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RE: Was the south right? - 8/27/2008 6:49:53 PM   
GShock


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Slavery still exists...in same forms (workers chained to tayloring machines) in some countries...but in modern world, unfortunately, everyone is slave to money. What else would u call a person who earns 600EU a month in a place where the rent costs 700EU a month?

Work work work work ... for whom? For your master...who doesn't need to use the whip. The new slavery is much is less brutal...but very real. I believe the war was primarily waged to build one country and, to those who studied it, there's more than just slavery as moving reason.

There's no right or wrong...and, in my opinion, Lincoln managed to abolish THAT slavery but not our slavery....whose masters are those who actually had him (and Kennedy) murdered.

An interesting movie/documentary which will make you see how the slavery works nowadays: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-1656880303867390173
(Be advised...it's a pretty ugly feeling once you understand it)


(in reply to anarchyintheuk)
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RE: Was the south right? - 8/27/2008 7:43:26 PM   
marcbarker


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Thanks Gshock....great words

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RE: Was the south right? - 8/28/2008 3:12:34 AM   
Jonah


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First on a note of clarification, My viewpoint is this: The war was fought for economics and states rights and not slavery. I’m not saying the south is right, rather they are wrong. But more wrong for seceding from the union then slavery, because slavery was a problem on the country as a whole for tolerating it, not just the south’s. Also I’m not justifying slavery, something a lot of you have been saying and an issue I’ll speak of later.

I’m first going to go over what the war was fought over, then about how evil was the south, Then I’ll discuss what the south’s viewpoints and ‘dreams’ of slavery, then finally I’ll address ‘Personal’ attacks.

From the top, I don’t know how many times I have to say this, the war was NOT about slavery. Lincoln, Grant and Sherman all show that: Sherman used blacks for slave labor in Atlanta, Grant said ‘if the war was fought over slavery he would’ve joined the other’ side and Lincoln said: ‘If I could save the union without freeing any slave, I’ll do it. If I can save the union by freeing the slaves, I’ll do it, and If I could save the union by freeing half the slaves, I’ll do it.’ The great emancipator himself recognizes that freeing the slaves is important, but he wanted to save the union anyway. It’s great that the slaves were freed, but that’s not why 600,000 people died(see my posts above). The three key leaders of the north recognized that slavery wasn’t the issue: If it was, Emancipation would’ve happened before of in the beginning of the war, not in the middle.


On the second issue, how evil was the south? Claims by people as knowledgeable as Anthropoid say that the south was one step worse then Hitler, for reasons already explained, that’s not so. With that, one could say that America is the worst country in the world just because of abortion.

Another issue that sparked my interest was that Abolitionists are similar to Gay Rights groups. An invalid claim due to the fact that abolitionists were trying to get basic human rights for slaves, rights that homosexuals already have.

quote:

None of our "homelands" are entirely just. It was a President of the U.S. who was the architect of the Trail of Tears, later Presidents promoted the Indian Wars. These were also entirely unjust, wrong, and "evil," deeds by "my homeland" the United States.


In response to this, I am proud of being in my Homeland, The United states of America, I hope you are as well. Instead of looking back on the evil things, look at how we can make our nation better. This clearly links with the Confederacy: Instead of looking back and saying how A MINORITY enslaved people, look at what we can learn from them to make our nation better. The same way through preserving the union, the cause of the north, we can also make our nation better by also freeing the slaves. I would not trash any period of history that we can learn from, also, if you go to other nations, you can see deeds worse than the trail of tears, any other nation, I assure you.

Now on the issue of what the south thinks of slavery. The south’s goal in life was not slavery. For reasons stated, the southern majority of non- slave owners would not spend thousands of lives (And the ones in the army were not the wealthy plantation owners that supposedly by claims ‘Wanted slavery for the world’ but it was the Farmers without slaves) and their homes and money to support the war. Also, as stated, slavery is a means, not an end goal.

The government’s goal was not to spread slavery, doing that would kill any chance of having an ally like France.

quote:

22 million murdered in cold blood in the span of 9 or 10 years is a gargantuan, and grotesque credit of human evil. The potential outcome had the CSA not been stopped: Hundreds of millions enslaved in scores of states around the globe over the last 160 years is a different scenario of human evil, but I would not necessarily be so quick to discount it as a "lesser evil," unless any of you are actually willing to take up Mr. Lincoln's challenge:


Hmm, saying that the library of congress stated that the amount of slaves between 1859-1865 numbered three million, the death of 22 million would be impossible. Not only that, since they viewed them as property, it would therefore be a waste to murder them all. Would you buy twenty beach houses then blow them up? Also you compared the south to Hitler, who killed more then your supposed statistic. The lesser evil was that they chose going to war against political threats was a lesser evil then killing their family, I hope you do too.

You mentioned that the south’s life goals were slavery, and that it’s not absurd to say they would go to war for the small elite. Those other instances of yours when Kings or Emperor’s inspired men to war? Never had they been for a small group, It’s been for the supposed welfare of the entire country. It is unlikely that they would go to war over something not even threatened, and the fact that it didn’t affect most of them. It’s like if a French winery went out of Business and the people that liked their wine invaded France. would everyone else in America go to war for that?

My final issue is Personal Attacks. Anthropoid and Randomizer seem to be under the impression that I am Pro slavery Randomizer furthered this when he said:

quote:

At the end of the day, none of this really relates to the root causes of the Civil War, be it slavery, economics or phases of the moon. Rather Jonah’s opening remark is telling;

quote:

I think we all agree that slavery is wrong but…


Once one qualifies a statement like that then one can move on and rationalize anything. Either slavery was wrong in the context of the anti bellum South or it was not. Just as one cannot be a bit pregnant, one cannot pick and choose which parts of the Confederate cause warrant support. While history is subjective it also tends to be somewhat messy and we have to take the package deal, not select only those bits that make us feel good.

Excuse me? May I note the thing I stated that he quoted was:

I think we all agree that slavery is wrong but is that the cause of the war?

He carefully omitted the end of my statement. I’m Rationalizing slavery? Far from it, my point is stating it wasn’t the cause of the war. And that I’m selecting bits of History to make me feel good? I appreciate the truth sir, and if I just want to feel good, why did I get into this discussion at all?


quote:

Cheers to those here treating a difficult and contentious issue with respect and civility.


I would appreciate if you read your own words randomizer, I wanted a discussion, now that you are out of things to say you resort to saying that the reason I say the war was fought for other reasons is that I’m trying to rationalize slavery. No disrespect to you though, I’m just a little perplexed.

All in all, many of my points were ignored, and Hopefully this can further explain my previous comments.




< Message edited by Jonah -- 8/28/2008 3:18:49 AM >


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RE: Was the south right? - 8/28/2008 6:09:19 PM   
Randomizer


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Jonah. It was never my intention to insult and since I have caused you offense I will publicly apologize. I also stated that you are an articulate defender of your point of view and I mean that in all seriousness.

I never meant to imply that you were pro-slavery. Rather I took your qualification as an indicator that you were perhaps trivializing the slavery issue as it applied to the Civil War and in that regard I was incorrect.

Wars tend to create their own dynamics and root justifications blur and change as conflict evolves. While your discussion contains any number of accurate observations as to specific actions and words by key players, I consider few of them really relevant to the actual war aims of both sides. It mattered not at all what a general or a politician may have said so the points that you felt were ignored were those that I felt made little difference to the big picture discussion. Whether emancipation was a stated Northern war aim or not is irrelevant, once hostilities commenced the South’s goal of status quo ante bellum, which included slavery, realistically came off the table.

As for the rest, I will respectively agree to disagree. I feel that without slavery there would have been no secession and so no Civil War since none of the other issues of the day (and there were a number) were divisive enough to provoke conflict. In the end slavery was the elephant in the House Divided that caused the conflict to unfold as it did.

Once again I am sincerely sorry for causing offense. I will leave the floor to you.

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RE: Was the south right? - 8/28/2008 6:17:57 PM   
elcidce

 

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Randomizer you need to do some reading about the nullification crisis to get some good back ground on the mood leading up to the war. The war was essentially a growing political struggle between the Northern industrializing states and the agricultural South. Increasing tensions were brought about by the South resenting the growing power of the North and their decisions to act on their regional interests in Congress despite hurting the South. Tariffs were a particular sore spot. Many other issues were more pressing than slavery. The states felt that they had a right to fight these tariffs and regulations that were hurting them and their economy. This is after all what the American Revolution was fought over a few decades earlier.



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RE: Was the south right? - 8/28/2008 6:17:58 PM   
elcidce

 

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RE: Was the south right? - 8/28/2008 6:17:58 PM   
elcidce

 

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RE: Was the south right? - 8/28/2008 7:34:38 PM   
Jonah


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Randomizer

Jonah. It was never my intention to insult and since I have caused you offense I will publicly apologize. I also stated that you are an articulate defender of your point of view and I mean that in all seriousness.

I never meant to imply that you were pro-slavery. Rather I took your qualification as an indicator that you were perhaps trivializing the slavery issue as it applied to the Civil War and in that regard I was incorrect.

Wars tend to create their own dynamics and root justifications blur and change as conflict evolves. While your discussion contains any number of accurate observations as to specific actions and words by key players, I consider few of them really relevant to the actual war aims of both sides. It mattered not at all what a general or a politician may have said so the points that you felt were ignored were those that I felt made little difference to the big picture discussion. Whether emancipation was a stated Northern war aim or not is irrelevant, once hostilities commenced the South’s goal of status quo ante bellum, which included slavery, realistically came off the table.

As for the rest, I will respectively agree to disagree. I feel that without slavery there would have been no secession and so no Civil War since none of the other issues of the day (and there were a number) were divisive enough to provoke conflict. In the end slavery was the elephant in the House Divided that caused the conflict to unfold as it did.

Once again I am sincerely sorry for causing offense. I will leave the floor to you.




That's fine Randomizer, I'm never one who's overly defensive, I just was trying to get across that I'm not a pro slave person. Now that I see your intent I'm absolutely fine and thank you for the compliment about being articulate but that's not why I'm saying this. As far as agreeing to disagree i'm fine with that, anyone else who wants to discuss thism, let's do it then. And I didn't mean any disrespect to you randomizer, I just don't want to come across as something I'm not.

_____________________________

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RE: Was the south right? - 8/29/2008 3:18:05 AM   
Anthropoid


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The question I always have about the "industrial north vs. agrarian south" hypothesis is this: why would an industrial north, that is producing more industrial goods, and more reliant on industrial goods be in competition with an agrarian south that was producing farm products and raw materials? I'd think they would have made excellent trading companions no?

I'll tell you why they were competitors: because the biggest chunk of the Southern economy was cotton, with tobacco coming in second. Their biggest customers, the industrial north, and England. Now does the whole "competition" thing make a bit more sense?

Whereas the north was growing its infrastructure, factories machinery, and working classes (which granted were not exactly living laps of luxury) the south was growing people. Indeed, in about the late 1840s, it became more profitable in some southern states (SC, NC, TN) to grow people and sell them to other states were large mega-plantations were feasible (MS, LA, southern AL, GA). This was industrial people husbandry, and it was responsible for a whole lot of cheap cotton garments being produced and used in Europe and the north.

Folks like your relative ancestor who had a small farm and "staff" slaves are the image that is the more quaint, and indeed, in many families with a small number of slaves, relations were probably more familial. But the big plantations were industrial affairs. Families were often irrelevant, and productivity was the number one priority.

When northern politicians tried to get bills put through for canals, roads, factories, etc., often times southern politicians would team up to block them. When southern politicians would try to get bills to extend slavery to new states, the north would do likewise. These were predominant themes in American politics in the 1840s through to the war.

Slavery was unethical, but legal; the founding fathers never explicitly made any constitutional statement that it was not legal. On this grounds you can quite rightly argue that the ultimate source of the 'wrong' was deeply ingrained in both northern and southern divisions of American society.

Secession is not legal in my opinion, and I cannot imagine any polity that would define it as being such. Any nation or other political entity that allows subdivisions to get out at their choice would never make it through one-generation, thus seccession is fundamentally an act of pure spite (which I do not think it was for the CSA) or it is standing up for what you think is right. The CSA thought it was right to secede. I do not.

A bit about what got this thing started: my comments.

Jonah, I deeply love the United States. Trust me, I'm not one of these radical left-wing conspiracy theory-driven America-bashers, and I 99% likely to vote McCain. I have defended the U.S. against America-phobic rhetoric on teh internet more times than I care to remember. I deeply love the United States, my homeland, and believe deeply that our nation has generally (over the long haul of history) tended to do more right, ethical, and and beneficial things for her people and indeed the world. But we are not saints, and it behooves us to recognize the bad things that have happened in our past. Letting slavery stay for so long was one thing. The Indian Removal Act, and Indian Wars, more. Lots of other things that are debatable, but those two are old enough that I think we can be sufficiently dispassionate about them as to adopt a fairly objective view, and I like to imagine we'd all agree that they were unethical acts of opression.

I also love the south. People in the south are terrific. They are often the descendants of the people who made up the CSA, but they are a lot different a lot of the time. The modern south has become something so totally distinct from the CSA, what happened then is hardly anything for anyone to feel proud, indignant, or guilty about. A lot of our ancestors did bad things, and we should just get over it! They lived in different times, and yes, the argument that "the bad they did was not regarded the same as it is today" is certainly valid.

At the time, many perhaps most did not regard slavery or racism as being quite the totally wrong thing that is is mostly regarded today, and that is worth noting. But from my perspective, as a person living in 2008, any polity that uses slavery, justifies it with elegant and lengthy philosophical rhetoric (which many learned Southern writers did do), and fights for it (whether as one part of a larger cassus belli or as the whole cause to fight) is wrong, and was wrong. I'm not going to refer to 1860s values in judging whether or not I think the CSA was noble, just, right, or "cool." I'm going to use the most up-to-date notions of human rights at my disposal.

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RE: Was the south right? - 8/29/2008 4:14:14 AM   
dolphinsfan9910

 

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Well, if you asked the Yankee soldiers from the Union Slave states of Kentucky, Maryland, or Missouri if they were fighting fighting to free slaves, what do you think they would say???

Many people forget that in fact slavery was still going on, albeit not as much, in the Union Border States. It's ironic that Georgia voted to get the Confederate flag off the state flag because it reminded people of Slavery. Especially when slavery was also perpetrated in the Union.

The Amancipation Proclemation was simply a piece of paper that gave the Union the "Moral High Ground". Although it was all paper, it "freed" slaves in the Confederacy, not Maryland, Kentucky, or Missouri.

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RE: Was the south right? - 8/29/2008 4:43:33 AM   
Randomizer


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I suppose that one of the problems that I seem to be having in this debate is that it appears as though the issue of slavery as it applied to Confederate war aims is somehow being subtracted from the big picture.

Jonah’s original post opined that there was a considerable number of other issues and since the vast majority of Southerners were not slaveholders and so essentially had no vested interest in defending slavery as an institution. He also provides some quotes and thumbnail vignettes that support his contention that the slavery was not really a proximate cause of the Civil War. Others have joined in with different contentious issues as well and on the surface all have some merit.

What seems to be getting lost in the shuffle is that victory for the Confederate States meant continuation of slavery in America. Full Stop.

One can debate endlessly the ethics of employing seemingly immoral techniques to fight a war believed to be just, the continuing controversy over strategic bombing and the employment of atomic weapons in WW2 stand as examples of horrific means being employed towards a noble end. Now if one believes that Allied victory in the Second World War was ignoble or wrong it follows that use of these tools was also ignoble and wrong.

So what has that statement got to do with the subject at hand?

Slavery was not a means to Southern victory in support of noble war aims, whether dealing with States Rights, tariffs, trade or common railroad gauges. Slavery was an end; an integral part of Confederate society before the war and would have remained so had secession succeeded. Being enshrined in the Confederate Permanent Constitution (Article 1 Section IX), it was the law of the land and so would take a constitutional amendment to end it. Triumph for the South was a de facto victory for the continuation of slavery.

We all seem to agree that slavery was wrong and agree to that without any qualifiers.

So if slavery was in fact wrong, how could defending its continuance somehow become right?

Perhaps the seceding states did have legitimate grievances and perhaps some of those were worthy of resorting to violence for resolution (although I do not to believe this to be the case), all Southern war aims whether just or not, become polluted by the specter of continued slavery.

One can debate the rightness of using questionable methods to defend a perceived right but how can one defend using any means at all to perpetuate a stated wrong.

This is why in my view Jonah’s original question is answered; the Southern cause was morally, ethically and unequivocally wrong.

Edited slightly for clairity

< Message edited by Randomizer -- 8/29/2008 5:01:46 AM >

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RE: Was the south right? - 8/29/2008 4:58:20 AM   
dolphinsfan9910

 

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A paraphrased quote from Sherman...and one of the maxims on FOF.... if the Confedracy would have won, the continent's fate would be that of Mexico, eternal war. Lincoln first and foremost fought to preserve the Union. Look at some of his speeches at the time, and the constant termoil in Europe, Franco-Prussian War, Austro-Prussian War, Britain & France vs. Russia in the Crimean War. Previous to that it was France vs. Britain, Spain vs. Britain, Spain vs. France, France vs. all of Europe, ect.

Lincoln fought to avoid this for North America. Imagine the precident if the South would have won the war. How long would the South have remained together?? How many states in the Union w/ provincial disputes would have remained in the Union?? How many "Countries" might exist today in what was the United States? Some of the historical fiction by Turtledove and others may not have been far fetched. ETERNAL WAR.

The causes might have been rooted in slavery and economics, by the effort was to preserve the Union. The fact is slavery legally existed on both sides, of course the Confedracy had many more slaves. Remeber history is written by the victors, not the loosers. The Union was not on moral high ground, nor the South. The history was written to give the appearance of the Union being on moral high ground. Numbers aside, both had slaves.


Being from North Florida myself, I prefer the Grey hats over the Blue ones. Doesn't make me bad or racist, just proud to be southern. Every time I go to Gettysburg, standing looking over the wheat field where Pickett's division was eviserated, I always imagine a different outcome, one of glory for the South.

I know the best thing for me and my family was the Union winning the war. This continent could be a real f-ed up place otherwise. I love the United States, and would bleed for Stars and Stripes. There's just something in a southern man's blood that gets going when he sees the Stars and Bars.

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RE: Was the south right? - 8/29/2008 5:19:55 AM   
marcbarker


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This is true. The Stars and Bars represents a sense of self to the southern man, Heritage, Deep seated family ties and values. A quotw from an appalachin CSA soldier, I ain't fightin for no slaves. I am fighting for my land. We got invaded. That was the thinking. Every man fights for their own just cause in a war.Wether society sees it right or wrong , he brlieves it a noble and just thing he does. I fault no man for fighting for his belief in what he holds dear. His home? His security? His slaves? His God? Who is to say who is right and who is wrong. The moral High Ground belongs to the victors. What if after the Alamo Sam Houston lost....What if in the turn of events we got decimated at midway or even lost in Luzon? What next....these are all paths down a history that does belong to the victors and that high ground is ours at present...

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RE: Was the south right? - 8/29/2008 1:31:08 PM   
Anthropoid


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Having grown up in the Ozarks, spent a lot of time roaming the hills in TN, AL, GA, and lived in Atlanta most of my adult life, I too am proud to be southern.

But I would never say I was proud to be Confederate. If any of you have ancestors who actually fought in the war, I can understand you not making such a distinction, but that is the way it is for me: no implied judgement of anyone else.

Indeed, it never even dawned on me when this thread got going but I'd like to suggest to everyone that we read the Title of this Thread a bit differently. Jonah named it "Was the South Right?" I myself have been responding to this thread as if it was in fact labelled "Was the CSA Right?" and it never even dawned on me that this erroneous equivalence was being made by some--erroneous in my mind at least.

I would never say that "The South" was wrong, because "The South" included a whole lot of individuals who were opposed to slavery even before the war, who did not support secession, and who did not willingly support the war. The Confederates, i.e., those who supported secession, supported the war and therefore (whether they were aware of it or not) were supporting slavery are the population, the culture, and the tradition in which I find great repugnance. As Randomizer points out the consequence of CSA victory for which Confederate soldiers, citizens and leaders fought would have been continued slavery, thus by definition a "Confederate" (though not necessarily a "Southerner") fought for slavery.

I realize that some of your ancestors likely fought in CSA military, supported secession, and supported the war, and I'm sorry to have to point out: they were wrong. Irrespective of whether there were racists who supported slavery in the North, the Orient, Russia or Quebec, they were wrong. Indeed, all of them who were not radical abolitionists were by degrees wrong. Abolitionism began nearly 100 years before the ACW, and still there were fence-sitters and out-and-out proponents of the horrific institution: ALL OF THEM, including Mr. Lincoln and the other pragmatists who refused to take a hardline against slavery prior to the war were wrong. It is simply WRONG for a human being to be considered rightful property of another human being, I don't care the cultural context it is, and was WRONG.

As I've argued above, none of us have an ancestry that is populated solely with heroes and Saints. Being a bastard, I myself do not know a lot about my ancestors, but I have no doubt that many of them did some very "wrong" things. However, that does not matter to me. It is for me to live my life as virtuously as I can, and I do not need my ancestors acts, whether imagined or real to buttress who I am and what I believe in.

"The South" also still exists today. The CSA does NOT exist today, and has not existed for over 150 years. It was defeated, dismantled, and prevented from reforming through military occupation, and driven into remission by a reconstruction effort. Indeed, the vestiges of that tradition have certainly reintegrated into "The South" and continue to echo down through time. But the post war "South" is an entity built on the ashes of the pre-War south and the Confederacy which hijacked it from the Union. It would be over the top for a devout Republican to be proud of his Whig ancestry, and I find it similarly incongruous for people to associate their Southern cultural identity and love of southern homeland with the CSA. To continue to do this serves no benefical purpose that I can see, but I do know that it is very, VERY widespread in the contempoary southern U.S. states.

My own tenant, a lovely old lady in her 80s, very anti-war, verging on pacifistic, kept a reproduction of a portrait of a Confederate officer on her apartment wall, most likely an ancestor. My wife: educated through most of grammar school and all of secondary school in Florida, initially echoed many of your views that the ACW was NOT about slavery, and was about northern opression of states rights. My masseuse back in Atlanta, a lady from Virginia, had a similarly proud and somewhat impudent response in a discussion about this game and the merits of the south;  And these were all WOMEN who are not nearly as proud as your average man! I find it all rather over the top, though essentially harmless.

It is not like the threat of some new "neo-White Supremacist movement" necessarily threatens to form on the ghost of Confederate Pride that is so very common in The South today; seeing that Confederate Officer on the wall in the apartment rented from me by that kind old lady from Missisippi was not quite as chilling as seeing a picture of Herman Goering or Heinrich Himmler on the wall in a German cottage in 2008, but I must be honest with you (and strictly for the sake of being honest, not with any intention of being insulting or antagonistic) that is exactly the DIRECTION of my response.

For many of us who find it impossible to overlook the atrocity that is slavery, looking at the CSA and the war they provoked with anything except a mild repugnance is extremely challenging. This is not necessarily a manifestation of factionalism or pride in being "better than them" as a Unionist. I grew up in frickin' Missouri! If anything my "roots" are simply American, not Union/Northern, and not CSA/Southern. In any event, I just don't understand how any of you guys can so readily disarticulate the CSA from slavery, formulate "but . . ." and "what-if . . ." and "the Union was no better . . ." and "it wasn't really about slavery . . ." type arguments in defense of the memory of the CSA.

quote:

Perhaps the seceding states did have legitimate grievances and perhaps some of those were worthy of resorting to violence for resolution (although I do not to believe this to be the case), all Southern war aims whether just or not, become polluted by the specter of continued slavery.


The existence of inter-state or inter-sectional differences did not warrant provoking a war, and I agree with Randomizer that the primary aim of the CSA was to perpetuate slavery, the primary macro-economic form of income for most of the states which joined the CSA.

quote:

One can debate the rightness of using questionable methods to defend a perceived right but how can one defend using any means at all to perpetuate a stated wrong.

This is why in my view Jonah’s original question is answered; the Southern cause was morally, ethically and unequivocally wrong.


I would clarify that, to say "the Southern cause" refers to the majority view in the South of 1861--i.e., to be more precise the "Confederate Cause"--but we need not liken this "South" of 1861 to a "South" of 2008. Indeed, as I've pointed out above, it is more accurate to refer to the question of "Was the CSA right?" instead of "Was the South right?" The South of 1861 and the CSA are virtually, but not entirely synonymous; there were abolitionists, in the South prior to the war, though very rare and generally careful in their rhetoric. Moreover, there were plenty of dissenters in the CSA who were NOT willingly supportive of that nations cause. Thus it is not entirely accurate to equate the war between the CSA and teh USA as being a war by "The South" of 1861 and The North of 1861.  Part of studying history is to be as objective, and dispassionate about studying who "we" have been, so that we can more conscientiously act to become who we WANT to be in the present and future.

dolphinsfan, I agree with the general idea you express that: in many ways the modal sentiments in the north were no less racist than in the south. But the fact that slavery was still legal and practiced in Maryland, KY, and MO, states which joined the Union more as an act of pressure from the Union than as an act of loyalty to the Union, does not really prove much about whether the CSA was "right." All it suggests is is that the Union was not an entirely "right" with respect to the injustice of slavery.

The issue at hand in my mind is not whether one entity was totally right and one totally wrong. The issue is about relative "rightness." The Union enfolded three states in which slavery existed  at the start of the war for pragmatic reasons of defeating the CSA. Indeed, at wars initiation, the idea of an Emancipation Proclamation was not even being imagined among most northern leaders; certainly among abolitionists, but as I've pointed out these folks remained fringe elements in 1861.

The EP only happened later, and primarily for _pragmatic_ reasons, i.e., strategic expediency of mobilizing more Black troops; a homefront PR drive to gain the strong backing of the abolitionists segments for the war and to quell the anti-war "lets just settle for peace and end this needless war" crowds in the north; promoting dissent and unrest in Southern plantations and Black CSA slave regiments; and also for diplomatic reasons, i.e., to undermine CSA efforts to gain diplomatic recognition in Europe. At the end of the day, the Union was little better than the CSA because it only very begrudgingly made that final step of declaring all slaves to be free.

Let me repeat that: the CSA was wrong, but the Union was only little better than the CSA because it only very begrudgingly made that final step of declaring all slaves to be free, ONLY when it became obvious that to not do so would be a strategic blunder that might allow the CSA to prevail, achieve a peaceful settlement that included its autonomy, and thus broke up the U.S.A.

_THIS_ the preservation of the Union was the primary goal for which the majority of Union leaders most definitely were fighting from beginning to end of the war . For most Union leaders--including Lincoln but certainly not his Secretary of State and U.S. Treasury Secretary, and as some of you have pointed out: not necessarily Sherman or Grant or many other key Union figures--the goal of eradicating slavery was not a primary goal at any time until such time as making the Emancipation Proclamation became a strategically USEFUL part of the war effort.

I can thus summarize my view of "why" the ACW fairly briefly: There are a number of peripheral or ultimate causes for why the war occurred and that depends on putting 1861 into the context of the previous decades. However, the proximate causes: Lincoln won, influential men in some Southern states felt that this was an imminent threat to their way of life--most notably their economic fortunes which were primarily based on a slave plantation system--and in a risky gambit declare themselves to be separate.  These first few adventurous leaders/states gradually managed to convince other states that were largely dependent on slavery to join in, and by spring 1861 we have a new nation formed up, the CSA. This is the proximate cause for the war: the south seceded based on a perception that their economic well-being, namely slavery, was under threat. The Union as a population was of a mixed mind about slavery, but most did not want to push the issue. Indeed, the backlash and negative repurcussions of taking the fringe abolitionist stance of declaring the Emancipation Proclamation was not even viable for Lincoln until such point as the progress of the war had put the Union into a state of desperation in its efforts to force the CSA to rejoin the Union.

In short, the Union was not really at any time "fighting to free the slaves," it was fighting to keep the Union intact. Freeing the slaves became a means to this ends partway through the war.

The CSA was also not ever "fighting to free the slaves;" indeed, it seceded as a way to avoid the Union's ongoing pressure to constrain, reduce, and phase out slavery, or if you will, the Unions continued efforts to thwart southern States rights to define slavery as they chose.

You also mention that several brigades of African Americans fought for the CSA. My only questions here: was there a CSA equivalent of an "Emancipation Proclamation?" Did the CSA decide part way through the war to decree that all slaves were free? Were these African brigades even free? If they were granted or promised freedom, was it in some way contingent on their service as soldiers, and/or the victory of the CSA? Would their freedom won through fighting for the CSA have necessarily insured eventual freedom for any of their immediate or distant kin?

Lets not get bogged down in these "well the Union was almost just as bad . . ." arguments. There were abolitionist ELEMENTS in the Union at wars start; such elements were virtually unheard in the South: to speak open abolitionist rhetoric in one of the Southern states in 1860 would very likely have resulted in harassment if not violence.

MOST people in the Union and CSA were racist, and indeed most were either ambivalent about slavery and its unethicality or else they thought it was perfectly right. Your point about asking Union soldiers from ALL OVER the northern states about whether they were fighting to free the slaves is apt: there would have been a variety of responses.

There would have been a DISTRIBUTION of responses among Union soldiers at any time between 1860 and 1866

Some would have said:
(1) No! No way, those N!%%@(s should be free! They're sub-human!
(2) Some would have said, well I suppose it would be for the best if slavery were ended forever.
(3) Some would have expressed zealous abolitionism

Whatever the actual distributions of these attitudes among Union soldiers, Union citizens, and Union citizens in 1860 through 1866 might have been, the key point here is not that "there were racist slavery supporters in the north." The key point is that the distributions of attitudes we logically would expect in the Union states would be sufficiently dissimilar from those we would expect in the CSA states taht we would not attribute them as being "the same."

The distribution of responses to this same question would not look the same if we queried a sample of CSA foot soldiers, citizens and leaders in 1860 or even 1866.

If a sample of Union soldiers had rendered distributions of
(1) 55% "Pro-slavery"
(2) 25% "Ambivalent"
(3) 20% "Abolitionist"

A sample of CSA solders almost certainly would have rendered a distribution of
(1) 75% "Pro-slavery"
(2) 24% "Ambivalent"
(3) 1% "Abolitionist"

Indeed, I'm sure there were quite a few CSA foot soldiers (e.g., the couple tens of thousands of African troops you mention) who would have fit into the 1% of those who would have argued that slavery should end, and they were not fighting to preserve it.

I would also not doubt one bit that a fairly large proportion (the 24% I hypothesis in the above paragraph) would have expressed ambivalent opposition. But the largest fraction of men who took up arms for the CSA (as well as the largest fraction of loyal citizens of the CSA and her leaders) whether they were plantation owners or not (which virtually ZERO non-comms or enlisted in the CSA military would have been) would logically have expressed a pro-slavery attitude. We can be confident in such general speculations about such distributions through a careful read of letters, newspaper and other publications, etc.

As Randomizer has pointed out, Slavery was an INTEGRAL part of Southern SOCIETY at the time. Even those working-class Southern whites for whom slavery actually worked at cross-purposes to their success as a laborer would have generally felt a strong natal loyalty to the institution because it was so enmeshed in the culture of the time.

Now, I've said a lot here that may well have riled up some of you guys, and I most definitely do not want to turn this into a flamefest. We've all been quite civil so far. Some of you guys with Southern backgrounds have been very respectful, polite, and generously honest. I have nothing but respect for you in this regard, and I'm not trying to make you feel bad or insult. I am just trying to reciprocate your generous honesty. I honestly find the CSA to be repugnant--not the individual foot soldiers, nor necessarily even the officers or Chiefs of Staff--but the cause for which these men fought, whether knowingly or in delusion.

As justifiably proud as you may feel of your Southern roots, and as erroneously proud as you feel for the CSA-disembodied from its fundamental identity as an Apartheid State fighting for its privilege to perpetuate, and indeed expand slavery---those of us who do not have such lineal links, and who cannot avert our gaze from the horror of American slavery pre-1864 have an equally, if not greater negative response to the CSA and the institution it would have enshrined had it not been defeated.

< Message edited by Anthropoid -- 8/29/2008 2:06:28 PM >


_____________________________

The x-ray is her siren song. My ship cannot resist her long. Nearer to my deadly goal. Until the black hole. Gains control...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkIIlkyZ328&feature=autoplay&list=AL94UKMTqg-9CocLGbd6tpbuQRxyF4FGNr&playnext=3

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Post #: 44
RE: Was the south right? - 8/29/2008 4:23:52 PM   
Randomizer


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I need to clairfy that I am by no means lumping the Confederacy into an indictment on the South in general or specifics, my closing statement should have specified the Confederate cause but will remain as written since I concur with Anthropoid's qualifier above.  Using Confederacy interchangably with Southern is less than precise and all my references to the latter should be taken to mean only the short-lived Confederate States of America.

Also there is no intention to denigrate the efforts or beliefs of the contemporary Confederate soldier.  Fighting for a bad cause is as old as warfare itself and attaches no negative stigma to the soldier doing his duty as expected in his society and era.

I have to echo Anthropoid's feelings towards the Confederacy and its soldiers but without his eloquence.

Best Regards

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Post #: 45
RE: Was the south right? - 8/29/2008 7:33:10 PM   
Mad Russian


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Randomizer:

What seems to be getting lost in the shuffle is that victory for the Confederate States meant continuation of slavery in America. Full Stop.

Edited slightly for clairity


It is not full stop.

You seem to want this to be only about slavery. That all other associated issues of the time were insignificant.

While there is not a single person that has made comments in this thread that has defended slavery there are several that put forth the idea that the war was not "soley" about slavery.

Slavery was an ingrained institution and the slave holders always put a spin on things being aimed at them, whether it was or not, but the bottom line cause for the war was that Southern states weren't going to accept anything being forced on them by the federal government.

Period.

No matter what it was. Whether it was abolishment of slavery, more taxes, the building of naval shipyards in Memphis........no matter what it was.

A good way to look at this issue is to take slavery completely out of the equation.

How do you feel about the war if slavery isn't the defining issue for you personally?

That's the way almost the entire population of the south looked at it. They weren't worried about slavery or no slavery...they weren't going to be told what to do.

So, if for you personally, the south broke away without slavery as the issue, would you have thought them legally credible for doing so? That's the question here.

Not if slavery was abhorent. Not that slavery needed to be abolished. That a state had no right to do other than what the federal government told them to do. That they had no rights other than what the federal government granted them to have.

That was the issue. All the way down to the bone.

Good Hunting.

MR

< Message edited by Mad Russian -- 8/29/2008 7:34:15 PM >

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Post #: 46
RE: Was the south right? - 8/29/2008 7:53:30 PM   
GShock


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quote:

That a state had no right to do other than what the federal government told them to do. That they had no rights other than what the federal government granted them to have.


And this my dear friends is the sole reason why the civil war was fought.

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Post #: 47
RE: Was the south right? - 8/29/2008 8:09:14 PM   
Anthropoid


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Irrespective of slavery, separatism is not the way to go. Look at how Quebec's moods have plagued Canada. As I've said a couple times already: any sovereign that is okay with the idea that sub-elements can get out of the organization at any time shall not last long on the world stage.

IMHO, even without slavery, there was no reason for the secession. There were many more avenues for reconciliation and compromise.

The war was motivated by the unscrupulous and avaricious motives of a few powerful elites in the south who managed to harness the common Southern citizen's spirit and pride for its purposes. Disdain for the north had been a growing social theme which various editors, property owners, politicians, lawyers, and similarly influential powerful citizens in the south had been inculcating in the minds of the peasants and small middle class for decades leading up to the war. That is why there is a lingering sense of resentment and indignation.

_____________________________

The x-ray is her siren song. My ship cannot resist her long. Nearer to my deadly goal. Until the black hole. Gains control...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkIIlkyZ328&feature=autoplay&list=AL94UKMTqg-9CocLGbd6tpbuQRxyF4FGNr&playnext=3

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Post #: 48
RE: Was the south right? - 8/29/2008 9:17:10 PM   
Randomizer


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Mad Russian

quote:

ORIGINAL: Randomizer:

What seems to be getting lost in the shuffle is that victory for the Confederate States meant continuation of slavery in America. Full Stop.

Edited slightly for clairity


It is not full stop.

You seem to want this to be only about slavery. That all other associated issues of the time were insignificant.

While there is not a single person that has made comments in this thread that has defended slavery there are several that put forth the idea that the war was not "soley" about slavery.

Slavery was an ingrained institution and the slave holders always put a spin on things being aimed at them, whether it was or not, but the bottom line cause for the war was that Southern states weren't going to accept anything being forced on them by the federal government.

Period.

No matter what it was. Whether it was abolishment of slavery, more taxes, the building of naval shipyards in Memphis........no matter what it was.

A good way to look at this issue is to take slavery completely out of the equation.

How do you feel about the war if slavery isn't the defining issue for you personally?

That's the way almost the entire population of the south looked at it. They weren't worried about slavery or no slavery...they weren't going to be told what to do.

So, if for you personally, the south broke away without slavery as the issue, would you have thought them legally credible for doing so? That's the question here.

Not if slavery was abhorent. Not that slavery needed to be abolished. That a state had no right to do other than what the federal government told them to do. That they had no rights other than what the federal government granted them to have.

That was the issue. All the way down to the bone.

Good Hunting.

MR


Actually I have avoided insisting that slavery was the cause, solely or in combination with other factors. Rather my contention is and always has been that the continuation of slavery was a logical consequence of a Confederate victory.

Historical cause and effect at work, the causes are really irrelevant, the effect would have been that slavery would survive.

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Post #: 49
RE: Was the south right? - 8/29/2008 10:22:52 PM   
marcbarker


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What would have happened a scant 75 years prior to the CW....Separatists said that we need to be our own country, screw that type of government that wants to tells us everything to do...we need to cecede from the the Union (Jack).....The US would not be here...we are by nature revolutionaries by heart and soul, we are a people that strive for independance at all cost, we are the Nation that overpowered another and won our freedom. When you look at that from the English Standpoint we are a nation of rebels, Look at Austrailia, a land comprised of men that were once prsioner of the English Realm and now are staunch allies to another rebelious nation...The US.

Now Flash forward
an invading army starts to go through your home state...woul you not defend her regardless of the color of the uniform? I would defend my homestead in this order:
My Fmaily
My Home
My neighbors and freinds
My State
My Nation

Tell me that you would not do that regardless of what political aspects were legal or not. A bullet shows no mercy for the law no political opinion.

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Post #: 50
RE: Was the south right? - 8/30/2008 4:25:13 AM   
Mad Russian


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Randomizer

Actually I have avoided insisting that slavery was the cause, solely or in combination with other factors. Rather my contention is and always has been that the continuation of slavery was a logical consequence of a Confederate victory.


You have avoided saying it directly but your posts only make that one single point of contention between the North and South.

Yes of course slavery was the logical consequence of a Confederate Victory. So were absolute states rights, the guarantee of European support...etc...etc...etc....

Nobody is denying if the Confederacy had won the states rights issue by force of arms that they would keep firmly in place the very issue that brought the whole thing to a head.


quote:


Historical cause and effect at work, the causes are really irrelevant, the effect would have been that slavery would survive.



I fully agree with you here. Well almost, you have it backwards. The cause was what was irrelevant. The effect would have been that Confederate states would have done whatever they wanted as a state. If that was to support slavery fine they would. If it was to abolish slavery that was fine too.

Have you ever considered that if a southern state had not wanted slaves but had still supported the rest of the CSA they would not have been attacked? That very thing did happen in the Union. There were several slave states in the Union. They weren't attacked.

You say your position isn't only about slavery but that's the only point you ever bring up. Hard to see your other "non-slavery" points when you don't make them.

Good Hunting.

MR

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Post #: 51
RE: Was the south right? - 8/30/2008 4:25:46 AM   
Mad Russian


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I think this is the point where I just agree to disagree and move on.

Good Hunting.

MR

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Post #: 52
RE: Was the south right? - 8/31/2008 2:15:26 AM   
Anthropoid


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No! I disagree to disagree!

And "States" don't have rights. Animals, plants, butterflies, people, they have rights, but states don't got no rights. All kneel to the power uhv the Federales!

. . .I want to send my condolences out to my dear oppressed brethren in the South. I know from my years in Atlanta just how rough it is to live a life as chattel with all your States Rights deprived of you by the wicked Federal powers  . . .

. . . . but seriously, the Thirteen Colonies were part of an Empire, the British Empire. The CSA pre-1861 was part of a family, a family called the United States. Breaking up a family and breaking away from an Imperial boss are not equivalent.

_____________________________

The x-ray is her siren song. My ship cannot resist her long. Nearer to my deadly goal. Until the black hole. Gains control...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkIIlkyZ328&feature=autoplay&list=AL94UKMTqg-9CocLGbd6tpbuQRxyF4FGNr&playnext=3

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Post #: 53
RE: Was the south right? - 8/31/2008 2:58:31 AM   
marcbarker


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Robert Shapiro where are you when we need a good litigation attorney....yeah just think , yeah thats right levy a law suit against the government.....if it was the IRS you can't do that , that is against the law....hmmmm...let me think..........dang...in some thinking the united states is an empire true? a democratic empire? No I forgot we are the Republic of the Untied States with the facade of a democracy...Yes we have rights to speech, religion, the right to bare arms, the right to go against a government that by its own deeds is tyrannical under the guise of a protectorate...lets think Homeland security....aren't they doing what Nixon resigned for....Did you know there is more bigotry and racism in the North then Down Here in the deep south......we are more sensitive here then anywhere else in this great nation to racial diversity....I understand the pros and the cons of the slavery issue from the times of old, through the letters, and and family accounts of the era. My Greant Grandfather grew up very rural alabama, my grnadfather and father as well...there was a huge divide for years but you know what....it still exists on both sides because of misconceptions and assumptions of what the CW was about.

I abhore slavery and all the context it enatailed but I am proud of my souther heritage, deep southern culture. I still say Yes ma'am, Good Morning to strangers, idle chit chat to the cashier at the piggly wiggly. You try that in Ohio, Indiana and that area and people look as though that you have the plague. I am proud of the southern drawl I have, the slowness of time when fishing at the beach, the quiet night with tree frogs sounding in the night air. This is the South, This is a way of life, this is our heritage, NOT SLAVERY.....The issues of the CW in my opinion has been and will always be that the State has the right to question the Federal Government of illeagle taxes, tariffs and laws....Staes Rights are guranteed in the Constitution and no matter how you slice it that is what came out of the CW, Slavery Abolished, Guaranteed States Rights, More Freedoms then what htey in that era ever dreamed about.

Make no mistake this is a great country, like the pheonix, it died and burst into flames and was reborn into something beautiful and great The New South, The New North and God Bless this United States!

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Post #: 54
RE: Was the south right? - 8/31/2008 3:46:15 AM   
terje439


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If we look at the Declaration of Independence, it can be claimed that the SOuth was wrong on the slavery issue, but it CAN be argued that they had atleast some right to leave the Union.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.

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Post #: 55
RE: Was the south right? - 8/31/2008 4:00:13 AM   
Anthropoid


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Well, we're one big happy family again (more or less) and that is the main thing.

. . . well now that I've made it abundantly clear that I'm really NOT a Confederate apologists (as one of my racist African American colleagues accused me in front of a room full of people at a conference back in the spring! Must've been the accent? Or could it be that I said "the north and south are at peace" and he detests the idea of us "white people" getting along again?), despite my love of Dixie and deep fascination for the South and Confederacy . . . . I guess I can get on with my slightly over-the-top "in-character" AAR as Jefferson Davis.

_____________________________

The x-ray is her siren song. My ship cannot resist her long. Nearer to my deadly goal. Until the black hole. Gains control...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkIIlkyZ328&feature=autoplay&list=AL94UKMTqg-9CocLGbd6tpbuQRxyF4FGNr&playnext=3

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Post #: 56
RE: Was the south right? - 8/31/2008 5:44:55 PM   
dolphinsfan9910

 

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I always wonder how long slavery would have lasted if the war had not been fought. Before the outbreak of hostilities, Lincoln was promising the South slavery would be left alone if they remained with the Union.

Was the Confederacy wrong??? Slavery is wrong, North or South, Union or Confederate. I can't imagine it could have lasted to much longer than it did, North or South. The world would not have tolerated it. The last country to abolish it was Brazil, in the 1880's.

The issue of States rights goes back to the founding fathers of the USA. Thomas Jefferson was a champion of States Rights, and yes I know he was from Virginia and a slave holder. South Carolina and several New England states tossed around the idea of Session in 1828 due to a tarriff enacted by congress. Read about it, the Nullification Crisis. Andrew Jackson rulled states did not have a right to leave the Union.

We as Americans seem top forget that in fact slavery did exist in the United States. Some people cringe when they see a portrait of a Confederate General or other Confederate soldier. Why don't they cringe when they see Washington's or Jefferson's pictures. A picture of these two can be fond in every school. The Stars and Bars and Stars and Stripes are both guilty. We just live in the USA and can't be to honest with ourselves about it.



Just a side note, nothing to do with the argument
Would war have been avoided if S. Carolina hadn't done what they did? Probably not, Florida would have neem the next contest over the Fort in Pensecola. I think South Carolina was insane to have fired upon Fort Sumpter. That's like a Chihuahua kicking a Great Dane in the balls. The runt of the seceeded states starts a fight with a giant.


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Post #: 57
RE: Was the south right? - 8/31/2008 5:54:59 PM   
marcbarker


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At the time you could have used the same analogy with the German Invasion of Europe....War is war , the reasons are different but the outcomes are the same, winner and loser. Society of the winning side dictates to those that were vaquished to the obigatory you were wrong see....we won. The Civil War was the Great American Tragedy bar none. How many of us on here can say that we did have family on both sides of the fence that fought each other in battle. Think of the Russian Civil War...Monarchy indifference drove the communists to power and led to the overthrow...the people had enough....you can say that about here as well...this great experiment was never designed to last as long as it did. Like with any Great Empire or Republic it is fated to end at some time by another's hand whether from the inside or another nation.

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Post #: 58
RE: Was the south right? - 8/31/2008 6:50:13 PM   
Anthropoid


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quote:

Some people cringe when they see a portrait of a Confederate General or other Confederate soldier. Why don't they cringe when they see Washington's or Jefferson's pictures. A picture of these two can be fond in every school. The Stars and Bars and Stars and Stripes are both guilty. We just live in the USA and can't be to honest with ourselves about it


This is so totally true. The U.S. has been guilty of many crimes against minorities and "subject peoples" over the centuries. There is no need to portray the CSA as the arch-villain of evil and the Union as the perfectly just paladin of pure good.

Much of social order in many societies at that time were "wrong." The CSA just took it a step further, not by being ambivalent to longstanding inequities and injustices and passively ignoring the growing social calls for change and reform, but by actively seceding and provoking a war to fight to entrench some of these longstanding inequities and injustices.

Certainly those who are complicit with wrong are not right, but those who fight to preserve wrong as a way of life are also not less wrong. In sum, the whole thing is a matter of relative degrees of rightness and wrongness, as it almost always is; including whenever a "truly unjust" war is provoked by an aggressor like Japan on the U.S. or Germany on Poland, or even when a totally legitimate system of transparent and legisltatively regulated judicial due process sentences a person to life in prison or to execution.

In an ideal world, you wouldn't have to imprison people to prevent them from committing additional crimes and to deter additional crime. You also would not have to place oil/scrap iron embargos on up-coming Imperial regimes who feel they are just emulating your long history of colonial expansion based on a racist notion of Manifest Destiny, or a National Socialist movement that has inspired a people fraught with a vindictive sense of resentment about being blamed for a previous World War . . . One can readily argue that the U.S. acting through the medum of FDR was "not right" and even that they were "indeed wrong" to be so hypocritical as to have embargoed Japan's oil and scrap iron and thus back them into the corner where the inevitable outcome was that Japan either had to declare war to take the Southern Resource Area else acquiesce to the League of Nations demands and get out of China. One can make such arguments but in my opinion they are either deluded about the merits of _relatively less unjust_ and/or relatively more democratic regimes when compared to less democratic ones, else such arguments are just nationalism.

In the case of the South, one cannot argue that there was not popular backing of the CSA, and thus the idea of it being "relatively less democratic" is not applicable. But CSA victory would probably have prolonged slavery for longer even than it would have taken to phase it out had the war never been fought. Slavery was an economic institution which the CSA enshrined in its constitution, and slavery was unjust. The Union was IMHO, relatively less unjust in having overall a more reformational tone about slavery (even in 1860) and also in not allowing itself to be disarticulated into warring factions for the interest of some special interests within the Union, i.e., wealthy an influential elites in some southern states.

quote:

Chihuahua kicking a Great Dane in the balls


Delightfully humorous image . . . But dont'cha think he'd _BITE_ instead of "kick?!"


< Message edited by Anthropoid -- 8/31/2008 6:54:30 PM >


_____________________________

The x-ray is her siren song. My ship cannot resist her long. Nearer to my deadly goal. Until the black hole. Gains control...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkIIlkyZ328&feature=autoplay&list=AL94UKMTqg-9CocLGbd6tpbuQRxyF4FGNr&playnext=3

(in reply to marcbarker)
Post #: 59
RE: Was the south right? - 8/31/2008 11:11:57 PM   
Mad Russian


Posts: 13256
Joined: 3/16/2008
From: Texas
Status: offline
All together this was/is a great discussion. All sides and posts taken into account. You see how divided we are about the very subject of slavery today some 149 years later. The actual event can only have been so much more intense and disruptive.

While we are polarized into camps of slavery and states rights issues we were at least calm and reasoning with each other. To the point of backing away when the points were getting set in stone.

There are many quotes in FoF that show how most of the men that fought the war seem to have had the same attitude that we do. There are issues but let's discuss them. I've not, nor have I seen anyone else, declare war on another in this thread. Yet there were those that would not bend and to into our history books our nation marched to war with itself.

From that fire and those lives lost we have become the great nation we are today. Everything that's gone before us has helped to shape who we are now. While we can be arrogant, loud and condescending we can also be humble, quiet and uplifting. I've been in 9 countries outside this nations borders and I always come back. No matter that the US is not the best country on earth, it's way ahead of whoever is in second.

A friend and I have had this discussion about just what an American is. We are the same type people from all countries and societies from around the world. Those people that want to gain by their own merit. That won't stand for being pushed around and TOLD WHAT TO DO. That want justice and equality for all social levels. Do we have all that? Not always but what do have is the will to work towards that goal.

The American Civil War was an almost inevitable result of our fixing our own issues. It is always hoped that can be done without loss of life. Most of the time it can't. It rarely goes to the extent of civil war but most countries have at least one of them in their history. I'm proud that our country stood up for what was right and kept the country together at the same time. It would have been easy for them so say fine. Just form the CSA and we'll see you later.

These kinds of discussions are great. It's the very fact that we can all take different sides and still have a calm discussion at the end that makes each sides points get recognition and makes the other side at least think about it.

That's what the study of history is for me. Thinking about how it all went and the effects it had on those peoples lives and those that have come afterwards.

Good Hunting.

MR

(in reply to Anthropoid)
Post #: 60
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