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So did Mr. Lincoln do so openly. Do you deny that?Originally posted by Tanker:
The leaders of the Confederacy openly proclaimed that their new government was based on slavery and their theory that blacks were inferior. Do you deny that?
For anyone who cares to be bothered with historical facts, there is a timeline on the first page of this thread. One fact that may not have been clearly stated is that the United States of America was a slaveholding nation until 8 or 9 months after General Lee's surrender to General Grant at Appomattox. Only after the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment did the United States cease to be a slaveholding nation. It is also an interesting fact that two states that had seceded (AR & LA) adopted anti-slavery constitutions (though admittedly through the influence of pro-Union voters) before any of the remaining slaveholding states of the Union and before the federal government of that Union adopted amendments against slavery.Originally posted by KenH:
As any historical timeline shows the war had been waging a long time before Mr. Lincoln even tried to free the slaves through the Emancipation Proclamation...
FINALLY!!! Some middle ground. I am sure willing to admit that the so-called "straw that broke the camels back" leading to the war was the issue of slavery. BUT, through the 1840's and '50's, the U.S. was increasingly changing from an agricultural country to an industrial country. The southern folk felt as if they were being left behind and didn't want for the rest of the country to be ahead in the industrial "race". To hang on to the agricultural side of America was the highest priority for southern farmers.The war came indirectly because of slavery, because the south did not like the hostile attitude of Lincoln and other Republicans towards slavery.
An' you suh, are nothing more than a black-hearted yankee sympathizer with no grasp of decorum or history. I'll not stand for my grandfathers' honor to be so maligned.Originally posted by Gunther:
The south was nothing more than a ragtag group of terrorists who died in a meaningless way, to promote stupidity.
Do you not listen? Do you not read? There were plenty of Southerners who were not enamored with slavery and were working to end it and who would have readily voted to end it.Originally posted by Tanker:
I think it is fine to give credit for the courage of the many southern soldiers. I have a collection of music from both the northern and confederate armies. But I really am puzzled by how intelligent people in this age, can provide ideological support for the southern rebellion, particularly when in doing so, they automatically approve of slavery, which was the only significant reason for the existence of the rebellion in the first place. Do you disagree? Then you must not have read the comments of the main participants in the struggle, from both north and south. Most of the southern leaders made no pretense of having any other reason for leaving the union, other than their support of slavery. I grant that there were many courageous and intelligent, and upright people fighting for the south. Some of my own ancestors were among them. But the basis for the southern rebellion was slavery with all its moral corruption. It is remarkable that some, more than a few, religious people, still sympathize with such a corrupt and tyrannical system.
An' you suh, are nothing more than a black-hearted yankee sympathizer with no grasp of decorum or history. I'll not stand for my grandfathers' honor to be so maligned.Originally posted by Hardsheller:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Gunther:
The south was nothing more than a ragtag group of terrorists who died in a meaningless way, to promote stupidity.
That's kind of a stupid statement, actually. Not only does it equivocate Jesus with the South, but it also says that you are unwilling to see what Truth may be and make the correct changes.Originally posted by Hardsheller:
I can no more divorce myself from my Southern upbringing and my Southern Roots than I can divorce myself from my SAVIOR. [/QB]
That's kind of a stupid statement, actually. Not only does it equivocate Jesus with the South, but it also says that you are unwilling to see what Truth may be and make the correct changes.Originally posted by ScottEmerson:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Hardsheller:
I can no more divorce myself from my Southern upbringing and my Southern Roots than I can divorce myself from my SAVIOR.
But I will. I state unequivocally that I wish the CSA was still in existence today. Slavery would have been done away with long, long ago. In fact, the CSA Constitution outlawed the importation of any more slaves and the first veto that President Davis exercised was on a bill that he felt violated the spirit of that prohibition.Originally posted by Hardsheller:
I have never said that I wish the South had won the war.
The war was almost over by then. That's historical revisionism by Mr. Lincoln.Originally posted by Tanker:
&I am posting here the text of his second inaugural address, in which Lincoln states that "These slaves constituted a peculiar and powerful interest. All knew that this interest was, somehow, the cause of the war."
The Bible Belt is in the South, not in Yankeeland. 'nuff said.Originally posted by ScottEmerson:
If you were ashamed of your southern roots and upbringing, then more than likely, you would be able to separate yourselves from them.
It's still a stupid statement. You're equivocating your Southern roots with Christ. That's kinda silly, don't you think?Originally posted by Hardsheller:
Scott, Thanks for your encouraging remark about my statement. For it to be labeled a "stupid statement" by you means that I have successfully positioned myself directly opposite of your position which I am more than proud and relieved to do on most subjects.
You had nothing to do with it, but the legacy left behind by your ancestors sure did. Being proud of their actions is the same as endorsing what they stood for.I bear no shame for my Southern Roots and Upbringing. Why should I? Should I be ashamed for something I had absolutely nothing to do with?
But, you did say that you are proud of your Southern heritage - and your ancestors did believe all of those things.I have never said that I approved of slavery.
I have never said that slavery was morally acceptable.
I have never said that I wish the South had won the war.
I'm not denying your honesty. You, like many others on this board, really feel that Southern pride running through you. However, to equivocate that with the sacrifice made by Christ on the cross is demeaning to Jesus, IMO.What I have said is that I am a Southerner and cannot imagine myself ever wearing Yankee Blue and fighting against my southern brothers.
That's not being stupid - That's being honest.
So now you are likening Jefferson Davis to Adolf Hitler and the CSA to Nazi Germany. You are completely mad.Originally posted by ScottEmerson:
Say I was related to Hitler and several other Nazi military leaders. What if I said that I was proud of my German heritage? People would look at me as if I was completely mad.