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Targeting Lost Causers
Old Virginia Blog ^ | 06/09/2009 | Richard Williams

Posted on 06/09/2009 8:47:35 AM PDT by Davy Buck

My oh my, what would the critics, the Civil War publications, publishers, and bloggers do if it weren't for the bad boys of the Confederacy and those who study them and also those who wish to honor their ancestors who fought for the Confederacy?

(Excerpt) Read more at oldvirginiablog.blogspot.com ...


TOPICS: Books/Literature; Education; History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: academia; confederacy; damnyankees; dixie; dunmoresproclamation; history; lincolnwasgreatest; neoconfeds; notthisagain; southern; southwasright
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1 posted on 06/09/2009 8:47:35 AM PDT by Davy Buck
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To: Davy Buck

There’s good money out there for anybody who can write a book about how Lincoln was the personification of evil. Thomas Dilorenzo has done quite well with his nonsense about Lincoln.


2 posted on 06/09/2009 9:00:14 AM PDT by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: Davy Buck
do if it weren't for the bad boys of the Confederacy

They(neo-yankees) would have to invent another group to make fun of, as to make their own Federal Boot Licking tendencies palpable....

3 posted on 06/09/2009 9:01:30 AM PDT by central_va (www.15thVirginia.org Co. C, Patrick Henry Rifles)
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

Yes he has. So has Lerone Bennett.


4 posted on 06/09/2009 9:02:58 AM PDT by Davy Buck
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To: Davy Buck

DiLorenzo and Bennett are two sides of the same coin.


5 posted on 06/09/2009 9:17:47 AM PDT by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: Davy Buck

There is a cultural element of the South that has been distorted by history texts since the 1870’s that warrants appreciation.

Self reliance, respect for hard work, voluntary sense of community, connectedness of family and community, genuine personal religious belief, respect for law and rightful government, and skepticism of distant central government are all factors. Most of this was learned the hard way by ancestors who experienced abuses in hard times before.

The Civil War was not about slavery, but that was a side element of the disputes. It was about conflicting economic interests.

I have stated this before and got a lot of criticism for it. I am sorry, this is how I view this event.

I do not study or read Civil War History. I do not live in the past. I have nothing but contempt for those who promoted slavery then, nor those who promote economic slavery now.

Life is about living in freedom and opposing oppression.

There is an understood concept in Texas. Leave us alone to live our lives in peace and we will get along fine, if that is not satisfactory, we will deal with it.


6 posted on 06/09/2009 9:19:14 AM PDT by Texas Fossil (Once a Republic, Now a State, Still Texas)
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To: Davy Buck

Lincoln was no angel. And it was about STATES RIGHTS, exactly what we’re trying to do here, today.

http://www.geocities.com/mark_willey/civlwar.html

Destruction of the Constitution

Lincoln suspended Habeas Corpus and 13,000 people were thrown into prison in Washington, DC, alone on charges never brought or made known. In his Proclamation of September 24, 1864, Lincoln by executive fiat ordered that all citizens who engaged in “disloyal practices” would be tried in military tribunals, with such practices decided at whim by Lincoln himself. The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Roger B. Taney informed Lincoln that he was engaged in practices that violated the Constitution he had sworn an oath to uphold. (Harold Hyman, A More Perfect Union, pp 85-86) Lincoln issued orders to arrest the octogenarian Taney but thought better of assaulting the most respected man in the country. The governor of New York reminded people that the founding fathers during the Revolution did not destroy men’s’ rights - “THEY did not say liberty was suspended, that men might be deprived of the right to trial by jury, that they might be torn from their homes by midnight intruders.”

Lincoln let his generals suspend 300 newspapers. As Encyclopedia Britannica puts it “He justified this action on the ground that he had to allow some temporary sacrifice of the Constitution in order to maintain the Union...” In other words, he destroyed the Constitution in order to save it. It is little wonder that Booth considered Lincoln a tyrant and expected Lincoln to create a monarchy. Lincoln’s model of assuming war powers and concentrating power in Washington was the precedent used by Wilson and FDR as a tool to remake America into a socialist state. Their intense desire and eagerness to grab and use this tool lead them to mistaken and harmful war-mongering. When the Constitution fails them they have only to say “this is time of war - and war gives all needed power.”

LINCOLN - 19th CENTURY HITLER

War has always been terrible, of course, and mass extermination was a regular occurrence until the development of what may be called; without irony, the rules of “civilized warfare” late in the seventeenth century. At that time Europe’s rulers, exhausted by bloody combat, came to agree on certain conventions: combat should be confined to soldiers in uniform; civilians and their property should be left alone; prisoners should be treated humanely; and defeated powers should be spared total devastation and indignity. These rules held until Lincoln violated them in the War Between the States, replacing them with the logic of annihilation that governed primitive or “primary warfare” — the unrestricted slaughter common between warring societies with no civilized principles in common.

For more than two centuries after the age of Louis XIV, European civilians were so unmolested that they often barely realized that their rulers were at war, and ordinary travel and commerce between countries usually continued during hostilities. There was courtliness between rulers and officers of opposing armies, like the jovial fraternization between common soldiers as soon as peace was restored. A sort of golden rule prevailed; each victor realized that he might be tomorrow’s loser, so everyone tried to avoid leaving a legacy of bitterness by treating the vanquished reasonably and often generously. Peace treaties politely avoided any tone of blame or recrimination.

Lincoln’s policy of waging war on civilian areas shocked European observers. Lincoln justified this on grounds that he was dealing not with a traditional war, but with a rebellion, in which the entire enemy population might be treated as criminals and traitors. The idealizers of Lincoln have blamed his policy on the generals who merely carried it out, especially Sherman and Sheridan. Of course even Lincoln was unable to apply this view consistently; to do so would have meant executing nearly every Southerner, soldier or civilian.


7 posted on 06/09/2009 9:30:08 AM PDT by HighlyOpinionated (Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann in 2012. With Liz Cheney as Secretary of State.)
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To: Davy Buck

I say that since academic/popular consensus is firmly on Lincoln’s side, and Lincoln has been set in stone as a national hero, let the Southern apologists have their fun. They’ve got some points. Lincoln had his dark side. If people like DiLorenzo stretch the truth, not many will listen. His ilk have that whole slavery stigma to overcome, which is a losing prospect.


8 posted on 06/09/2009 9:36:56 AM PDT by Tublecane
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To: HighlyOpinionated
Lincoln’s policy of waging war on civilian areas shocked European observers. Lincoln justified this on grounds that he was dealing not with a traditional war, but with a rebellion, in which the entire enemy population might be treated as criminals and traitors. The idealizers of Lincoln have blamed his policy on the generals who merely carried it out, especially Sherman and Sheridan. Of course even Lincoln was unable to apply this view consistently; to do so would have meant executing nearly every Southerner, soldier or civilian.

With malice toward none and charity for all! What a great man!

ML/NJ

9 posted on 06/09/2009 9:38:56 AM PDT by ml/nj
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To: Texas Fossil

Anyone that says anything positive about the Confederacy is going to get attacked. It is like the myths of JFK and BHO, reality can be painful. For many people, Lincoln is above human criticism. He is the Union’s Messiah as much as Obama is the Messiah of the left. Of course, there are those that romanticize about the Confederacy, too. It is easy to create that myth. I would like to see and read an accurate history of that era, but authors cannot help, it seems, but to use circular arguments that validate their own views. Maybe a hundred years from now, when people can be less emotional invested in the subject, someone will write an objective history, but it is not going to happen in my lifetime.


10 posted on 06/09/2009 9:40:46 AM PDT by Nosterrex
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To: Tublecane

Lincoln really didn’t care about slavery one way or the other - he stated so - until he realized he could use it for political gain. He supported the original 13th amendment - The Corwin amendment. Read it.


11 posted on 06/09/2009 9:47:11 AM PDT by Davy Buck
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To: Davy Buck
Davy, expect the trend to get worse.

Right now the Constitution has gone very far out of whack and balance. Power has shifted from the balanced State-Federal equation. It is now heavily weighted toward the federal side.

To correct it, a reassertion of State's Rights is beginning to be heard. Unfortunately "States' Rights" is now a code=word meaning "no civil rights for blacks." The term has been completely co-opted, making anyone calling for States' Rights a "racist."

In the popular view, the ultimate expression of States' Rights was the founding of the Confederacy, inextricably bound up with slavery.

12 posted on 06/09/2009 9:47:11 AM PDT by Kenny Bunk (The Election of 2008: Given the choice between stupid and evil, the stupid chose evil.)
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To: Davy Buck
I have noted for some years, as Mr. Williams has, that “inordinate focus” on things CSA; especially in the battlefield museum shops from Gettysburg to Manassas. Perhaps the most striking was the shop selling nothing but Confederate novelties, in an exclusive up-scale shopping mall in the heart of Washington, D.C. As I wandered in, staring wide-eyed, the shop's owner (Lebanese) strode forward smiling broadly and nodding his head as I pointed in utter disbelief to the Confederate battle standards, T-shirts, hats, beach towels...”Yes...yes...You are thinking in this place, why am I still alive?” Laughing hysterically now, he continued “I DON’ KNOW! These (Black) people they are crazy! My best customers!” Go figure.
13 posted on 06/09/2009 9:48:16 AM PDT by PowderMonkey (Will Work for Ammo)
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To: Kenny Bunk

Actually, the principle of states rights was used by Northern states to ignore the Fugitive slave act.

Don’t surrender because of lies.


14 posted on 06/09/2009 9:49:22 AM PDT by Davy Buck
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To: PowderMonkey

Simple economics. It sells.


15 posted on 06/09/2009 9:50:19 AM PDT by Davy Buck
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To: HighlyOpinionated
Lincoln was no angel.

He was not elected to the post of angel, he was elected president of the US. Being president can be a rough job, especially during a Civil War. I do not think you can examine Lincoln completely without knowing what was simultaneously happening in Saint Jeff's Dixie of sweetness and light. When Lincoln was merely jailing suspected bridge burners in Maryland, the Davis's thugs were hanging them in Knoxville. One of the best defense for Lincoln's actions can be found in looking at the way the rebels treated their own home front.

16 posted on 06/09/2009 9:51:31 AM PDT by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: Texas Fossil

I don’t live in the past either, but I do study it. The current faddish trend is for every generation to be so self-absorbed as to think they are smarter than all the previous generations. How’s that working out?


17 posted on 06/09/2009 9:52:41 AM PDT by Davy Buck
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To: Nosterrex

Thank you for such balanced comments.

I stated that I have not studied Civil War History and do not dwell in the past.

My ancestors left the deep south because of intolerable government abuse.

My grandfather said his Dad never talked about it, but the experience left indelible impressions on him. He knew real hunger as a child. He always had a huge garden, far too much to eat, and was quiet and knowledgeable.

He and his mother left Alabama after the father left them, the father was wanted for murder of carpet baggers and would have been hanged if he was caught. He was not caught, but wound up in Arkansas. The family found him after the turn of the century.

You wonder why so many of the courthouse were burned to the ground in much of the south. Part of the time it was to erase the records.


18 posted on 06/09/2009 9:52:50 AM PDT by Texas Fossil (Once a Republic, Now a State, Still Texas)
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To: Davy Buck
I don’t live in the past either, but I do study it.

I understand knowing the past, but as someone previously posted it is difficult to find a balanced perspective to something that was a complex event.

I tend to accept my ancestors "biases" over what I read in print now. History texts nearer to the actual event are probably more accurate, but have to be filtered for biases.

I have a copy of "The Great Conspiracy" it's origins & history .. by John A. Logan copyright 1886 that I found interesting. It has been many years since I read it.

19 posted on 06/09/2009 10:03:43 AM PDT by Texas Fossil (Once a Republic, Now a State, Still Texas)
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To: Davy Buck

The only “lost cause” is a true little ‘r’ republic that we were supposed to live in before the Yankees destroyed it.


20 posted on 06/09/2009 10:10:38 AM PDT by central_va (www.15thVirginia.org Co. C, Patrick Henry Rifles)
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