced as sinful the institution of slavery; they have permitted open establishment among them of societies, whose avowed object is to disturb the peace and to eloign the property of the citizens of other States. They have encouraged and assisted thousands of slaves to leave their homes; and those who remain, have been incited by emissaries, books, and pictures to servile insurrection.
...[the Northern States] have united in the election of a man to high office of the President of the United States, whose opinions and purpose are hostile to slavery. He is to be entrusted with the administration of the common Government, because he has declared that the `Government cannot endure permanently half slave, half free, and that the public mind must rest in the belief that slavery is in the course of ultimate extinction. ... On the 4th day of March next, this party will take possession of the Government. It has been announced that the South [i.e. slavery] shall be excluded from the common territory, that the judicial tribunals be made sectional, and that a war must be waged against slavery until it shall cease throughout the United States.
The statements of secession of some of the other Confederate States were even more shockingly frank in their revealed dependence on and reverence for slavery. For example, in Mississippis Declaration, they stated as follows:
Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery-- the greatest material interest of the world. Its labor supplies the product which constitutes by far the largest and most important portions of commerce of the earth. These products are peculiar to the climate verging on the tropical regions, and by an imperious law of nature, none but the black race can bear exposure to the tropical sun. These products have become necessities of the world, and a blow at slavery is a blow at commerce and civilization. That blow has been long aimed at the institution, and was at the point of reaching its consummation. There was no choice left us but submission to the mandates of abolition, or a dissolution of the Union, whose principles had been subverted to work out our ruin.
The Texas Rebels even asserted in their declaration that God and the best interests of the slaves were on their side:
In all the non-slave-holding States, in violation of that good faith and comity which should exist between entirely distinct nations, the people have formed themselves into a great sectional party, now strong enough in numbers to control the affairs of each of those States, based upon an unnatural feeling of hostility to these Southern States and their beneficent and patriarchal system of African slavery, proclaiming the debasing doctrine of equality of all men, irrespective of race or color-- a doctrine at war with nature, in opposition to the experience of mankind, and in violation of the plainest revelations of Divine Law.
The Rebels of Georgia used a more economically framed approach in their declaration:
For the last ten years we have had numerous and serious causes of complaint against our non-slave-holding confederate States with reference to the subject of African slavery. ... Because by their declared principles and policy they have outlawed $3,000,000,000 of our property in the common territories of the Union; put it under the ban of the Republic in the States where it exists and out of the protection of Federal law everywhere...
Although it may seem hideously barbaric to put a value on slavery (here roughly $750 per slave), by doing so the Georgians made it all too clear why hundreds of thousands of Southerners would risk their lives for the institution of slavery, and by their declaration the representatives of Georgia demonstrated the absolutely absurdity of the claims of the present day Confederate sympathizers that the Confederates were fighting not for $3 billion worth of property but instead over a few million dollars worth of tariffs.
Another glaring weakness of the states rights theory of the Civil War is revealed by the Confederate Constitution that was adopted. Essentially the U.S. Constitution with a few minor revisions (including some mealy-mouthed language forbidding taxes on importations...to promote or foster any branch of industry), its most interesting provisions are those that dictate total conformity among the States and subsequently acquired territory with regard to the Confederacys most cherished institution:
No bill...or law denying or impairing the right of property in negro slaves shall be passed. ... In all [newly acquired] territory the institution of negro slavery, as it now exists in the Confederate States, shall be recognized and protected by Congress and by the Territorial government.
When I offered this evidence to some of the Confederate glorifiers, most of them just ignored me. To his credit, Lew Rockwell, one of the most ardent of their number, took time out of his (no doubt hectic) schedule to review the materials I presented and respond. But rather than accept these official documents of the Confederacy as dispositive, Rockwell seems to have simply written them off as irrelevant public relations tools, as his most recent writings on the issue suggest:
[The Civil War] transformed the American regime from a federalist system based on freedom to a centralized state that circumscribed liberty in the name of public order.
...if you listen to the media on the subject, you might think that the entire issue of the Civil War comes down to race and slavery...
And yet this take on the event is wildly ahistorical. It takes Northern war propaganda at face value without considering that the South had solid legal, moral, and economic reasons for secession which had nothing to do with slavery...
But one issue loomed larger than any other in [1860] as in the previous three decades: the Northern tariff...
Lincoln promised not to interfere with slavery, but he did pledge to `collect the duties and imposts: he was the leading advocate of the tariff and public works policy, which is why his election prompted the South to secede. In pro-Lincoln newspapers, the phrase `free trade was invoked as the equivalent of industrial suicide. Why fire on Ft. Sumter? It was a customs house...
Before the war, Lincoln himself had pledged to leave slavery intact, to enforce the fugitive slaves laws, and to support an amendment that would forever guarantee slavery where it then existed. Neither did he lift a finger to repeal the anti-Negro laws that besotted all Northern states, Illinois in particular. Recall that the underground railroad ended, not in New York or Boston-since dropping off blacks in those states would have been restricted-but in Canada! The Confederate Constitution did, however, make possible the gradual elimination of slavery, a process that would have been made easier had the North not so severely restricted the movements of former slaves.
... if we were to recommend one work-based on originality, brevity, depth, and sheer rhetorical power-it would be Charles Adamss time bomb of a book, When in the Course of Human Events: Arguing the Case for Southern Secession (Rowman & Littlefield, 2000). In a mere 242 pages, he shows that almost everything we thought we knew about the war between the states is wrong.
Adams believes that both Northern and Southern leaders were lying when they invoked slavery as a reason for secession and for the war. Northerners were seeking a moral pretext for an aggressive war, while Southern leaders were seeking a threat more concrete than the Northern tariff to justify a drive to political independence. This was rhetoric designed for mass consumption . Adams amasses an amazing amount of evidence-including remarkable editorial cartoons and political speeches-to support his thesis that the war was really about government revenue. Lew Rockwell, Lew Rockwell.com, May 11, 2000.
So there it is. All that the declarations of secession and the Confederate Constitutions slavery guarantee amounted to were a vast conspiratorial hoax upon the citizens of the Confederacy. In Rockwells reality, the Confederates had a secret plan to end slavery that involved convincing their citizens to fight a war to preserve it. In Rockwells reality, the Rebel leaders had solid legal, moral, and economic reasons for secession, but instead of relying on those reasons for their rebellion, they perpetuated the biggest lie in political history so they could get their racist, ignorant constituents to go along with their war. The real truth about their secession was not being portrayed in the Confederates official documents, but rather in editorial cartoons and political speeches. And if you believe that, youd probably believe that the Declaration of Independence was not about breaking away from English rule, but rather a secret plan to make America safe for the invasion of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones some 200 years later.
So when Jefferson Davis delivered his address to the Confederate Congress on April 29, 1861, according to Rockwell and Adams he must not have really believed his slavery-justifying rhetoric. To wit:
...under the mild and genial climate of the Southern States and the increasing care and attention for the well-being and comfort of the laboring class, dictated alike by interest and humanity, the African slaves had augmented in number from about 600,000, at the date of the adoption of the constitutional compact, to upward of 4,000,000. In moral and social condition they had been elevated from brutal savages into docile, intelligent, and civilized agricultural laborers, and supplied not only with bodily comforts but with careful religious instruction. Under the supervision of a superior race their labor had been so directed as not only to allow a gradual and marked amelioration of their own condition, but to convert hundreds of thousands of square miles of wilderness into cultivated lands covered with a prosperous people; towns and cities had sprung into existence, and had rapidly increased in wealth and population under the social system of the South; the white population of the Southern slaveholding States had augmented form about 1,250,000 at the date of the adoption of the Constitution to more than 8,500,000 in 1860; and the productions of the South in cotton, rice, sugar, and tobacco, for the full development and continuance of which the labor of African slaves was and is indispensable, had swollen to an amount which formed nearly three-fourths of the exports of the whole United States and had become absolutely necessary to the wants of civilized man.
And what are the primary sources for Adams secret Confederate motivation theory? As it turns out, they consist of a few newspaper editorials in Charleston and New Orleans papers and the theory of an English writer who thought money was the root of all evil -- Charles Dickens, who had debated John Stuart Mill, a bastion of liberty, on the issue. In one of these articles, Rockwell tells us, a New Orleans paper referred to import duties costing Southerners $60-70 million per year. Thats a lot of money, but when you compare it to $3 billion worth of breeding stock (i.e. slaves), it is reduced to relative peanuts. And if the duties were the real cause of secession and the war, why didnt the Confederates approach Lincoln and/or the abolitionists with a deal to free the slaves in exchange for the abolition of all tariffs? The reason of course, is that the slaves were valued at $3 billion because they were generating hundreds of millions of dollars (and perhaps billions) per year in income for the Southern plantation owners. So in a sense, Dickens may have been right about the war being all about money, though it seems likely that there was also a we just dont like those damned Yankees telling us what to do sentiment in the mix.
In addition to ignoring the declarations of secession, another mistake the Confederate sympathizers make in addressing the question of why the Civil War was fought is their overreliance on some carefully chosen quotations from Abraham Lincoln. Drawing conclusions about the war based on Lincolns words about preserving the Union even if that meant perpetuating slavery ignores the fact that the Southern secession movement began before he was even in office and seems to have resulted more from the beliefs and actions of the abolitionists who had propelled Lincoln into office than Honest Abe himself. Thus, when the Confederates fired upon Fort Sumter, Lincoln was left with few options to preserve both the Union and his popularity among abolitionists but to fight.
The Confederate glorifiers also make much of the fact that most Southerners did not own slaves and many openly opposed slavery (including General Robert E. Lee). But that only proves the obvious point that there was an element of regional loyalty and peer pressure at work in the Civil War at the level of the individual soldier. Significantly, what the Confederate sympathizers ignore in this regard is (a) the large numbers of Southerners who opposed the war or moved north to fight for the Union, and (b) that the Rebel cause was so shaky even in the South that they had to quickly resort to a draft to raise even the paltry number of troops they managed to assemble, while the Union draft occurred much later in the war (and was avoidable even when it was enacted by the payment of what essentially amounted to a defense tax).
To obtain a more balanced approach to analyzing the Civil War than that of Charles Adams and the other Confederate glorifiers, I recommend the work of Jeffrey Rogers Hummel. Although he shares the thesis of the Confederate glorifiers that the Civil War marked the beginning of the era of big government (which in fact was an era that Alexis de Tocqueville had predicted some twenty years prior to the Civil War based on the majoritarian tyranny permitted by our Constitution), Hummel does not glorify the Confederates and vividly exposes their deep affection for big government as well.
So in the final analysis if it is reasonable to conclude that if the Civil War marked the beginning of the era of big government (as the Confederate glorifiers and Hummel argue), then that turn of events seems to have been largely attributable to the immense evil that the institution of slavery posed to the citizenry -- an evil so great that most were willing to acquiesce in the expansion of centralized Federal government power in order to protect them against such things. And even if we strain credulity (to the point at which it may snap back in our faces) and accept the view of the Confederate sympathizers that the Civil War was a tax revolt, the lesson is clear: If you are going to launch a tax revolt, dont pretend that it is really a crusade to preserve an even more heinous form of involuntary servitude.
Richard Allen Vinson Center for Responsible Freedom May 22, 2000
Read Jefferson's and the Founders ideas of State's rights. You know ... small limited government with primary right of self-determination belonging to the States?! AND the right to seceed if they didn't feel the government was acting on their behalf! After all, that's what representative government is all about. Representative is the key word here boyo!
Once again, if the issue where anything OTHER than SLAVERY, you'd have a case. If the south had severed its ties to the federal government due to shipping lanes, or water rights, or anything other than slavery, the argument of states rights would be be arguable. The fact that the southern states rode the wrong horse (slavery), doomed their argument. And it makes apologists for the Confederacy today look ridiculous. Argue your point, but don't try to refight the Civil War.
I completely agree with your statement, in fact, all of your comment. I'm sure there were plenty of reasons why the Civil War started, and continued for four horrible years...But in the end, the conflict was over slavery. The abolitionists pressured Lincoln to make this issue the focus of the war. Until the Emancipation Proclamation, he resisted, and was conciliatory toward the south if it would lay down its rebellion (again, I think Lincoln's belief was that slavery would eventually collapse of necessity). But by the time of the Emancipation Proclamation, he had concluded that the war couldn't be ended, and wouldn't end well, without the end of slavery being a prime goal of the north, as well as union. History is written by the victors. And the change in the terms of the Civil War written by Lincoln in late 1862, ultimately made slavery (and union) the focal point of the war.
I wasn't aware of this proposed 13th Amendment. Thanks for the information.
For someone who claims to support the northern tyrant, do you even bother to read what he said beyond that literal doublespeak called the Gettysburg Address? From his first inaugural address
In doing this there needs to be no bloodshed or violence, and there shall be none unless it be forced upon the national authority. The power confided to me will be used to hold, occupy, and possess the property and places belonging to the Government and to collect the duties and imposts; but beyond what may be necessary for these objects, there will be no invasion, no using of force against or among the people anywhere
This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing Government, they can exercise their constitutional right of amending it or their revolutionary right to dismember or overthrow it. I can not be ignorant of the fact that many worthy and patriotic citizens are desirous of having the National Constitution amended. While I make no recommendation of amendments, I fully recognize the rightful authority of the people over the whole subject, to be exercised in either of the modes prescribed in the instrument itself; and I should, under existing circumstances, favor rather than oppose a fair opportunity being afforded the people to act upon it...I understand a proposed amendment to the Constitutionwhich amendment, however, I have not seenhas passed Congress, to the effect that the Federal Government shall never interfere with the domestic institutions of the States, including that of persons held to service. To avoid misconstruction of what I have said, I depart from my purpose not to speak of particular amendments so far as to say that, holding such a provision to now be implied constitutional law, I have no objection to its being made express and irrevocable.
Now mind you this came out of the mouth of the slaveholder lawyer, the man who operated as a citizen of the state of Illinois for 7 years that did not allow blacks to move into the state (the northern black codes)
By its very design, the Proclamation was unenforceable in those states to which it applied because they were still in rebellion. But it helped to undermine slavery in those states.
This is some sort of joke right? lincoln himself admitted by the end of 1862 the US had reached the last straw in the war. Most of the support was gone, which led to the Draft Riots in New York in '63, and the only thing the Emancipation Proclamation did was to gather moral support in the north for continuance of the war. Yes, abe had to turn to the very group, that he was quoted as saying he did not want to be painted with an 'abolitionist brush', for continued support in the war. Less than 200,000 people belonged to Abolitionist groups in the north before the proclamation but the numbers swelled afterwards in 64 and 65
But, there is ample evidence that Lincoln thought that slavery was a doomed institution.
You think? Come on now, even DiLorenzo points out in his latest work, that slavery was dying worldwide. Only a few places actually had a war involving the end of slavery of 2 out of 3, historians admit slavery was a red herring to wave in front of the people to gain support for governmental change. Want to take a guess what the third one was? In every other major nation, slavery had about died out. If you bothered reading the Confederate Constitution, slave trade was banned except for receiving slaves from the United States. Now if we are to believe these history books written by such worshippers as McPherson and Sandburg, the whole north was up in arms over the abolishment of slavery and there wasn't a slave to be found up north. So if there were no more slaves in the north, there would be no more slaves coming into the Confederacy. Also I'd like to see where good ol' abe was in relation to teaching the slaves. Perhaps he was closer to his yankee brethren in Conneticut that outlawed teaching a slave to read and write in 1836 versus men like Stonewall Jackson and Robert E. Lee that not only taught their slaves but were training them for the day they would be released. Do a little search on lincoln's 'root,pig, or perish' ideals. He could have cared less.
You are fighting against a straw man. There are few people if any who would argue that the North went to war in 1861 to free the slaves. Rather they fought to preserve the Union and maintain their own freedom from what they took, not without reason, to be an expansionist "slave power." By the end of the war, freeing the slaves did become part of the justification for the war.
Think of WWII. We got into it because Japan attacked us and Hitler declared war on us (leaving the complicated questions of Roosevelt's motives and machinations out of the discussion for the time being.) In the course of the war new reasons were found for us to fight, and we've been coming up with still more reasons in the six decades since. There is some validity for some of these grounds. Certainly, if Hitler hadn't invaded most of Europe he wouldn't have declared war on us and we wouldn't have fought him with such passion. So one can't simply rule such reasons out as part of the larger picture of what created the war.
For the Confederacy, the defense of slavery was an important motivation from the beginning. If it reflects poorly on Lincoln that he put the Union above abolitionism, would you think better of him if he put abolition first from the beginning? It could have meant losing the war, and I doubt it would have brought him plaudits from anyone. And if putting union before slavery is Lincoln's sin, what do we think of the Confederates who put slavery before the union?
This article is a fine examination of the conflict and subsequent discussions. Growing up, I was always taught that North and South, Union and Confederacy, Lincoln and Lee were all part of "Our American Heritage." That may have been a naive view. After all, the war was a particularly costly in American lives and there were serious conflicts involved. But I don't see what's gained by making Lincoln a melodrama villain and sterilizing the climate of the era to fit the war into a distorting scheme based on present politics. If there is to be a debunking, let it be a general debunking, that's as quick to see through the Confederate facade as the Union, and no quicker to come up with excuses for the rebels than for Lincoln.
Liberals tend to overlook economic implications of all public policy issues. Owing a slave had an implicit cost. Most employees in the period at the bottom end of the agricultural economy were earning only subsistence wages--a slave included not only the subsistence but also other costs related to security and management. Those costs did not make the institution uneconomic until the cotton gin--however at the point use of the gin because widespread, the cotton farmer with slaves made less money, or lost money, to the farmer who did not have slaves. That spelled clear ultimate end to the system at a finite point in future history.
The death of over 400,000 Americans was simply not necessary to enforce the ultimate end of slavery. The only slavery issue was timing.
I don't mind the Confederate flag, because it is a symbol of brave kids who fought and died to protect their families, homes and way of life. That's honorable. I'm glad South Carolinans told the world to stick it - people of communities can choose their own cultural icons, and the offended can hit the road if they can't abide the insult.
We need to get past all the 137 year old humiliation and obsessing though. That War is no longer a legitimate grievance for inter-generational poverty, lagging health and poor education in much of the South. We're Americans - Army Rangers don't care if the brother next to them is from Maine or Mississippi, black or white, Christian or Jew - he's kin. Geez, Abe Lincoln took an assassin's bullet in the head for his trouble. What more do some here want - General Sherman's ancestors to walk backwards replanting their tobacco fields and rebuilding livery stables?
Sure. But the point of this argument is that the War of Northern Agression was not necessary, and was not instituted, to the purposes of bringing an end to slavery. There is little doubt that slavery would have collapsed eventually--economics drive everything and the cotton gin made slavery uneconomic--the end was in sight in the near term.
The elimination of slavery argument added moral force to Lincoln's later position in management of the war--the whole point of the current authors is that elimination of slavery was an afterthought by Lincoln in support of his conduct of the war.
"History is written by the victors." That is the argument--the history of Lincoln as the Great Emancipator is a fraud--he wasn't. He instigated the war for the purpose of enforcing the will of the majority to preserve their economic interest in protectionist tariffs against the interest of the minority in the south of whom they were destructive. The south's only remedy was the threat to secede which was clearly the basis for the the original unity of the states under the constitution--if a majority state interest is ultimately unacceptable to the minority, the minority had the clear right to leave.
It's fine to say in response, as this author does, that preservation of the capital-property interest in the slaves was an objective of a large portion of the political constituency that supported defense of the war in the south--but the war was unnecessary to bring an end to slavery nor was it necessary for the south to secede to prolong the institution. So at the end of the day, slavery was not the issue.
The real issue all along was to eliminate the protection of the minority from the ability of the majority (as the majority does today with the federal income tax) to exact money and other economic benefits from the minority by sheer force of the block of their votes. Lincoln did that--it will ultimate bring about the end of the republic.
Sorry X, that just doesn't add up. All during March and most of April, 1861 all the leading northern papers were editorializing that Lincoln should just let the south go. Then once word of the Confederate Constitutional convention started to filter back up north establishing a free trade zone in the south the drumbeat for war started. These same big newspaper editors that just weeks before called for peace began to lead the charge demanding Lincoln call up the troops and blockade southern ports. Northern ports told Washington they wouldn't collect the tariff duties and soon themselves were calling for a free trade zone. Washington and Lincoln saw their revunue base about the collapse.
Well stated!
OK, now I see where you're going with this....Excuse me, but who fired the first shot of the Civil War ("War of Northern Aggression"...cute spin)? Who withdrew its delegates from Congress? Who rebuffed overtures to return to the Union in peace? Do you think anyone would have let the southern states withdraw without opposition? Even Stephen Douglas saw the primacy of union; so it wasn't just Lincoln who rejected the south's "right" to go their own way.
And it's to the advantage to the south that the union was found "inseparable." Had the Confederacy succeeded in its rebellion, had slavery been perpetuated for another 20 or 30 years, had the perversion of Jeffersonian democracy the south held dear been pursued (which was a perpetuation of an agrarian society, a refusal to develop a diversified economy, and the faulty presumption that democracy was dependent upon small farms), had that national entity been allowed to be formed on a denial of the foundational premise of the Declaration of Independence that all men are created equal and are endowed by God with, among other things, the inalienable right to liberty, the Confederacy today would be nothing but a backward third world nation. Could such a nation, founded on racism and dependent on the servitude of slaves, whose society was grotesquely deformed because of the perpetuation of the plantation slave system, amounted to anything of value? It's to the benefit of the peoples of the south that their mad experiment in sucession failed. The whole premise of the Confederacy was false, and degenerate.
You're nuts.....
Whatever you do, don't remind the Confederate glorifiers about the Amish and other religious groups that helped the escaped slaves evade the fugitive slave law. According to these guys, there were only a few thousand people in the Northern States who gave a damn about negroes circa 1860.
What happened to government, by the consent of the governed?
The last presidential election proved how divided we are. The North-east and the West-coast wants their gun-control, centaralised government, welfare-state, secular-humanist schools. The South wants a Christian Repubic, limited by law, with an armed citizenry. We recongnise that man is a sinful creature, and that government must be limited, seperated, and divided, because man is inherantly sinful.
The South is different from the rest of the Empire, and we want FREEDOM...
What we want, is to be left alone....
For an independant Southland,
Larry Salley
So much for your familiarity with the U.S. Constitution, history, and historical literature. For one thing, James McPherson (Battle Cry of Freedom, 256) discusses the amendment proposed in 1861. He notes therein that 3/5 of the Republican Congressman (i.e. the "Radicals") voted against this amendment (which was passed by the House on February 28, 1861), even though it appeared to be the only thing that may keep the Southern States in the Union and avoid a war.
Secondly, Lincoln was not even President at that time, having not yet been inaugurated, and the President doesn't have any formal role in passing Constitutional Amendments anyway. (Art. V.) Although McPherson characterizing Lincoln as having "passively endorsed" the amendment, that obviously wasn't a strong enough position to sway most of the members of his own party, and it is questionable whether the required 3/4 of the states would ratify it anyway. In any event and perhaps fortunately for the cause of abolitionism, the Confederates refused any compromises and attacked Fort Sumter.
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