But Lincoln fought for coercion, for exploitation, for another form of slavery. All he deserves is my contempt.
Remember your Lincoln-Douglas debates. Douglas pointed out that sometimes the conditions for factory workers in the north was worse than that of slaves. Lincoln agreed, but there was one big difference, you see: a factory worker can go up to the foreman and say "I quit." A slave can't do that.
Also, remember your Marx. Capitalism is more advanced than feudalism. If you dislike capitalism, fine. But somebody who argues for the emancipation of slaves but not the basic equality of women, while someone not worthy of much respect today, might be quite respectable in 1000 BC and ahead of their time. In modern times, I wouldn't be real happy about somebody arresting the governer of Maryland without a trial, either. But taken in context...
As for federalism, well, ya got me there. Lincoln was the supporter of the stronger government. But I wouldn't hold up the CSA as any great anarchist paradise, either.
The difference is that the Constitution is the Supreme Law of the Land.
Yes, and you responded to the question of the Supreme Law of the Land being a monarch's whim by saying we were ignoring the difference between democracy/republic and monarchy. PRECISELY! We were ignoring that. So why were you being so sillily & blindly legalistic? You have to take into account lots of things when considering whether a law is just or unjust, and then furthermore, whether an unjust law is worth fighting over, and how. There are lots of unjust laws I disagree with today, but believe aren't worth disrupting law & order over. Also, in our modern system we have universal suffrage, meaning we don't have to worry about any vestiges of monarchy, where somebody else rules over you just because. This was less true in Civil War times.
So then you'd have no problem with a violent revolt against gun control, then, I take it?
If you honestly believed that gun control was a great evil that needed to be overthrown, even at the cost of a civil war, so be it, I suppose. Disagreeing with you, I'd support the efforts of the army to put you down.
Much the same as slavery, I suppose.
Lincoln
Getting back on topic, let me just say that I will line up and say that I believe that Lincoln is a complex man, but on the whole, still a great one. He was almost always very strongly against slavery, ever since he visisted the South. I have absolutely no question of that in my head. It was BECAUSE he held to the Constitution, DF, that he didn't campaign on a platform of abolition in 1860, and why he delayed on abolition. Not opportunism. He was also a firm federalist, so yes, if you hate a real government, then you have good reasont to dislike him.
Don't believe me? Read some of Lincoln's own writings. I'm sure you can quote me lots of things that would contradict what I just said, and I'm sure I could dig up things that contradict what I said, but it's not going to work anymore. I used to think this of Lincoln because that's what history books said and that's the impression I got, but now I'm sure, and not changing my mind, because I actually read the man. And that's the best way to get a handle on what he thought, pure and simple.
Fort Barrancas
As a lieutenant without orders,
MtG... some issues with this. First of all, I distinctly you remember not making a big deal of this at first, and IIRC somebody else told the story about this to you. What does the fact that somebody as well-read as you had never heard about Ft. Barrancas until recently say about the events that occurred there (my apologies if this is inaccurate)? Not to mention that massive number of Confederate sympathizers who've been around this past century. If this was really some kind of proof about the North's aggression in the war- a main claim of the South- don't you think they'd have made more of a deal about it?
Secondly, I did a bit of work in Google, and I can't find anything on this. All that anybody says is that the men at the fort withdrew to Ft. Pickens, which stood the rest of the war. The only thing I could find on the actual incident that made the commander pack up was this:
Very vauge. What were the assaulters doing? Were they armed? How many were there? Did some guy take a rifle and fire some warning shots into the air, or were they shooting to kill? At what range did this all occur? Was there any talking involved? There weren't that many people here either, not that many witnesses.
It's possible that what you said occurred, but the Mists of Time have done a number on this incident. More to the point, it seems like nobody cared back then either. Apperantly the Floridians who did this little scouting missions did not go back terribly annoyed about this incident and make a huge fuss. Why didn't they? We don't know. But they might have had a good reason. And as pointed out, Buchanan was president at the time.
I'm not saying you're wrong, but this seems at most a historical footnote that it would be very difficult to base a serious argument off of.
Berzerker: Har har. So you believe new information if it fits your view of the world, but not otherwise?
Remember your Lincoln-Douglas debates. Douglas pointed out that sometimes the conditions for factory workers in the north was worse than that of slaves. Lincoln agreed, but there was one big difference, you see: a factory worker can go up to the foreman and say "I quit." A slave can't do that.
Also, remember your Marx. Capitalism is more advanced than feudalism. If you dislike capitalism, fine. But somebody who argues for the emancipation of slaves but not the basic equality of women, while someone not worthy of much respect today, might be quite respectable in 1000 BC and ahead of their time. In modern times, I wouldn't be real happy about somebody arresting the governer of Maryland without a trial, either. But taken in context...
As for federalism, well, ya got me there. Lincoln was the supporter of the stronger government. But I wouldn't hold up the CSA as any great anarchist paradise, either.
The difference is that the Constitution is the Supreme Law of the Land.
Yes, and you responded to the question of the Supreme Law of the Land being a monarch's whim by saying we were ignoring the difference between democracy/republic and monarchy. PRECISELY! We were ignoring that. So why were you being so sillily & blindly legalistic? You have to take into account lots of things when considering whether a law is just or unjust, and then furthermore, whether an unjust law is worth fighting over, and how. There are lots of unjust laws I disagree with today, but believe aren't worth disrupting law & order over. Also, in our modern system we have universal suffrage, meaning we don't have to worry about any vestiges of monarchy, where somebody else rules over you just because. This was less true in Civil War times.
So then you'd have no problem with a violent revolt against gun control, then, I take it?
If you honestly believed that gun control was a great evil that needed to be overthrown, even at the cost of a civil war, so be it, I suppose. Disagreeing with you, I'd support the efforts of the army to put you down.
Much the same as slavery, I suppose.
Lincoln
Getting back on topic, let me just say that I will line up and say that I believe that Lincoln is a complex man, but on the whole, still a great one. He was almost always very strongly against slavery, ever since he visisted the South. I have absolutely no question of that in my head. It was BECAUSE he held to the Constitution, DF, that he didn't campaign on a platform of abolition in 1860, and why he delayed on abolition. Not opportunism. He was also a firm federalist, so yes, if you hate a real government, then you have good reasont to dislike him.
Don't believe me? Read some of Lincoln's own writings. I'm sure you can quote me lots of things that would contradict what I just said, and I'm sure I could dig up things that contradict what I said, but it's not going to work anymore. I used to think this of Lincoln because that's what history books said and that's the impression I got, but now I'm sure, and not changing my mind, because I actually read the man. And that's the best way to get a handle on what he thought, pure and simple.
Fort Barrancas
As a lieutenant without orders,
MtG... some issues with this. First of all, I distinctly you remember not making a big deal of this at first, and IIRC somebody else told the story about this to you. What does the fact that somebody as well-read as you had never heard about Ft. Barrancas until recently say about the events that occurred there (my apologies if this is inaccurate)? Not to mention that massive number of Confederate sympathizers who've been around this past century. If this was really some kind of proof about the North's aggression in the war- a main claim of the South- don't you think they'd have made more of a deal about it?
Secondly, I did a bit of work in Google, and I can't find anything on this. All that anybody says is that the men at the fort withdrew to Ft. Pickens, which stood the rest of the war. The only thing I could find on the actual incident that made the commander pack up was this:
Despite its dilapidated condition, Lieutenant Adam J. Slemmer, who was in charge of United States forces at Fort Barrancas, determined that Pickens was more defensible than any of the other posts in the area. His decision to abandon Barrancas was hastened when, around midnight of January 8, 1861, his guards repelled a group of men intending to take the fort. Some historians note that this could be considered the first shots fired by United States forces in the Civil War.
It's possible that what you said occurred, but the Mists of Time have done a number on this incident. More to the point, it seems like nobody cared back then either. Apperantly the Floridians who did this little scouting missions did not go back terribly annoyed about this incident and make a huge fuss. Why didn't they? We don't know. But they might have had a good reason. And as pointed out, Buchanan was president at the time.
I'm not saying you're wrong, but this seems at most a historical footnote that it would be very difficult to base a serious argument off of.
Berzerker: Har har. So you believe new information if it fits your view of the world, but not otherwise?
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