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Old 01-09-2005, 09:38 AM   #81 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by scout
To take a very dark time in the history of the United States and in a time when most white people, Yankees included, despised and thought black people was a bit less than human and "boil it down" to a war 99% about slavery is a bit shallow wouldn't you agree? Especially since, as someone stated earlier, slavery was on it's way out anyway. Surely a war in such a time as this, one that pitted brother against brother, would be about about something a little more important to the people of that time. As it stated earlier, most Confederate soldiers of that time did not own slaves. In fact very very few Southerners of that time owned slaves. Only the wealthiest could afford them. In fact, most Southerners at that time were either small landowners that farmed the land themselves or were sharecroppers. Sharecroppers, in case you aren't familiar with the term, is but a tiny step above being a slave. Only a few minor but important differences separated the lives of the sharecroppers and that of the slaves. So to suggest that a few hundred thousand of what was considered white trash by the slave owners went out and died to preserve the lifestyle of a few thousand rich white slave owners is pretty preposterous wouldn't you agree?
Or to suggest that Northern soldiers were fighting over slavery, when they went home and made laws specifying that former slaves couldn't settle permanently in their states.

I'd also like to see an explanation for the 65,000-90,000 slaves who fought for the Confederacy.
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Old 01-09-2005, 10:18 AM   #82 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jb2000
That was my initial thought, that you just return the money and be done with it. However, it is bound to be a VERY sizeable amount and possibly in excess of the current value of the building. At that point they may as well demolish the dorm and build a new one that they can name whatever they want. Also, the argument could be made that if it is the name that the Daughters find so valuable, not the contribution to the institution and the betterment of the school, then they have gotten 75 years of value out of it already. That's a pretty good lifespan, so it could be said that some pro-rating of the amount would have to account for this.
Josh
Yeah I'm sure some adjustmants could be made. I know that nowadays some companies give money to sports franchises and cities in order to get stadiums named after themselves. When I was in Seattle Safeco bought the rights to name the Mariners stadium Safeco Field. They didn't build the structure like the DOC just gave them $10M or so as I recall. I wonder how much they would give Safeco back if they wanted to rename it?
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Old 01-09-2005, 10:28 AM   #83 (permalink)
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Well, Houston terminated the name rights of Enron and didn't give any money back I think.

I'm sure some accountant could figure out the pro-rat for 'services rendered'. Maybe after 7 years, they'll get nothing. I think the Daughters of the Confederacy got a bargain anyway.

Or maybe they could turn it into a sorority house. Preferably one that honors the mission statement or is closer to the Daughters of the Confederacy, like the Southern Belles (I'm not sure if this is a real org or sorority but hopefully you get the idea). That way, they could preserve the name, it would still be choice (choose to live there) and they could swap with a existing sorority house or build a new dorm.

I think that would be a good compromise, everyone saves face and no one's rights gets trampled on..

On a side note: Would anyone be offended if someone endowed a dorm and named it "Yankee Pride"? We need to be a bit careful when it comes to policing this type of thing. (at least I think so).
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Old 01-09-2005, 11:04 AM   #84 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jb2000
Strange, the middle finger may not mean much to me, but if I put it up in your face, you may well be offended by it. I may be forgiven if I don't know that, but if I know it offends you and I still put it up there, then it is perfectly fair for you to take offense.
I assume you are equating the display of the CSA battle flag as something offensive to some people like giving someone the finger would be. I hope you also understand that tearing it down offends those of us who wish to honor our ancestors bravery as well.

It is truly a shame that the memory of these brave men should be tainted because some radical minority hate group like the KKK have displayed it. It is disappointing that some people have let the actions of a few hate groups determine the meaning of the symbol.

Once people decide the symbol is negative they begin to re-invent history. As an example of this just read some of the misinformed posts in this forum.
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Old 01-09-2005, 11:23 PM   #85 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jorgelito
Well, Houston terminated the name rights of Enron and didn't give any money back I think.

I'm sure some accountant could figure out the pro-rat for 'services rendered'. Maybe after 7 years, they'll get nothing. I think the Daughters of the Confederacy got a bargain anyway.

Or maybe they could turn it into a sorority house. Preferably one that honors the mission statement or is closer to the Daughters of the Confederacy, like the Southern Belles (I'm not sure if this is a real org or sorority but hopefully you get the idea). That way, they could preserve the name, it would still be choice (choose to live there) and they could swap with a existing sorority house or build a new dorm.

I think that would be a good compromise, everyone saves face and no one's rights gets trampled on..

On a side note: Would anyone be offended if someone endowed a dorm and named it "Yankee Pride"? We need to be a bit careful when it comes to policing this type of thing. (at least I think so).
Perhaps, but it bears noting that this isn't a case of anyone filing suit against Vanderbilt to get the name change or a law or court saying they had to change it. This is simply a case of the University deciding that it was no longer in their best interest to retain the name, and whether or not they had the right to make the change or what could be done about it.

The Stadium deals are a little different. For one, they are not considered gifts, donations, or otherwise in the least. They are paid advertising, and the deals are written with all of the appropriate legalese to cover these kinds of situations, something obviously lacking in the contract this article covers. In the case of Houston, reclaiming the naming rights was a mutually agreed path, and while I'm sure the team and stadium were no longer eager to be associated with Enron, the biggest reason is that Enron obviously was no longer able to maintain the payments on the rights. All of it was covered in the contracts, and so there wasn't really any issue to it, they just went ahead and did it.

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Old 01-09-2005, 11:48 PM   #86 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by flstf
I assume you are equating the display of the CSA battle flag as something offensive to some people like giving someone the finger would be. I hope you also understand that tearing it down offends those of us who wish to honor our ancestors bravery as well.

It is truly a shame that the memory of these brave men should be tainted because some radical minority hate group like the KKK have displayed it. It is disappointing that some people have let the actions of a few hate groups determine the meaning of the symbol.

Once people decide the symbol is negative they begin to re-invent history. As an example of this just read some of the misinformed posts in this forum.
I'm not sure that I do understand the offense at 'tearing it down'. I mean, sure, if they were litterally tearingit down and treating it disrespectfully, sure, but that's not the case here. Let me be clear, as I understand it, the symbology we are discussing (primarily the name 'Confederate Memorial Hall' to be clear) is specifically related to the CSA or Confederacy, which is a very time-specific entity. It did not exist outside of the years 1861-1865. The Confederate flag and Confederate symbology does not reflect southern history prior to this period, although it would of course be silly to ignore the importance of those years on the history of the south. It is fair to say that no time before or since better represented what the 'south' means to a lot of people.

The defense that we need to maintain these symbols to honor the dead doesn't really hold water. Symbols aren't needed to maintain honor. Germany honors her war dead without needing to display Third Reich symbology or give Nazi effects any kind of place of honor to maintain the honor of those soldiers who fell for their country.

I make the comparison to Nazi Germany not to try and say that the CSA rivalled Hitler's evil or even was that kind of country at all. It is because, like the CSA, the Third Reich was a very time-specific entity. The flag of Nazi Germany, like the flag of the CSA, was not a historical symbol, but instead one crafted during the period and which only flew over a very brief and delineated period of history.

With these kind of symbols, it is hard to tell somebody to ignore the bast body of what they stood for and allow them to be displayed as some kind of memorial. The simple fact is that a lot of people do not want those types of things memorialized. They don't want to honor what they consider a criminal and treasonous confederacy which rose up in arms against their nation, leading to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of American citizens. They don't want to honor the fact that this was done primarily over whether or not states should have the right to maintain slavery or whether the federal government had the authority to interfere in states affairs on that matter, even if it was a matter or precident and/or principle.

In the end, most people understand that symbols aren't really used to maintain the honor of the deceased, but instead to keep alive the ideals that they stood for. Given that these ideals are in a great number of ways counter to what many Americans hold, and to those upheld in our Constitution, when it comes to public places of honor, it is not necessarily appropriate to put Confederate symbology up.

In the case of this school, they are a private institution and have the right to fly Confederate flags if they desire. They also have the right to do the opposite.

Josh
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"Don't tell me we're so blind we cannot see that this is my land! I can't pretend that it's nothing to do with me.
And this is your land, you can't close your eyes to this hypocracy.
Yes this is my land, I won't pretend that it's nothing to do with me.
'Cause this is our land, we can't close our eyes to the things we don't wanna see."

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Old 01-10-2005, 12:33 AM   #87 (permalink)
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Josh, you have very leveled opinions.

I can't remember specifics on where we disagree or not, but I would enjoy reading your thoughts regardless of whether your points differed substantially from mine.

Thanks for your thoughtfulness in the politics board.
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Old 01-10-2005, 01:25 AM   #88 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jb2000
With these kind of symbols, it is hard to tell somebody to ignore the bast body of what they stood for and allow them to be displayed as some kind of memorial. The simple fact is that a lot of people do not want those types of things memorialized. They don't want to honor what they consider a criminal and treasonous confederacy which rose up in arms against their nation, leading to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of American citizens. They don't want to honor the fact that this was done primarily over whether or not states should have the right to maintain slavery or whether the federal government had the authority to interfere in states affairs on that matter, even if it was a matter or precident and/or principle.
I guess this is where we disagree. You refer to the Confederacy as rising up in arms against their nation. Their nation was the Confederacy since they seceded from the Union. They wanted self rule something that up until that time was considered their right as long as their state legislatures voted to. It was the North who took up arms to prevent them.

It required the state legislatures to vote them into the Union and it was understood that those same legislatures could vote them out of it. If the North would not have taken up arms to prevent it there wouldn't have been the death of thousands. In my opinion and many others the North was wrong to do so. All they had to do is let them go.

I'll admit the South wanted to rule themselves including the right to have slaves but that was not what the war was about. We have already discussed what the leaders of the Union thought about slavery including the right to own them in the North even after the Emancipation Proclimation banned it in the South. Do you really think the Union cared one way or another except for political leverage? Don't you think Lincoln would have asked/made Grant free his slaves instead of keeping them till long after the war ended?

So that is why we don't see what is wrong with honoring these brave young men and boys for fighting for their homeland. They were not treasonous and criminal. Many people then and now think they were in the right, just outnumbered and ill equipped.

If intelligent folks like yourself do not see the honor in what these soldiers did and why we might want to remember them, then I am going to resist posting much more on the matter. Like ShaniFaye I've said about all I can.

Last edited by flstf; 01-10-2005 at 01:31 AM.. Reason: spelling
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Old 01-10-2005, 05:13 AM   #89 (permalink)
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To clear some things up: Sorry to have applied "fuckwad" to the entire south. I will limit it to those only wo fought for the continuance of slavery, not the average soldier who was just doing his duty for his state. I won't apologize beyond that though.

I would like some sources stating that slavery was well and alive in the north after the war.
Quote:
I'll admit the South wanted to rule themselves including the right to have slaves but that was not what the war was about. We have already discussed what the leaders of the Union thought about slavery including the right to own them in the North even after the Emancipation Proclimation banned it in the South. Do you really think the Union cared one way or another except for political leverage? Don't you think Lincoln would have asked/made Grant free his slaves instead of keeping them till long after the war ended?
Everything I have learned has taught me that it was outlawed in the north long before the war even started. This was the main reason for the Dred Scott case. Please give me a citing of this.
Also cite for me Grant owning slaves after the war ended.

to the end of what you said flstf: We can honor the soldier, but that is done at their gravesite. Explain why these soldiers deserve buildings named after the political substance (a the current flying of their war banner) that they once fought for while the many German soldiers who died for the Nazi regime do not.

To anything anyone has tried to ask me since friday afternoon, please if you want me to answer, ask it again. I don't get on much at all on weekends. If you don't think it's been significantly explained yet, please question me.
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Old 01-10-2005, 06:06 AM   #90 (permalink)
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I found something interesting in my research also that I would like to share. It is the "Paradox of Democratic Secession" Seems logical to me.

Quote:
democracy contra secession
Democracy relies on a prohibition of secession. A democratic regime assumes a 'demos' - a unit of political decision-making which is constant between decisions. If every dissident minority secedes after every opposed decision, then there is no democratic regime. (There would be no political regime at all - at least not for standard political theory).

So democrats have concluded, like President Lincoln in the 1860's, that secession must be suppressed. Since modern democracies are nation states, secession is now treated as an issue of national unity, and national identity: Lincoln was one of the last politicians who had to address secession as a classic political issue.
There lies another difference between the American Revolution and the American Civil War.
The revolution was an act of creating a democracy as the colonies had no power of democracy to begin with.
The Confederate States were performing an action that was antithetical to democracy.

Then there is this one:
Quote:
Despite the rhetoric of liberal democracy, actual consent is not necessary to political legitimacy...Separatists cannot base their arguments on a right to opt out because no such right exists in democratic theory.
Government by the consent of the governed does not necessarily encompass a right to opt out. It only requires that within the existing political unit a right to participate through electoral processes be available. Moreover participatory rights do not entail a right to secede.
Lea Brilmayer (1991) Secession and self-determination: a territorial interpretation. Yale Journal of International Law 16, 177-202, p.184-185.
In essence it is: "We let you be part of this democracy, therefore we are permitted to keep you in it.


The situation the southern states were in was like in a court case were someone writes up a personal contract with someone that if he fails in the goal he has to forefeit his firstborn to the other half of the contract.
The Judge will say, though the contract states it, you have no legal right to do this.

The same goes to secession from a democracy. You can state it in a contract that you hold the right to seceede, but the definition of democracy prohibits it.

Last edited by Superbelt; 01-10-2005 at 06:09 AM..
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Old 01-10-2005, 07:26 AM   #91 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Superbelt
I would like some sources stating that slavery was well and alive in the north after the war..
Also cite for me Grant owning slaves after the war ended.
Quote:
Slavery was not an exclusively Southern institution. Almost 400,000 slaves lived in Northern states at the start of the war. Many of those slaves were not freed until the 13th Amendment was passed. In fact, it is commonly accepted that the last slaves freed were in Delaware, a staunchly Union state. The 13th Amendment, passed after the war ended, was approved by Southern states who had already seen their capital assets stripped away without compensation and who were considered occupied enemy territory by the Northern States at that time.

The north had slavery at least until 1866, due to some holdouts like Union General Ulysses S. Grant who refused to give up his slaves until the passage of the 13th Amendment. The slave’s name was William Jones. In 1858, while attempting to make a go in civilian life as a farmer near St. Louis, Missouri, Ulysses S. Grant bought the slave, William Jones, from his brother-in-law. Grant's also became the owner of record of his wife’s inheritance of four slaves, but as was the case at the time, women could not actually own slaves, so they were under the control of Grant. There is no record of these slaves having been freed prior to emancipation in Missouri in 1865. In 1862, U.S. General Ulysses S. Grant's army had become encumbered by runaway slaves. Grant decided to go into the cotton business, using the runaway slaves to pick cotton in the Mississippi fields. Gen. Grant did pay them a small wage which was just enough to cover the cost of their food that was provided (sold) to them. The cotton was shipped back to factories in the North, with Grant collecting the profit. Grant did not own the land or the crops! General Grant owned slaves that were not freed until the passage of the 13th Amendment. It is interesting to note some of the thoughts of General Grant. Grant informed his family that his only desire was, "…to put down the rebellion. I have no hobby of my own with regard to the Negro, either to effect his freedom or continue his bondage. I am using them as teamsters, hospital attendants, company cooks and so forth thus saving soldiers to carry the musket. . . . it weakens the enemy to take them from them."
http://www.scv674.org/SH-3.htm
Quote:
Originally Posted by Superbelt
to the end of what you said flstf: We can honor the soldier, but that is done at their gravesite. Explain why these soldiers deserve buildings named after the political substance (a the current flying of their war banner) that they once fought for while the many German soldiers who died for the Nazi regime do not.
We will disagree till the cows come home as to why I feel they should be remembered with memorials, etc.. and you may not. My main feelings on the subject are in some of the previous posts. While I respect much of what you write in these forums I see no reason to fully address your Nazi comparison. One was a regime planning for world conquest and the other just wanted self rule.
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Old 01-10-2005, 09:40 AM   #92 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by flstf
I guess this is where we disagree. You refer to the Confederacy as rising up in arms against their nation. Their nation was the Confederacy since they seceded from the Union. They wanted self rule something that up until that time was considered their right as long as their state legislatures voted to. It was the North who took up arms to prevent them.

It required the state legislatures to vote them into the Union and it was understood that those same legislatures could vote them out of it. If the North would not have taken up arms to prevent it there wouldn't have been the death of thousands. In my opinion and many others the North was wrong to do so. All they had to do is let them go.
Perhaps it was missed, but I took great pains to explain in detail that I do not disagree that the South had the right to secede. You claim that it was the North, but do not address the fact that the war began with the siezure by force of arms of Federal (Union) property by Southern troops. If that doesn't constitute rising up in arms, I don't know what does!

I agree that if the North had accepted the siezures and relinquished the rights to its property without due process, that there would not have been a war. But can you realistically expect any nation on earth to allow its territory to be violated without response? Do you not feel that the President has the responsibility to act in defense of US territority when it is siezed?

Quote:
I'll admit the South wanted to rule themselves including the right to have slaves but that was not what the war was about. We have already discussed what the leaders of the Union thought about slavery including the right to own them in the North even after the Emancipation Proclimation banned it in the South. Do you really think the Union cared one way or another except for political leverage? Don't you think Lincoln would have asked/made Grant free his slaves instead of keeping them till long after the war ended?
And I have agreed that the slave issue was merely the spark, and during the war was used by the north as a moral banner, not necessarily representative of what the real aims of the war were, much like the moral banner of liberation we wave in Iraq today. This does not change the fact that the issue was a critical part of the war, the victory by the Union led the the end of slavery much quicker than had the South seceded peacefully or won the war.

Quote:
So that is why we don't see what is wrong with honoring these brave young men and boys for fighting for their homeland. They were not treasonous and criminal. Many people then and now think they were in the right, just outnumbered and ill equipped.

If intelligent folks like yourself do not see the honor in what these soldiers did and why we might want to remember them, then I am going to resist posting much more on the matter. Like ShaniFaye I've said about all I can.
I thought I was very clear in separating the honor of the soldiers themselves from the symbology of the nation they fought for. I don't believe there was any lack of honor in fighting for their states. They did their best to sacrifice in the best interest of their homes, families, and communities. There is no dishonor in that.

The fact that the CSA may have acted wrongly in perpetrating the war should not be heaped upon the shoulders of the men who fought in its army. Soldiers fight for their homes. It is on the shoulders of their leaders to use them wisely.

If you can not understand this distinction, I apologize for not making it clear enough. Perhaps it is true that for some the honor of the individual soldier and the symbology and motives of his nation are inseperable. However, if you at all feel I am attempting to dishonor the southern or soldier or say that it is inappropriate to honor them, then you are truly wrong.

Josh
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"Don't tell me we're so blind we cannot see that this is my land! I can't pretend that it's nothing to do with me.
And this is your land, you can't close your eyes to this hypocracy.
Yes this is my land, I won't pretend that it's nothing to do with me.
'Cause this is our land, we can't close our eyes to the things we don't wanna see."

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Old 01-11-2005, 07:29 PM   #93 (permalink)
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Thank you Josh for your well thought out post. I still think the North was just as responsible if not more than the South for this war however your ideas are reasonable and I think I understand where you are coming from.

Those of us with close ties to the South sometimes get upset with all the negativity associated with what we consider an honorable heritage. If I were the descendant of slaves I most probably would feel very differently. But then I think I would be just as offended by the way the whole country treated my ancestors as well.
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Old 01-11-2005, 07:36 PM   #94 (permalink)
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Hehe, my post got squashed by a Mack truck!
I defer to the Southern secession/Civil War discussion...
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Old 01-11-2005, 07:46 PM   #95 (permalink)
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The South is fully to blame for starting the Civil War, period.

The island upon which Ft. Sumter rests was never, ever part of the state of South Carolina. It is a man-made island which was created by the authority of Congress in the 1820's for the expressed purpose of building the fort. It was ALWAYS federal government property from the beginning and South Carolina never had any credible claim to it.

The South legitimately seceded from the Union and formed their own nation. President Jefferson Davis then ordered General P.G.T. Beauregard to demand the surrender of Ft. Sumter and to seize it by force if that demand was refused. This constitutes an act of war under any definition of the term. As a legitimate nation which had seceded from the Union, the South had NO RIGHT to demand Northern territory nor to seize it. Furthermore, the North could not possibly ignore a hostile nation on its border which had deliberately attacked it, seized a federal base, and was then proceeding to begin a massive military buildup. To do nothing in the face of a direct attack from a hostile and growing power would've been stupidity in the extreme.

The Confederacy would've had legitimate grounds to demand recognition and respect from the North had it simply chosen not to attack Ft. Sumter. As said before, that attack constituted an act of war under any definition of the term ever invented. In so doing, they lost any hope of saying that they had peaceful intentions. The Confederacy brought the Civil War upon itself. No nation with an ounce of sanity would allow one of its military installations to be seized by a neighbor without responding with its own military. To do otherwise would have been practically asking the Confederacy to attack again. The Confederates should've kept their fingers off the trigger and they would've had a leg to stand on. When they fired the first shot they brought the war down upon their own heads.

Last edited by CShine; 01-11-2005 at 07:48 PM..
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Old 01-11-2005, 10:03 PM   #96 (permalink)
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As usual there's two sides to this.
Quote:
Originally Posted by CShine
The island upon which Ft. Sumter rests was never, ever part of the state of South Carolina. It is a man-made island which was created by the authority of Congress in the 1820's for the expressed purpose of building the fort. It was ALWAYS federal government property from the beginning and South Carolina never had any credible claim to it.
Quote:
Remember that South Carolina had legally seceded from the Union with the united States, and Fort Sumter was on South Carolina land. After South Carolina seceded, the fort was still manned by a Union garrison. The South Carolina demanded possession of the fort and offered to pay for it. The Lincoln administration promised that the garrison would leave. However, Lincoln sent Federal war ships, which were supposed to be ships providing provisions for the men there, but instead were actually war ships. When General Beauregard learned of the ships sailing for Fort Sumter, he demanded that Major Anderson, the Union general in charge of the garrison, surrender the fort, or he would commence firing. Anderson refused to surrender, and Beauregard gave the order to fire before the garrison could be reinforced by the Federal war ships.

In short, South Carolina wanted her property back, offered to buy it back, and were promised to be given it back. When the promise was found out to be a lie, they were forced to take it back with force. Lincoln knew he could not gain support of the Northern people for war, so he forced the South into a position of "firing the first shots", This allowed him to trick the North and the world, and as we see now most history teachers into thinking, "Look, Confederates fired on our United States flag. They want war." You can see this was a propaganda stunt staged by the Northerners to win sympathy for the political aspirations of Lincoln. Quote
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Old 01-12-2005, 04:27 AM   #97 (permalink)
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1) How is your source able to make the decision that the ships were war ships and not supply ships?

2) The land is an island and was never a part of Carolina property to begin with

3) Do you see the similarity to Guantanamo Bay?
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Old 01-12-2005, 07:00 AM   #98 (permalink)
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flstf,

Thank you for the further information. The question of whether Ft. Sumter was ever S. Carolina land (as posted by others) is not meaningful. Noone denied that it was a Federal fort, and by the same token, I don't think anyone can argue that it would have made sense, had the South been recognized as independent, for the fort to remain in Federal hands. The fact that it was created by Federal mandate or whatever doesn't change the fact that being in a S. Carolina harbor, for it to not become S. Carolina territory would be untenable.

If it is true that warships were sent to Fort Sumpter, and that this provoked a response by President Davis, then I don't see how this changes the idea that the South, by taking military action to seize the fort, initiated hostilities. The fort was already a military facility, heavily armed and garrisoned. The arrival of warships did not transform it, even if they added to its military strength. Such an addition would seem warranted given the threat that was percieved from Southern forces (and bourne out to well-founded, given events that unfolded).

That negotiations were ongoing, including Federal promises to hand over the fort, only adds to the South's culpability in this matter. As I have cited before, the secession was only declared in January of 1861. Fort Sumpter was seized in IIRC April of 1861. That amount of time is hardly enough to determine that non-violent and/or legal methods had been exhausted to achieve both independence and the hand-over of facilities.

It may well be true that the Federal Government would have not recognized Southern independence, and that any plans for peaceful handover of Fort Sumpter were destined for failure. However, given the time-scale, we will never know, as the South never gave either of those possibilities enough time to come to fruition. In their haste, for whatever reason, they jumped the gun and started a shooting war. For this, they do deserve to be considered the instigators of the shooting war that became the Civil War.

Let me clarify: this does NOT mean that I hold the South solely or fully responsible for the war. The bon-fire had been building for a long time, and a lot of people figured it was an inevitability. On both sides, but especially in the South, there was almost relief upon the start of hostilities, as it was figured they could get started and get it over with. Naturally, both sides saw it as a short war that was coming and that it would be over quickly in their favor. In the above study, I am merely recognizing that it was the South that actually took the action of lighting the match, if you will.

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Last edited by jb2000; 01-12-2005 at 07:07 AM..
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Old 01-12-2005, 01:27 PM   #99 (permalink)
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This is an interesting discussion. I've been an (armchair) Civil War buff for years, and I've never had any doubt that

a) The war was, on a fundamental level, about slavery
b) That Lincoln did carry out some illegal actions, but justified them in his desire to save the Union. As most Northerners agreed, there was not much opposition to this.
c) That the legality of secession is a murky area, but arguing over it is meaningless. The South always knew the North would fight to preserve the Union

It's interesting to see that this topic still engenders such feelings and mixture of interpretations today.


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Old 01-12-2005, 03:51 PM   #100 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Superbelt
1) How is your source able to make the decision that the ships were war ships and not supply ships?
Quote:
Abraham Lincoln, inaugurated President of the United States on March 4th, soon adopted the war policy which had been initiated by the concentration of troops by Major Anderson at Fort Sumter in December, 1860, the ordering of the Star of the West to Charleston harbor in January, 1861, with troops, arms and supplies, and the summons of several ships of the distant squadrons to steam homeward. The policy most practicable for immediate hostilities as became apparent to President Lincoln's advisers, was an invasion of the Confederacy by way of the ocean and the gulf. The first objective point, Charleston; the first State to be overthrown and brought to terms, South Carolina; the first movement, reinforcement of Fort Sumter, peaceably if permitted, otherwise by force. This plan was maturely considered during March, while the Confederate leaders were held in suspense with the hope of peace. which caused them to wait for the action of the Federal administration. At length, on the 8th of April, South Carolina was officially informed that "an attempt would be made to supply Fort Sumter, peaceably if they could, forcibly if they must." Eight armed vessels with soldiers aboard had been sent to sustain the notification, and moved so quickly on this expedition that only an unexpected storm at sea caused delay enough for the Confederate authorities to successfully meet the issue.
The Confederate States objected to this movement of the Federal authorities, because the reinforcement was invasion by the use of physical force; because it asserted the claim of the United States to sovereignty over South Carolina, which was in dispute; and because the supply of the garrison in Fort Sumter with necessary rations was not the object nor the end of the expedition. The purpose was to secure Fort Sumter, to close the port with the warships, to reduce Charleston by bombardment if necessary, to land troops from transports, and thus crush the rebellion where it was supposed to have begun by overthrowing South Carolina. This admirable scheme was frustrated by the necessary, prompt and successful attack on Fort Sumter after General Beauregard had exchanged the usual formalities with Major Anderson. http://www.civilwarhome.com/confedhistorypart3.htm
Quote:
Originally Posted by Superbelt
2) The land is an island and was never a part of Carolina property to begin with
I think jb2000 answered sufficiently in the quote that follows from a previous message .
The question of whether Ft. Sumter was ever S. Carolina land (as posted by others) is not meaningful. Noone denied that it was a Federal fort, and by the same token, I don't think anyone can argue that it would have made sense, had the South been recognized as independent, for the fort to remain in Federal hands. The fact that it was created by Federal mandate or whatever doesn't change the fact that being in a S. Carolina harbor, for it to not become S. Carolina territory would be untenable.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Superbelt
3) Do you see the similarity to Guantanamo Bay?
Yes I do. I don't know much about the history of Guantanimo Bay but it would seem that the analogy doesn't help my assertion that South Carolina was justified. A short search for info on Guantanimo turned up the fact that we still believe we are leasing it. I assume Castro would have resisted if he had the means to do so.
Quote:
The first American casualties of the Spanish-Cuban-American war were two marines killed at Guantánamo on June 11, 1898. A U.S. Marine battalion camped there the day before, marking the first U.S. presence on the bay.

Just about five years later, on February 23, 1903, U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt signed an agreement with Cuba leasing the bay for 2,000 gold coins per year. The agreement was forced on the puppet Cuban government (with an American-citizen for President) through the Platt Amendment, which gave U.S. authorities the right to interfere in Cuban affairs.

On July 2 1906, (just before the 2nd U.S. military intervention, a new lease is signed in Havana for Guantánamo Bay and Bahía Honda, for which the U.S. will pay a meager $2,000 per year.

After Cubans annulled the Platt Amendment in 1934, a new lease was negotiated between the Roosevelt administration and a U.S.-friendly government that included Fulgencio Batista as one of three signatories. Batista emerged as the strong man on the island over the next twenty-five years.

When the Revolution triumphed in 1959, the U.S. banned its soldiers stationed at the bay from entering Cuban territory. Legally speaking, Guantánamo should have been returned to Cuba at this time.

"It's no secret," writes Rafael Hernández Rodriquez in Subject to Solution: Problems in Cuban-U.S. Relations, "that the main mission of the naval bases in this area of the Gulf is to control, police and spy on Cuba."

In an interview with Soviet journalists in October 1985, U.S. President Ronald Reagan said that the purpose of the base was political: to impose the U.S. presence, even if the Cubans didn't want it.

Every year the U.S. sends a check for the lease amount, but the Cuban government has never cashed them.http://www.historyofcuba.com/history...ts/guantan.htm
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Old 01-13-2005, 07:05 PM   #101 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jb2000
flstf,

The question of whether Ft. Sumter was ever S. Carolina land (as posted by others) is not meaningful.
Quite the contrary, it's the ONLY thing that has any meaning regarding who had a right to it. If South Carolina had ANY legitimate grounds to claim that they could secede then they could ONLY claim to take the lands within its borders. They did not have any claim to territory that had always lain outside their borders, yet they presumed to do just that. They had no more right to Ft. Sumter than they did to Boston harbor. The fact that the fort was strategically significant to the operation of the harbor did NOT confer to them the right to shoot at it, much less seize it. Doing so was AN ACT OF WAR.
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Old 01-15-2005, 07:44 AM   #102 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CShine
Quite the contrary, it's the ONLY thing that has any meaning regarding who had a right to it. If South Carolina had ANY legitimate grounds to claim that they could secede then they could ONLY claim to take the lands within its borders. They did not have any claim to territory that had always lain outside their borders, yet they presumed to do just that. They had no more right to Ft. Sumter than they did to Boston harbor. The fact that the fort was strategically significant to the operation of the harbor did NOT confer to them the right to shoot at it, much less seize it. Doing so was AN ACT OF WAR.
So was sending ships in order to begin an invasion.

By your logic, we would have "started" WWII against Japan if we'd shot down any of their torpedo bombers before they hit Pearl Harbor.

Last edited by sob; 01-15-2005 at 11:26 AM..
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Old 01-15-2005, 10:09 AM   #103 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Superbelt
I found something interesting in my research also that I would like to share. It is the "Paradox of Democratic Secession" Seems logical to me.



There lies another difference between the American Revolution and the American Civil War.
The revolution was an act of creating a democracy as the colonies had no power of democracy to begin with.
The Confederate States were performing an action that was antithetical to democracy.

Then there is this one:


In essence it is: "We let you be part of this democracy, therefore we are permitted to keep you in it.


The situation the southern states were in was like in a court case were someone writes up a personal contract with someone that if he fails in the goal he has to forefeit his firstborn to the other half of the contract.
The Judge will say, though the contract states it, you have no legal right to do this.

The same goes to secession from a democracy. You can state it in a contract that you hold the right to seceede, but the definition of democracy prohibits it.
The concept you bring up is that a contract can not be based on illegality. I prefer to use a different example than yours: an employment contract in which it is specified that the employer is not required to pay an hourly employee overtime, no matter how many hours the employee puts in.

There are very clear laws prohibiting the practice above, unlike the act of secession, on which there were no prohibitions. In fact, as was earlier stated, three states demanded that right, and the other ten acceded.

Let's review:

First you said in an earlier post that
Quote:
Our Constitution does provide for the separation of the union.
(Post #38)

You followed that up with
Quote:
American Civil War: a process agreed upon in the constitution for seccession, the confederacy ignores it and just declares independence.

They had the right to leave, but you can't just say "Bye" There are procedures.
(Post #42)

Ergo, if you are to be believed in regard to the above, and in regard to your comments regarding democracy in #90, our Constitution is an illegal contract.

Therefore, the South was within its rights to terminate the contract.

Please note that it is not my position that the Constitution is an illegal contract. I am simply pointing out what I see as a flaw in your argument.

I should also note that you seem to waver between saying the states had a right to secede, and saying they had no such right.
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Old 01-15-2005, 01:14 PM   #104 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr Mephisto
This is an interesting discussion. I've been an (armchair) Civil War buff for years, and I've never had any doubt that

a) The war was, on a fundamental level, about slavery
b) That Lincoln did carry out some illegal actions, but justified them in his desire to save the Union. As most Northerners agreed, there was not much opposition to this.
c) That the legality of secession is a murky area, but arguing over it is meaningless. The South always knew the North would fight to preserve the Union

It's interesting to see that this topic still engenders such feelings and mixture of interpretations today.


Mr Mephisto
That's one reason I've enjoyed this thread--because many of us see some parallels between that time and the present.

I'm not clear if the positions above represent the way you feel today, especially in regard to a).

Although no one would say slavery wasn't an important component of (gig inserted here) the "War for Southern Independence," it has always appeared to me that the fundamental cause was clearly an intolerably overbearing central government. The financial aspects have been covered to some extent here, but not as much as I'd like.

b) The NORTHERNERS might have agreed, but the Southerners would (and still do) react quite differently. You tend to take it personally when an army steals your possessions (silverware and livestock, not slaves) and destroys your crops, in order to have your family starve in your absence. The words "Never Again," borrowed from another cause, seem appropriate here.

I also tend to contrast excusing "some illegal actions" of Lincoln to the flamebait thread I saw earlier in which someone delivered a rant because, for security, the parade participants weren't supposed to fix their gaze on President Bush.

Examples from that thread:
Quote:
Why do I feel the tendrils of Fascism wrapping around my ankles
Quote:
Irate, we shouldn't suspend our rights for even a single day.
These statements were about directing your gaze. I haven't seen a word from either author in regard to the wrongness of Lincoln's suspension of Habeas Corpus. If Bush followed Lincoln's example, a great many people on TFP would be locked up under "martial law" without official charges or a trial.

Habeas

At least Bush hasn't ignored the chief justice of the US Supreme Court!
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Old 01-15-2005, 05:48 PM   #105 (permalink)
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I can't get to everything you said, but I will by at least monday night.o one of your questions:
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthr...hlight=Lincoln
From me:
Quote:
The "Great" presidents, like Roosevelt and Lincoln openly violated the constitution. Lincoln basically suspended the entire thing and ruled the Union as a dictator in wartime, thankfully he restored it after the war was over.
Mr Meph:[qote]Lincoln, without a doubt, stands head and shoulders above all others in my mind. Without his dogged determination and leadership the United States may have ceased to exist as we know it today. He had his faults, but they were minor to what he achieved; the preservation of the Union and the Emancipation of the Slaves.
[/quote]
Neither of us specifically cite Habeas Corpus but we both allude to it in a manner that is obvious to anyone who is even remotely well read in American Civil War History.
So, we are on record to this.
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Old 01-15-2005, 07:16 PM   #106 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Superbelt
I can't get to everything you said, but I will by at least monday night.o one of your questions:

http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthr...hlight=Lincoln
From me:

The "Great" presidents, like Roosevelt and Lincoln openly violated the constitution. Lincoln basically suspended the entire thing and ruled the Union as a dictator in wartime, thankfully he restored it after the war was over.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Superbelt
Neither of us specifically cite Habeas Corpus but we both allude to it in a manner that is obvious to anyone who is even remotely well read in American Civil War History.
So, we are on record to this.
Well, I cited it, but you apparently didn't read it. Lincoln didn't suspend the Constitution. Here it is again:

Habeas, the Constitution

Quote:
Did President Lincoln suspend the U.S. Constitution?

Answer: No

Did President Lincoln suspend Habeas Corpus?

Answer: Yes, in 1861 and 1862

Was Habeas Corpus ever restored?

Answer: Yes, in 1866.

Here's the story:

As the Civil War started, in the very beginning of Lincoln's presidential term, a group of "Peace Democrats" proposed a peaceful resolution to the developing Civil War by offering a truce with the South, and forming a constitutional convention to amend the U.S. Constitution to protect States' rights. The proposal was ignored by the Unionists of the North and not taken seriously by the South. However, the Peace Democrats, also called copperheads by their enemies, publicly criticized Lincoln's belief that violating the U.S. Constitution was required to save it as a whole. With Congress not in session until July, Lincoln assumed all powers not delegated in the Constitution, including the power to suspend habeas corpus. In 1861, Lincoln had already suspended civil law in territories where resistance to the North's military power would be dangerous. In 1862, when copperhead democrats began criticizing Lincoln's violation of the Constitution, Lincoln suspended habeas corpus throughout the nation and had many copperhead democrats arrested under military authority because he felt that the State Courts in the north west would not convict war protesters such as the copperheads. He proclaimed that all persons who discouraged enlistments or engaged in disloyal practices would come under Martial Law.

Among the 13,000 people arrested under martial law was a Maryland Secessionist, John Merryman. Immediately, Hon. Roger B. Taney, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States issued a writ of habeas corpus commanding the military to bring Merryman before him. The military refused to follow the writ. Justice Taney, in Ex parte MERRYMAN, then ruled the suspension of habeas corpus unconstitutional because the writ could not be suspended without an Act of Congress. President Lincoln and the military ignored Justice Taney's ruling.

Finally, in 1866, after the war, the Supreme Court officially restored habeas corpus in Ex-parte Milligan, ruling that military trials in areas where the civil courts were capable of functioning were illegal.

Copyright, 1999
American Patriot Network
Just for emphasis, as you can see above, the Supreme Court restored Habeas Corpus after the war. Lincoln was hindered in doing so, since he happened to be dead at the time.

By the way, does it meet with your approval for a president to rule the Union "as a dictator in wartime?"

Thanks in advance.

Last edited by sob; 01-15-2005 at 07:34 PM..
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Old 01-15-2005, 08:11 PM   #107 (permalink)
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This is really interesting as it starts to bring up"the ends justifies the means" type of argument. Also, I feel it's heading into "slippery slope" territory of double standards.

For example: Would we find it ok if Bush suspended habeas corpus in the interest of "national security"? Would he then become one of the greats years from now? It's probably too soon to tell, one of the inate problems with the study of history.
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Old 01-15-2005, 08:25 PM   #108 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jorgelito
This is really interesting as it starts to bring up"the ends justifies the means" type of argument. Also, I feel it's heading into "slippery slope" territory of double standards.

For example: Would we find it ok if Bush suspended habeas corpus in the interest of "national security"? Would he then become one of the greats years from now? It's probably too soon to tell, one of the inate problems with the study of history.
That was the point of my question.

Brace yourself for the replies you're about to receive.
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Old 01-16-2005, 01:58 PM   #109 (permalink)
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Lincoln was one of the greats in hindsight, not at the time. His decisions, though blatantly unconstitutional proved to be, I believe good decisions in the best interest of the nation.
I, and many like me, contend that Bush will not hold up to the test of time as Lincoln did.
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Old 01-16-2005, 03:19 PM   #110 (permalink)
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I'm glad to see that college priorities are right on track !
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Old 01-16-2005, 09:33 PM   #111 (permalink)
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Look, maybe the south should try seccession again. Take Texas when you go. Don't let the door hit ya where the good lord split ya.

<small>Why oh why couldn't we just let these people go when we had the chance? Gee, thanks Abe. Screwed by republican president #1</small>
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Old 01-16-2005, 09:46 PM   #112 (permalink)
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We tried that once, seems we got shot, bombed, and occupied straight out of the idea!

I think this time we should just kick New York, Massachusetts, California, Illinios, and Connetticut out!
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Old 01-16-2005, 10:44 PM   #113 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by The_Dunedan
We tried that once, seems we got shot, bombed, and occupied straight out of the idea!

I think this time we should just kick New York, Massachusetts, California, Illinios, and Connetticut out!
I need the north there to remind me why i"m happier down here.
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Old 01-17-2005, 04:45 AM   #114 (permalink)
This vexes me. I am terribly vexed.
 
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You also need us here to award you our federal taxes
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Old 01-17-2005, 10:01 AM   #115 (permalink)
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More like you need us here to pay those Federal taxes. You folks pay more per-capita, but we pay far more in dollar amount, as I understand it. Not to mention grow most of your food, produce most of your electricity, produce and refine most of your petro-chem, mine most of your coal, bauxite, graphite, and building-stone, and provide you with cheap labour.
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Old 01-19-2005, 10:09 AM   #116 (permalink)
This vexes me. I am terribly vexed.
 
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sob: I didn't waver, I have completely changed my position after reading the philosophy of the paradox of democratic secession.
The document would not be made illegal because of an agreement made before the signing of the contract. The signers should have realized they would have had no true right to secceed before signing. They would still be bound by the contract but would be barred from performing the illegal action that they were granted from outside the contract.

I take the position that once the states became one nation, individual states do not have the right to break away because they are american citizens first and state resident second. We don't go abroad and identify what state we are from, we identify that we are americans.
The south attempted to seceede because of decisions our government was making were unfavorable to them. Tough titty, under the umbrella of democracy we vote on issues as a nation and make decisions that affect us all. They knew this going in, they shouldn't have expected to be in the drivers seat on every issue forever. It is just not realistic and not democratic.

We are and always were american citizens, by the time of the civil war, everyone who was alive was born an american citizen. We make decisions together, the south did not even try to get together and vote with the rest of the nation on whether or not they would be allowed to leave (the only way they could seceede in a democracy) as such, they didn't have the right.

on Habeas:
You could make a case that suspending a part of the constitution is the same as suspending the whole thing. For a president to suspend any one part of it makes the rest of it just as vulnerable.

dunedan:
What the hell.
We pay more per capita and we have more people, that means we pay more in dollar amount as well.
But I never want this nation to be broken apart anyway. We need the south and midwest for their food production and the south and midwest needs the NE and West coast for our economic strength.
BTW, I am from PA, we have plenty of coal, building-stone, etc up here as it is.

Per dollar given to the Fed, this is how much each of these states get back. Those are the ten highest.
1. D.C. ($6.17)
2. North Dakota ($2.03)
3. New Mexico ($1.89)
4. Mississippi ($1.84)
5. Alaska ($1.82)
6. West Virginia ($1.74)
7. Montana ($1.64)
8. Alabama ($1.61)
9. South Dakota ($1.59)
10. Arkansas ($1.53)


But this a whole different issue that we already covered here.
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Old 01-25-2005, 04:11 PM   #117 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sob
Constructive, no. However, it's quite revealing of the mindset and lack of accurate historical knowledge of those denigrating the Confederacy in this thread.



It would have been more accurate to have added the word "anymore" after the word "disagree."

Superbelt, in post #24, made the claim that the South betrayed their country. When his statement was proven false, he quickly changed his story to the position that they didn't secede in the way "Our Constitution does provide for the separation of the union." I pointed out that this is inaccurate as well, and it is pretty [edit: "much"] my basis for the following statement: How can a person be labeled a "traitor" or a "criminal" or "dishonorable" for exercising their legal rights?



My response is based on this interpretation of the above: you're unsure that Lincoln was a traitor to the Constitution.

Lincoln ignored the right of the states to secede (a condition some states stipulated before they would sign on), suspended Habeas Corpus, made a shambles of the 9th and 10th amendments, proclaimed that Southern states couldn't have slaves (but Northern ones could), made plans to ship slaves out of the US, and made war against women, children, and the elderly by destroying their food so they would starve. Don't forget, according to Lincoln, those were citizens of HIS country. How much more do you need?

I hope you're not one of those who clings to their opinion in spite of a mountain of evidence to the contrary.



"Why is that, because you say so? I think we've been having an interesting debate over just that, but noone from any perspective has brought up anything that does what you claim. Are you one of those who says 'my side has some evidence so we must be 100% right without question!' ? I would hope not."




I'm very unsure why this was brought up again, but in an effort to get back to the topic of the thread, my "clincher" would be the following.

When I lived in another town, a movement was underway to change the name of a street to "Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd."

Some people and businesses on this street opposed the move. They did not like the thought of having the name of a documented philanderer and plagiarist in their address.

Would those who support the eradication of references to the Confederacy side with the residents and businesses? Or is it only minorities that are allowed to be offended?
So I'm sitting here reading my copy of the constitution again for my legal reasoning and it hits me:

a lot of people don't really know what the constitution says. Sometimes they think they do, because they have some knowledge of the amendments. But the actual Articles? I think not...

Quote:
Article 1, section (9):
"The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases or Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it. "
Quote:
Article 3, section (3):
"Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort."
Apparently, habeas corpus can be suspended according to the constitution, and my definition of treason seems to adhere to the definition embedded in the constitution.

So there's my thoughts on the matter, I must admit I was happy they meshed with the document that created our nation.


...back to studying.
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Old 01-25-2005, 08:26 PM   #118 (permalink)
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" We don't go abroad and identify what state we are from, we identify that we are americans."
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Just for the record..... we do In Texas.


I miss the Oilers.
-fibber
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Old 01-25-2005, 08:34 PM   #119 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by fibber
" We don't go abroad and identify what state we are from, we identify that we are americans."
-Superbelt

Just for the record..... we do In Texas.


I miss the Oilers.
-fibber
lol, likewise for us Californians.
At least, my friends who travel internationally recommended I follow that advice when abroad.
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Old 01-25-2005, 09:01 PM   #120 (permalink)
can't help but laugh
 
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just as a sidenote (i hope this hasn't been said in this thread already):

i'm in alabama for a short while... i actually heard someone call the "civil war" the "war of northern agression" in plain speech. that is to say, without the aire of the expression being a novelty of any sort. also, a person i met down here originally from Maine has told me he was once kicked out of a bar once the patrons heard his northern accent. wow.

alabamans (alabamians?) have been great to me so far... but i sure was surprised that any of that sentiment was still around.
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