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How the Civil War Changed the World
New York Times Disunion ^ | May 19, 2015 | Don Doyle

Posted on 05/19/2015 10:33:26 PM PDT by iowamark

Even while the Civil War raged, slaves in Cuba could be heard singing, “Avanza, Lincoln, avanza! Tu eres nuestra esperanza!” (Onward, Lincoln, Onward! You are our hope!) – as if they knew, even before the soldiers fighting the war far to the North and long before most politicians understood, that the war in America would change their lives, and the world.

The secession crisis of 1860-1861 threatened to be a major setback to the world antislavery movement, and it imperiled the whole experiment in democracy. If slavery was allowed to exist, and if the world’s leading democracy could fall apart over the issue, what hope did freedom have? European powers wasted no time in taking advantage of the debacle. France and Britain immediately each sent fleets of warships with the official purpose of observing the imminent war in America. In Paris, A New York Times correspondent who went by the byline “Malakoff” thought that the French and British observers “may be intended as a sort of escort of honor for the funeral of the Great Republic.”

...the French forced Benito Juárez, the republican leader, to flee the capital and eventually installed the Austrian archduke Maximilian as emperor of Mexico.

European conservatives welcomed the dismemberment of the “once United States” and the bursting of the “republican bubble” that, beginning with the French Revolution, had inspired revolution and unrest in Europe. Republicanism had been in retreat in Europe since the failed revolutions of 1848, and some predicted that all the wayward American republics would eventually find their way back to some form of monarchy, or seek protection under European imperial rule. When Lincoln, in the darkest days of the war, referred to America as the “last best hope of earth,” he was hardly boasting...

(Excerpt) Read more at opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com ...


TOPICS: Education; History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: 1848; 1860; 1861; 186103; 186110; 186506; 1866; 186705; 1868; avanzalincolnavanza; benitojuarez; brazil; canada; civilwar; cuba; demokkkrats; dominicanrepublic; dompedro; dompedroii; electricchain; europe; france; freewomblaw; garibaldi; germany; gloriousrevolution; godsgravesglyphs; greatestpresident; havana; humanrights; lastbesthope; maximilian; maximillion; mexico; napoleon3; napoleoniii; newyork; newyorkcity; newyorkslimes; newyorktimes; onwardlincolnonward; ottovonbismarck; popepiusix; queretero; republicanism; risorgimento; russia; slavery; suffrage; unitedkingdom
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To: central_va
Was Reagan like that? Bush 43? No. What you saw in one speech you got the same the next day.

Lincoln was in the same position that politicians from the early Republic down to Truman, Eisenhower, Eisenhower Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon were in.

Have you really forgotten just exactly who it was that wanted reassurances from national politicians that went against what they really believed (and got them)?

You must have a very short memory.

If Reagan was able to avoid all that, he might be willing to admit that he was lucky in coming along when he did.

And Bush? Not the best example. What you got one year was likely to be an apology or a repudiation of what you got a few years before.

141 posted on 05/20/2015 3:17:57 PM PDT by x
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To: iowamark

This fellow is a well-informed idiot.

These actions of European powers in the Western Hemisphere are better explained by New England’s consolidation of it’s power.
The new United States was a centralized, mercantile nation run by and for the small Northeast ‘aristocracy’.
The old United States was respected, but the new one was feared.
Of course other nations turned tail and ran.


142 posted on 05/20/2015 4:05:54 PM PDT by mrsmith (Dumb sluts: Lifeblood of the Media, Backbone of the Democrat/RINO Party!)
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To: x

Hi.
If you know offhand, were “free womb” bills of any import in antebellum US?
I don’t remember any consideration of that idea by the Founders but it seems the idea would have been considered.


143 posted on 05/20/2015 4:11:21 PM PDT by mrsmith (Dumb sluts: Lifeblood of the Media, Backbone of the Democrat/RINO Party!)
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To: PeaRidge
More research on your part would reveal that the official statements of the secession conventions were those approved by the people. The “causes” publications were editorials.

Uh huh. You're going to argue with a straight face that while the actual ordinances of secession issued by the conventions are valid documents because they were later voted on by the people, the declarations of causes issued by those same conventions in which they explain the reasons for their actions are just so much hot air, not to be taken seriously, and it's all the media's fault, anyway. I will say you never disappoint in your capacity for willful obtuseness.

Here's the debate at the South Carolina secession convention over their document.

A lot of good stuff there. I particularly like the part where someone asks if they should mention the tariff and Keitt says that this isn't about the tariff and someone else compares this to the Declaration of Independence. (Of course, that was never ratified by the people, either, was it? So I guess it can't really be considered more than an "editorial.")

By the way, the South Carolina convention was called by the legislature as "a Convention of the People." There was no direct popular vote to enact their measure. In fact, all of the secession conventions were Conventions of the People, since the Constitution was ratified in the same way, and only three states put the resolutions of those conventions to a vote. Actually they had to vote twice in Tennessee to get the result they wanted.

Here's a link to the Proceedings of the Mississippi secession convention, in which you can find the committee being appointed to write the declaration of causes, the submission of the final document to the convention, the vote adopting it, and "Resolved, That twenty-five hundred copies of the Declaration and Address of the immediate causes of the secession of Mississippi from the Federal Union, together with the Ordinance of Secession, with the names of the members who signed it, be printed in pamphlet form, and distributed to the members of this Convention." No, not at all an official document, right?

In the Proceedings of the Georgia secession convention, you can find this:

Mr. Nisbet, from the committee of seventeen, to report the Ordinance of Secession, after stating that it was written by Mr. Toombs made the following REPORT, which was taken up, read, and adopted.

"The people of Georgia having dissolved their political connection with the Government of the United States of America, present to their confederates, and the world, the causes which have led to the separation. For the last ten years…

You can find the same for Texas here

144 posted on 05/20/2015 5:15:35 PM PDT by Bubba Ho-Tep ("The rat always knows when he's in with weasels." --Tom Waits)
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To: piasa

“You would not were you born a slave.”

The CW wasn’t about slavery. Every damn day, if I don’t get a reaction post from faggot loving Freepers, then the historical imbeciles. i swear Fr has been infiltrated by liberal morons..


145 posted on 05/20/2015 5:40:44 PM PDT by max americana (fired liberals in our company last election, and I laughed while they cried (true story))
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To: rockrr

“I thank God it failed.”

Can you also thank god about obama? I mean, I prayed hard in 2008 and 2016 that he won;t be elected, but damn...


146 posted on 05/20/2015 5:42:41 PM PDT by max americana (fired liberals in our company last election, and I laughed while they cried (true story))
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To: iowamark

The lpve of money and power by the north was the cause of ghe war. The same thing that controls the US govt today.


147 posted on 05/20/2015 5:53:11 PM PDT by Carry me back (.)
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To: max americana
Can you also thank god about obama?

No. Øbozo's success came at all of our expense, just like the "success" of the insurrection would have come at the expense of generational warfare on this continent.

148 posted on 05/20/2015 5:54:52 PM PDT by rockrr (Everything is different now...)
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To: central_va

The north was made to hate through the media. Which was controled by the rich, like today. The north wasnt smart enough to see they were being used.


149 posted on 05/20/2015 5:57:00 PM PDT by Carry me back (.)
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To: Sherman Logan

The south didnt wage war against the US govt. TheUS govt did against them. The US govt claimed to be for thd people but at that point refined itself to be for the super rich an against self governance. Obama talked about whites attacking blacks in 1921 today, as if he knows the reason why, if it happened at all. Of course he said it was racism. Only one reason the left keeps attacking whites. To justify more handouts and socialism. He couldnt care less about 1921. Its all about greed and power.


150 posted on 05/20/2015 6:06:46 PM PDT by Carry me back (.)
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To: x

It just occurred to me how you and Lincoln are so much alike; both of you are disgusting slime balls of BS.


151 posted on 05/20/2015 6:07:47 PM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: DoodleDawg

You mean the white states ?


152 posted on 05/20/2015 6:12:16 PM PDT by Carry me back (.)
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To: central_va

They talk about Virginia trending purple. If so ,thats because northerners have moved into the state. Which makes the point the south was right in wanting to leave.


153 posted on 05/20/2015 6:15:48 PM PDT by Carry me back (.)
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To: Carry me back

The state legislature is blue.


154 posted on 05/20/2015 6:17:59 PM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: Bubba Ho-Tep

Many thanks, Bubba, for posting the link to the Texas document. I’ve not seen that before. The document lists the dates of abandonment of the forts in the state, the first comprehensive listing of those dates I’ve seen.

Whoever pieced the document together or reassembled it sometime in the past, might have done it from partial pieces or loose pages as they sometimes got the pieces put together incorrectly. Even so, it is still an interesting document.

I see mention in it of my great great grandfather’s commander in the war, John Salmon R.I.P. Ford, a former Texas Ranger captain who was hell on wheels. They drove the Federals down the Rio Grande Valley to an offshore island alhough the Federals had three times as many men.


155 posted on 05/20/2015 6:29:24 PM PDT by rustbucket
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To: urbanpovertylawcenter
If the South had been successful, Germany wins WWI and no Hitler no holocaust and no Israel, no A bomb, no cold war, no ISIS, no Al Qada and most importantly no Obama.....

I guess it was worth the freedom of 3 million slaves, millions of whose descendants have been casually aborted in America since Roe V Wade and thousands locked away in the awful inner city slums of our nations decaying megatropoli, Chicago,Detroit, Baltimore, Washington,DC.

No, the war was not about Slavery it was about savagery and taking the heart and gold out of the South.


Hard to say. I'm sure if the Confederates have won, parts of history as we know it would have been butterflied away. I think we might have had an alternate World War I since it was the Empire system in Europe lining up to battle. World War II might have not happened. Some alternate historians have the North and South fighting each other while others have them as allies on the same side. One interesting thing in Harry Turtledove's series on a Southern victory was where the US was a lot more socialist.
156 posted on 05/20/2015 6:30:34 PM PDT by Nowhere Man (Mom I miss you! (8-20-1938 to 11-18-2013) Cancer sucks)
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To: Jed Eckert
If slaves will make good soldiers, then our whole theory of slavery is wrong." - Gen. Howell Cobb

They did, and it was.

157 posted on 05/20/2015 7:30:27 PM PDT by Eric Pode of Croydon (I wish someone would tell me what "diddy wah diddy" means.....)
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To: Verginius Rufus

“than in the Upper South, whose states did not secede until after Fort Sumter),”

Ft Sumter isn’t what prompted the Upper South states to secede. They seceded in response to Lincoln’s April 15th call for 75,000 troops to force the Deep South back into the Union.

Had Lincoln been patient instead of eager for war the Confederacy would have been smaller and not likely to last long. Instead his call for war resulted in a much larger and more powerful opponent.


158 posted on 05/20/2015 9:59:06 PM PDT by Pelham (The refusal to deport is defacto amnesty)
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To: iowamark
Today, the US leads the war on Islamic terror.

I surely must be missing something. Care to drop us a hint of how this could be?

159 posted on 05/20/2015 10:11:58 PM PDT by onedoug
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To: Pelham
Had Lincoln been patient instead of eager for war the Confederacy would have been smaller and not likely to last long. Instead his call for war resulted in a much larger and more powerful opponent

His call for troops was in response to the South starting the war. Lincoln didn't start it.

160 posted on 05/21/2015 3:46:03 AM PDT by DoodleDawg
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