This is kind of what I'm talking about. The whole "it could have been anything" is just bull**** (you kind of go back and forth, say it was the main issue, but it could have been anything).
They didn't really do anything when the Tariff of 1832 came up except voice their displeasure.
There are people who vehemently disagree with government wiretaps on principle, but as heated as they are they are not going to go to war over it. What if the government baned interstate travel for the same reasons? Would an armed uprising over that be because of the ban on government travel (a devestating real world action) or the government overstepping its bounds at the expense of their liberties (a principle). Or both?
Unless you mean it would give the North the ability to legislate over the South on the issue of slavery.
He actually said that 2 books were coursework and all 4 were used in his studies. I'm assuming the other 2 were used in his thesis.
Please. [An extreme minority of] Historians had completely devalued the central role slavery played. It was all "states rights", not slavery crap, until recently, when the "revisionists" said, hey, wait a sec, states rights is basically code for slavery and it was more central than they put on.
Why exactly did I hear so much of in a positive light by the right (of which I was a part at the time) while growing up? The Lost Cause was a myth, created by white Southerners:
And again, what the laymen thinks is not important here. I am sure the KKK and others had followings that believed all sorts of things. They are not the same people as renouwned tenured hitorians at the nations greates universities, North and South.
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