Putting junk food into the basket of your motorized shopping cart should be illegal
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Moral outrage and the U.S. Civil War
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Originally posted by giblets View PostThis is a strawman, I did not claim that South Africa as a whole wasn't backwards.
You (apparently) claimed the CSA would be on par with Central America which is an exaggeration because the existence of slavery wouldn't have undermined the productivity of white workers to anywhere near that extent.
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You still don't seem to be accounting for (or making an argument against) any of this:
a) the North was demonstrably already able to conquer the CSA
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c) the North had a growing sentiment against slavery
d) the rest of the world had a growing sentiment against slavery
e) the CSA was heavily reliant on exports
f) the CSA didn't have the capital to industrialize anywhere as fast as the North
g) slaves are even more inefficient in industrial economies if the CSA ever managed to get that done
h) most of the whites in the CSA were not slave owners, and would have eventually had more opportunities emigrating to the North
i) Manifest Destiny
j) Monroe Doctrine
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Half of those things are irrelevant because the premise is that the North is either unable or unwilling to conquer the South. And you could claim the North didn't have sufficient capital to fully industrialize itself- after all British investors put plenty of money into railroads in the US. Also, Northern industry benefited from high tariffs and the USA's protectionist policies would have been less effective in promoting industrialization if the CSA were independent. Slaves would be employed in areas where they have a comparative advantage- that is wherever the efficiency gap between slave labor and paid labor is smallest- while paid labor did everything else. Since cotton is a fungible commodity it would be difficult to harm the South's cotton exports through a boycott. In the 19th century the US was reliant on British support in order to actually enforce the Monroe Doctrine and the British government frankly wouldn't have seen US dominance over the CSA as being in Britain's interest.
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Originally posted by giblets View PostHalf of those things are irrelevant because the premise is that the North is either unable or unwilling to conquer the South.
The CSA was already too weak militarily to protect/promote their interests (they did very well with what they had in the Civil War and still lost), and would have continued to lose ground to the North in that regard. Whether this was displayed in outright conquest, or in other ways (using the position of strength to favor extractive US ventures in the CSA) doesn't so much matter.
And you could claim the North didn't have sufficient capital to fully industrialize itself- after all British investors put plenty of money into railroads in the US.
Claiming the South was industrializing slower is just pointing to an obvious historical fact.
Also, Northern industry benefited from high tariffs and the USA's protectionist policies would have been less effective in promoting industrialization if the CSA were independent.
Slaves would be employed in areas where they have a comparative advantage- that is wherever the efficiency gap between slave labor and paid labor is smallest- while paid labor did everything else.
Also you have failed to address the point where the higher paying jobs would have been in the North, drawing much of the most capable and motivated free Southerners away.
Since cotton is a fungible commodity it would be difficult to harm the South's cotton exports through a boycott.
The extent of boycotts would have increased internationally (and even internally) over time. By 1950's a worldwide boycott and banning would have happened. Slavery was a doomed system.
Demonstrably the US was able to harm the South's cotton exports through a blockade as well. One of the disadvantages of being weak militarily.
In the 19th century the US was reliant on British support in order to actually enforce the Monroe Doctrine and the British government frankly wouldn't have seen US dominance over the CSA as being in Britain's interest.
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Would you buy something that was made in North Korea if the quality of the product was acceptable...?
Or do you boycott everything that was made in a country that doesn't respect human rights?
Do blood diamonds sell?
You're just making shaky hypothetical claims and then getting butthurt when other people don't accept them.
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I see you're dodging the question. I'm a little confused to whether you are doing so because you are afraid to admit you would buy slaved products or whether it's because you are afraid to admit near universal boycotts would have been an eventuality?
Originally posted by giblets View PostWould you buy something that was made in North Korea if the quality of the product was acceptable...?
Or do you boycott everything that was made in a country that doesn't respect human rights?
The South had a large reliance on slaves, so a large portion of their economy (including their main exports) would have been produced via slavery and definitely should be boycotted. The CSA could not have hidden millions of slaves and their treatment from public view the way some small entities are able to do to fool consumers.
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