Got it.awesome guy wrote:Showing that it's economics shows cause over having slaves vs having slaves to feed grapes to you all day.ip_law-hokie wrote:USN_Hokie wrote:People talk past each other on this. Yes it was about slavery. Yes it was about economics. The two are irrevocably intertwined.
Well, yes Cap'n. The South's economy was premised on slave labor. It's really not that difficult unless you want to make it difficult, presumably in order to assuage one's own guilt and to justify one's support of a losing, traitor, rogue regime that got their ass kicked while trying to defend the institution of slavery.
The Myth of the Kindly Gen. Lee
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Re: The Myth of the Kindly Gen. Lee
With their Cap’n and Chief Intelligence Officer having deserted them, River, Ham and Joe valiantly continue their whataboutismistic last stand of the DJT apology tour.
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Re: The Myth of the Kindly Gen. Lee
That's what I saidawesome guy wrote:Other way, that was to diminish their representation.133743Hokie wrote:Missouri compromise. Everyone knew the country was expanding and that new states would not be slave states. The south's power (slaves as 3/5 to boost population and seats in the house) was going to quickly be diluted if not eroded and the north was going to then outlaw slavery.UpstateSCHokie wrote:Well he said it was the primary reason for secession.Hokie CPA wrote:In fairness to nolan, he didn't say slavery was the reason for the war. He correctly said it was the reason for secession. The war was started because Lincoln invaded the sovereign Confederacy over some misguided perception that somehow states couldn't leave this club they had voluntarily joined, even though every state believed in the right to secession. Massachusetts had even advocated its own secession about 40 years earlier. And these CalExit fruitcakes still think they have a right to secede.
The War Between the States was started primarily because Lincoln didn't want to be the guy who broke the United States.
I'm still not clear why the states felt they needed to secede to preserve slavery when the north was not trying to end it (until later in the war). In Lincoln's own words:nolanvt wrote: Slavery was a primary reason the southern states seceded and is supported from their secession documents.
http://www.abrahamlincolnonline.org/lin ... reeley.htmMy paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that. What I do about slavery, and the colored race, I do because I believe it helps to save the Union; and what I forbear, I forbear because I do not believe it would help to save the Union
Ending slavery was not an objective of the war when it started.
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Re: The Myth of the Kindly Gen. Lee
Yes.. that's certainly true.USN_Hokie wrote:People talk past each other on this. Yes it was about slavery. Yes it was about economics. The two are irrevocably intertwined.
I will comment that saying economics rather than slavery serves the purposes of those who like to diminish the racial aspect of it.
You are 100% correct though. Saying economics is the same thing as saying slavery.
Re: The Myth of the Kindly Gen. Lee
Abraham Lincoln was more concerned with preserving the union (and yeah, that was 99% about economics) than ending slavery IMHO. Plenty of folks in the South cited slavery as a reason for secession and that's a legitimate thing to point out, but slavery was going to end anyways, it was only a matter of time.ip_law-hokie wrote:USN_Hokie wrote:People talk past each other on this. Yes it was about slavery. Yes it was about economics. The two are irrevocably intertwined.
Well, yes Cap'n. The South's economy was premised on slave labor. It's really not that difficult unless you want to make it difficult, presumably in order to assuage one's own guilt and to justify one's support of a losing, traitor, rogue regime that got their ass kicked while trying to defend the institution of slavery.
I'm not expert on civil war history...just MHO. I don't really have any dog in the fight except that the lamentations of those bemoaning these statues are an irrational hypersensitivity to the issue. The people complaining should invest that time making their lives better instead of wasting it blaming inanimate objects.
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Re: The Myth of the Kindly Gen. Lee
And those that yell slavery, slavery, slavery serve their own purpose as well.HvilleHokie wrote:Yes.. that's certainly true.USN_Hokie wrote:People talk past each other on this. Yes it was about slavery. Yes it was about economics. The two are irrevocably intertwined.
I will comment that saying economics rather than slavery serves the purposes of those who like to diminish the racial aspect of it.
You are 100% correct though. Saying economics is the same thing as saying slavery.
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Re: The Myth of the Kindly Gen. Lee
I've been on UWS for years........seems to be a running theme133743Hokie wrote:And those that yell slavery, slavery, slavery serve their own purpose as well.HvilleHokie wrote:Yes.. that's certainly true.USN_Hokie wrote:People talk past each other on this. Yes it was about slavery. Yes it was about economics. The two are irrevocably intertwined.
I will comment that saying economics rather than slavery serves the purposes of those who like to diminish the racial aspect of it.
You are 100% correct though. Saying economics is the same thing as saying slavery.
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Re: The Myth of the Kindly Gen. Lee
http://www.vtmag.vt.edu/winter11/feature1.htmlcwtcr hokie wrote:I guess you did not listen in class, Robertson in the class I had with him said economics was the primary reason, yes slavery as part of it. Of course at the time there had been slaves by the rest of the planet before and to this day after the US Civil War. America made a correction which happens at times but yes taking down statues will stop black folks from being the overwhelming danger to life of other black folks....Charlotte just racked up its 57th murder, double last year, the stats are lots of black people.... killed by other black people. Statues have yet to kill anyone in town this year.HvilleHokie wrote:Every serious civil war historian, from James McPherson to Gary Gallagher and yes even bud Robertson agree that slavery was the primary cause of the civil war. It wasn't even really debated until the lost cause movement in the early 20th century which obfuscated the truth. This same movement, steeped in white supremacy, was also responsible for deifying southern generals. It is no coincidence that these statues were all erected in the 1920s.
As to lee himself... He was an excellent tactician. He fought on the wrong side of the civil war. The statues to him were erected as part of the lost cause movement that speaks more to a white supremacy movement in the early 20th century than to civil war history. For that reason they should come down.
Slavery, Robertson teaches his students, was unquestionably the primary cause of the war, even if the original goal of the war wasn't to end it. "For 15 years [before the war], every issue to come before Congress [had] something to do directly or indirectly with slavery," he said.
Re: The Myth of the Kindly Gen. Lee
'Buh, buh, I read an article in the Atlantic and a Howard Zinn book.'WestEndHokie39 wrote:The Civil War is one my history passions. I have read many, many different works by many authors with many viewpoints.nolanvt wrote:I understand this will go against what some of you all learned in Virginia public schools, but the facts cited in this piece should make anyone have second thoughts on some of the myths perpetuated about Gen. Lee as a person.
http://theatln.tc/2fDOn38
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You are embarrassing yourself, moreso since you graduated from a university with one of the premier Civil War scholars in the nation.
/nolan
"I predict future happiness for Americans, if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them." - Thomas Jefferson
Re: The Myth of the Kindly Gen. Lee
Because historical facts are just a political prop.ip_law-hokie wrote:He should have, as members in his family did. Losers don't get to write history, CPA.Hokie CPA wrote:Suppose Trump were to order the US Military to put down a revolt... say a bunch of people come back to stop work on the Dakota Pipeline. How many of our soldiers do you think would refuse to fire on Americans? Never mind the "It wouldn't happen" argument. It's a hypothetical. I think an awful lot of American soldiers would have a real problem following such an order. Lee had the same problem. Lincoln wanted him to invade Virginia and kill Virginians. Lee refused to do it.ip_law-hokie wrote:Robert E. Lee was given a choice to stand with his country or quit and join the opposition. He quit. He lost. And he was a traitor.Hokie CPA wrote:In fairness to nolan, he didn't say slavery was the reason for the war. He correctly said it was the reason for secession. The war was started because Lincoln invaded the sovereign Confederacy over some misguided perception that somehow states couldn't leave this club they had voluntarily joined, even though every state believed in the right to secession. Massachusetts had even advocated its own secession about 40 years earlier. And these CalExit fruitcakes still think they have a right to secede.
The War Between the States was started primarily because Lincoln didn't want to be the guy who broke the United States.
Losers still follow him today.
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"I predict future happiness for Americans, if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them." - Thomas Jefferson
- ip_law-hokie
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Re: The Myth of the Kindly Gen. Lee
According to UWS dogma, there were many reasons and slavery was just one of them. Just keep repeating that until you believe it.HvilleHokie wrote:http://www.vtmag.vt.edu/winter11/feature1.htmlcwtcr hokie wrote:I guess you did not listen in class, Robertson in the class I had with him said economics was the primary reason, yes slavery as part of it. Of course at the time there had been slaves by the rest of the planet before and to this day after the US Civil War. America made a correction which happens at times but yes taking down statues will stop black folks from being the overwhelming danger to life of other black folks....Charlotte just racked up its 57th murder, double last year, the stats are lots of black people.... killed by other black people. Statues have yet to kill anyone in town this year.HvilleHokie wrote:Every serious civil war historian, from James McPherson to Gary Gallagher and yes even bud Robertson agree that slavery was the primary cause of the civil war. It wasn't even really debated until the lost cause movement in the early 20th century which obfuscated the truth. This same movement, steeped in white supremacy, was also responsible for deifying southern generals. It is no coincidence that these statues were all erected in the 1920s.
As to lee himself... He was an excellent tactician. He fought on the wrong side of the civil war. The statues to him were erected as part of the lost cause movement that speaks more to a white supremacy movement in the early 20th century than to civil war history. For that reason they should come down.
Slavery, Robertson teaches his students, was unquestionably the primary cause of the war, even if the original goal of the war wasn't to end it. "For 15 years [before the war], every issue to come before Congress [had] something to do directly or indirectly with slavery," he said.
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With their Cap’n and Chief Intelligence Officer having deserted them, River, Ham and Joe valiantly continue their whataboutismistic last stand of the DJT apology tour.
Re: The Myth of the Kindly Gen. Lee
It was actually economics! [emoji38]ip_law-hokie wrote:According to UWS dogma, there were many reasons and slavery was just one of them. Just keep repeating that until you believe it.HvilleHokie wrote:http://www.vtmag.vt.edu/winter11/feature1.htmlcwtcr hokie wrote:I guess you did not listen in class, Robertson in the class I had with him said economics was the primary reason, yes slavery as part of it. Of course at the time there had been slaves by the rest of the planet before and to this day after the US Civil War. America made a correction which happens at times but yes taking down statues will stop black folks from being the overwhelming danger to life of other black folks....Charlotte just racked up its 57th murder, double last year, the stats are lots of black people.... killed by other black people. Statues have yet to kill anyone in town this year.HvilleHokie wrote:Every serious civil war historian, from James McPherson to Gary Gallagher and yes even bud Robertson agree that slavery was the primary cause of the civil war. It wasn't even really debated until the lost cause movement in the early 20th century which obfuscated the truth. This same movement, steeped in white supremacy, was also responsible for deifying southern generals. It is no coincidence that these statues were all erected in the 1920s.
As to lee himself... He was an excellent tactician. He fought on the wrong side of the civil war. The statues to him were erected as part of the lost cause movement that speaks more to a white supremacy movement in the early 20th century than to civil war history. For that reason they should come down.
Slavery, Robertson teaches his students, was unquestionably the primary cause of the war, even if the original goal of the war wasn't to end it. "For 15 years [before the war], every issue to come before Congress [had] something to do directly or indirectly with slavery," he said.
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