Posted on 07/26/2014 7:34:52 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
yea I see my error, thanks I have not notice it in the last 4 years, also hanging the traitors..
So was Reagan “flawed” when he nominated this Kennedy?
This Kennedy must be a shrewd politician, an old Ford man who could deceive Ronald W. Reagan.
But the underlying contention -- that the south's economy was reliant on slave labor -- is true.
To that point, the plantation owner could well produce a 1000 (or more) bales of cotton. But twenty of the smallholders were more likely to produce something like 50 bales of cotton, not a comparable 1000. A standard bale is 500 lbs -- and that is a whole lot of cotton to pick.
Per the National Cotton Council...
Cotton bolls range in size from under 3 grams to over 6 grams per boll. Seed accounts for about 60% of this weight; the remainder is lint. This translates into about 200 to 400 bolls to produce a pound of lint, or 100,000 to 200,000 bolls per bale.
Pre-Civil War, figure 3 grams per boll (or less). Thus, the simple logistics of a cotton harvest (not to mention the tending) severely limited a smallholder's productivity.
The fact is that the primary agricultural crops of the early south -- cotton, indigo, tobacco, etc. -- were all extremely labor-intensive, thereby lending themselves to a plantation economy. There was a reason why slaves had been introduced into the south in the first place. Which is the same reason why the south's economy remained shackled to them -- until, finally, machinery changed the equation.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/01/0131_030203_jubilee2_2.html
All your examples concerning cotton relate to an era several decades after the 1790s. During the 1790s, tobacco was the main southern crop in Virginia and NC and cotton was grown mostly in SC and Georgia. And the territories that became the other southern states hadn't even been opened for very much settlement.
At the time the Constitution was written, the economy of the southern states was totally reliant on slave labor.
The remark relates to the 1790s, not 1850. Much of central Alabama was still inhabited by the Creek Indians until their defeat by Andrew Jackson in 1814. The cotton growing south didn't exist in 1790.
The link above went dead for some reason.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/01/0131_030203_jubilee2_2.html
Buy that?
At the time, I believe the most important single crop in the south was indigo -- concentrated in South Carolina and grown in the hot, humid coastal plain.
Very labor intensive -- moreso even than cotton.
Frankly, I don't know why we're still quibbling on this topic. On the one hand, it seems obvious that "totally" was an overstatement and thus inaccurate. And, by the same token, it seems obvious that -- even in the 1790's -- the economy of the south (defined as Virginia thru Georgia) was largely (mainly, importantly, strongly) reliant on slave labor.
Indeed, the best proof of that claim may be that the southern states were prepared to depart the Confederation over it. And they were doubtless the best judges of just how reliant their economy was on that "peculiar institution" at the time.
Which was my original point and still is my main point. So there's little point in continuing this.
Of course it’s flawed. It was written by humans.
It’s still orders of magnitude better than any of the alternatives the Left longs for.
The Constitution is not deeply flawed. It has been amended to fit the changing values of the people of this country as they more adhere to morality with regard to slavery. As far as everything else is concerned, the Constitution is more than adequate. Justice Kennedy is trying to make a legacy for himself by trashing the document that has been his bread winner for a lot of years, knowing he is on his way out. You’d think he’d have a lot more decency!
The most important (and first) commercial crop in the south up until the revolution was tobacco, concentrated in Virginia, Maryland and NC. The link in #67 addresses that.
In all fairness to Reagan, he did nominate 2 other people (rejected by the Dems) before nominating Kennedy to the court.
He was dealing with a nasty Dem controlled senate for most of his presidency.
Sorry judge Kennedy, but the Founders were much more intelligent than you.
5.56mm
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