1/30/2007 10:47:44 AM
^^This is very true. Winners do get to tell there side of history. The Civil War was not just about slavery. In fact if you want to know who should get credit along side of Lincoln then its Harriet Beecher Stowe. Lincoln said to Stowe when he first met her "So this is the little lady who made this big war." Her novel Uncle Tom's Cabin help light the fire of slavery as a issue so that the north could gain support to fight the South. The north had to do alot of work to win the war because in convetional war without assistance the north would have lost if it hadn't gained some support in the south.
1/30/2007 11:17:07 AM
Off the top of my head, I can't think of any wars that started for just one or even a couple of reasons. Massive undertakings like those come out of a complex set of circumstances.So yes, tariffs and other issues were at play, probably more largely than they get credit for the education system; and no, we didn't fight it for the purpose of ending slavery. But to deny that it was a major reason for the conflict is just intellectually dishonest.
1/30/2007 12:50:18 PM
What we can be sure of is that it certainly wasn't about a state's right to leave the union.
1/30/2007 12:58:56 PM
1/30/2007 1:16:26 PM
1/30/2007 1:17:59 PM
in short, the south hated america. god damn terrorists.
1/30/2007 1:18:01 PM
1/30/2007 1:27:02 PM
with or without the war, slavery was going to end no mater what...it was not economically viable anymore thats what I am saying, fighting over just slavery was pointlessok, black slave labor was over in the south for agricultural purposesstill didn't stop the rich people from using the irish or chinese[Edited on January 30, 2007 at 1:27 PM. Reason : better??][Edited on January 30, 2007 at 1:28 PM. Reason : .]
1/30/2007 1:27:12 PM
1/30/2007 1:28:46 PM
wasn't exactly freeI guess the "ownership" part slipped your mindor do you think that slaves just appeared on your farm and started working without food, clothing, shelter, water, guards etcjesus christ I feel stupid for having to explain that to someone
1/30/2007 1:31:43 PM
^^The Southern economy was depressed by tariffs that heavily protected Northern industry over Southern agriculture. I can only assume that is what he was getting at.
1/30/2007 1:41:44 PM
slaves were thrown into the copper mines of Utah, etc. slavery was not dying.
1/30/2007 1:43:00 PM
In some ways, the current situation in Iraq has some parallels from which we can gain perspective. Within the "power class", if I can use that term, a stabilized and American controlled Iraq no doubt would be a boon to Bush's oil buddies and Cheney's Halliburton friends. For these reasons they drummed up a national need for war. Wrapped in the cloak of fighting the terrorist threat (slavery) and sheer patriotism (unionism), and in many ways a crusader mentality, they spun public opinion in favor of invading a foreign country that, while they disagreed with them, may or may not have posed a threat to their safety all things considered. On the opposite side, Islamic fundamentalists (secesh fire-eaters) drummed up a sensationalism that the Yankees (Yankees) were here to rape all the women and burn all their houses. People flocked to the anti-American cause for various reasons such as Arab pride, independence and dignity, Islamic fundamentalism, or sheer profit. In many ways both Arabs and Southerner's saw their culture (in all its good and bad) being steamrolled by an uninvited foreign ideology.Needless to say, my intent isn't to turn this into an Iraq debate nor to draw moral parallels between Arabs and Rebs, but it should be obvious that the motivations for war vary greatly from those who stand to gain the most (the power class) and those who stand to lose the most (Johnny Reb - or Joe Arab).
1/30/2007 1:49:00 PM
1/30/2007 2:43:40 PM
1/30/2007 3:38:07 PM
Whatever. There's no way wages could drop below the cost of owning slaves. They were fed at a sustenance level, and the only extra capital required was some shacks and a whip.
1/30/2007 3:55:24 PM
^^Good points. Along those lines, the Northern industrial economy of the era relied heavily on what was for all practical purposes an unlimited supply of low-skilled labor. Labor conditions were deplorable, because the growing population in Northeastern cities (largely due to immigration) meant that if an employee became maimed, broken down, or otherwise unproductive, there were always multiple people to take their place at little cost. Since labor involved no capital investment, there was little incentive to improve the working conditions or longevity of employees.^You missed the point. The slaves were the capital.[Edited on January 30, 2007 at 4:02 PM. Reason : .]
1/30/2007 3:58:21 PM
1/30/2007 4:41:31 PM
The question of slavery is not really relevant to the fact that the North was wrong. You may hold the South in complete contempt and, though I disagree, you can think whatever you want.The issue is whether the Union is voluntary.If Lincoln really believed in government of the people, by the people, and for the people, he would not invade and subdue a people that wished only for peace and self-government. The South did not want a war. The North forced it on them. We can debate whether the secession was warranted or justifiable by the south. That's all fine and good. But that's not the point. The point is what nation are we? The Forcedly United States of America...or the Voluntarily United States of America. Hate the South's cause all you like, but that does not justify invasion and occupation.A question settled by force is a question unsettled forever.
1/30/2007 4:53:45 PM
I just wanted everyone to know that North Carolina was the last state to join the confederacy, but it gave the most men, resources, and money to the war effort.This is one of the many facts that illustrates why North Carolina is the greatest state in the USA.[Edited on January 30, 2007 at 5:49 PM. Reason : ]
1/30/2007 5:47:55 PM
^ Bridget, does the fact that NC was the southern state who gave the most amount of Union Soldiers to fight the Confederacy fit into your picture of NC=GreatestState ?
1/30/2007 6:31:38 PM
1/30/2007 7:05:38 PM
1/30/2007 7:08:35 PM
1/30/2007 7:29:45 PM
1/30/2007 7:57:59 PM
you don't get itmaybe if you had a clue about something other than communism you would but you don'tsometimes things come along and replace other thingskinda like how the assembly line is now mostly automated as opposed to 30 years ago
1/30/2007 8:10:50 PM
hahayou don't even understand what side of this arguement I've takenhow cute.
1/30/2007 8:22:03 PM
I'm not that concerned with your positionyou imply however, that it was somehow economically sound to continue with slaveryand you're wrong[Edited on January 30, 2007 at 8:26 PM. Reason : are you gonna be e-cool and "pwn" me, because thats all the rage now]
1/30/2007 8:24:55 PM
More than 125,000 men from North Carolina served in the Confederate Army. The state also had as many as 15,000 black and white troops in Federal (Union) regiments.http://www.classbrain.com/artstate/publish/printer_NC_civil_war_facts.shtmlNC didn't supply as many troops to the Union army as it did for the southern army. most of the troops that fought for the union were from northern counties of the state.North Carolina was a confederate state mainly because the north forced the issue. Just like The north sent troops to Maryland to prevent it from succeding too.
1/30/2007 8:32:41 PM
I didn't say they supplied more Union troops than Confederate troops; I said that they supplied more Union troops than any other Confederate state
1/30/2007 8:40:07 PM
1/30/2007 8:47:45 PM
1/30/2007 9:05:48 PM
lol the rampant silliness in this thread really makes me concerned about our public school system :x
1/30/2007 9:14:27 PM
^.
1/30/2007 9:15:13 PM
1/30/2007 10:15:06 PM
1/30/2007 10:46:16 PM
1/30/2007 11:25:27 PM
1/30/2007 11:40:16 PM
1/31/2007 1:17:34 AM
1/31/2007 3:29:48 AM
1/31/2007 4:27:23 AM
Slavery would have ended, war or no war. It might have taken a few years longer, but it still would have ended. Can anyone at least concede to that?
1/31/2007 8:41:23 AM
i'll secede to that
1/31/2007 9:04:40 AM
jason and kriswhy do you guys not get it?the slave trade was overslaves were becoming prohibitively expensiveyou had to feed, shelter, dress, provide some type of care (because you don't want your slaves to die)and guard them to keep them from leavingnot to mention it's hard to get work done when someone really is only going to do the bare minimum to stay alivecombine that with the fact that agriculture was about to experience a major technological revolution and slavery was dyingour country has some really shitty history in it's past, some of our ancestors treated people horribly, but the civil war was not fought just over slavery... you can have revisionist PC liberal feel good history all you want, but slavery was dying in the south(and lincoln knew that also) and that was not the reason for the war
1/31/2007 9:22:30 AM
1/31/2007 10:25:34 AM
1/31/2007 10:36:31 AM
no it wouldnt .
1/31/2007 10:41:25 AM
Alexander Stephens quotes are more or less useless as an "official" viewpoint of the Confederacy. He was a fringe political figure at odds with Jefferson Davis on many if not most issues, although he did have a significant amount of support among deep south governors.
1/31/2007 10:42:54 AM
what innovation is he talking about then?
1/31/2007 10:46:31 AM