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To: Arkinsaw

I agree to a point, but it's not quite as evenly split as you seem to be saying. (If I'm wrong there I apologize for misinterpreting your excellent post.) It's not as if everyone in Lincoln's time thought slavery was just fine and that one had to be a radical to hold the view similar to the current one. Slavery was not an acceptable establishment to many, or even most--including many southerners. So it's not as if by saying slavery was an evil that should be abolished in the nineteenth century one is being a revisionist, when in fact many believed that at the time. It's those who say the war was not about slavery who are doing the revizin'.


10 posted on 02/19/2005 12:14:45 AM PST by Darkwolf377 ("Drowning someone...I wouldn't have a part in that."--Teddy K)
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To: Darkwolf377
I agree to a point, but it's not quite as evenly split as you seem to be saying. (If I'm wrong there I apologize for misinterpreting your excellent post.) It's not as if everyone in Lincoln's time thought slavery was just fine and that one had to be a radical to hold the view similar to the current one. Slavery was not an acceptable establishment to many, or even most--including many southerners. So it's not as if by saying slavery was an evil that should be abolished in the nineteenth century one is being a revisionist, when in fact many believed that at the time. It's those who say the war was not about slavery who are doing the revizin'.

I've heard Southern partisans say many times that the Civil War was not about slavery. Thats not rational of course. The institution of slavery was the focal point and the trigger. But at the same time, I hear Northern partisans state give slavery as the sole cause of the conflict. Thats just simly two competing sound bites, neither of which add anything at all to understanding. Both pure propaganda.

The fact is that the Civil War is the most complex political event/eruption in US history. It's causation cannot be boiled down to one simple statement and maintain intellectual honesty. Slavery cannot be tossed out and still maintain intellectual honesty.

In reality, the reasons for conflict change for both sides as the war progresses. In fact, in many aspects, in the north the war becomes more about slavery as time passes and in the south the war becomes less about slavery as time passes. Partisans of both sides seize whatever fits their beliefs from this continuum and hold it up as a picture of the whole. Its like someone asking what a NASCAR race is like and having one person show them a photo of a crash and another show them a photo of the Winner's Circle.

Secession was more about slavery in the deep South states, whereas it was less about slavery as you move geographically farther from the deep South areas. For instance the concept of honor, local and regional loyalties, and opposition to what was viewed as military "coercion" of fellow states played a large role in the secession of states farther from the center. Whereas in the center, slavery was a clearly stated impetus in secession documents. You can not make the statement "The Southern states seceded over slavery" and give a clear picture of the whole.

We see these threads constantly and they are always the same. One side or the other trots out pieces of evidence to support their sound-bite one-liner capsule history and flings it at the other side. Then vice-versa.

The facts that are trotted out for one side or the other are generally correct, just as the photos of a NASCAR race are factual. Many times both sets of facts are contradictory, yet both true. Thats because they are part of a complex whole and not individual proofs.

So many in these threads start with a belief, and then mine the complexity for things that support that belief rather than studying the eruption holistically and establishing a belief based on that study.

I agree with your statement in regard to the common views of slavery at the time, even in the South. Lets put it this way, if you judge certain Lincoln comments by modern standards he is an out-and-out racist. But it is ridiculous to make such a judgment because its fairly clear that his views of the matter were somewhat advanced for the time. In addition, he was a politician who had to operate in a political environment where a large portion of the electorate, even in the north, were less advanced (to put it kindly). Lincoln said things from time to time to appeal to, or assuage, the feelings of that portion of the body politic. It is ridiculous to take such statements out of their political and temporal context and yank them into the modern day to call Lincoln a "racist" in the modern sense.

Similarly, we all know that there were fire-eaters. We also know that Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee were quite different from them. We know that a person like Patrick Cleburne didn't have an interest in the maintenance of slavery at all. We know that Alexander Stephens actually had more of a constitutionalist view of the situation than he did a social (slavery) view of it. Yet we trot out a Stephens political speech, presented to fire-eaters for political reasons, as a generic reflection of the Confederate leadership's primary motivations. That is as lame as calling Lincoln a racist based on similar constructions.

Such as trotting out Lincoln's statement that he would maintain slavery to preserve the Union (which he certainly would have) as evidence of inherent racism or lack of real concern over the fate of slaves. Thats fairly ridiculous (and was originally meant to be a facetious turn of the tables) and ignores that his views early in the war and later in the war were altered by events. We trot out comments of his in regard to the rights of blacks and whites in a politically charged environment as reflective of his inner views. Quite a reach.

Similarly, regardless of his views at the start of the war (which were fairly moderate actually), by the end of it Jefferson Davis was so wrapped up in independence for the sake of independence that I do not believe that slavery played any part at all in his thinking.

I've read hundreds of books and articles on the war from all sorts of points of view. My fundamental conception of the war is vastly different than it was when I first started studying it. I still find new facts that alter my views of the event from time to time. But the rate of change in my views has declined steadily as time has gone by.

There is plenty of blame to go around for the Civil War and plenty of abuses on both sides. Those who continually try to place blame on one side or the other in these threads will simply fail. It is sad to see facts ignored because they don't fit the propaganda of one side or the other. Those who engage in it are doing a disservice to the memory of both Lincoln and Lee who, despite any other flaws, desired an honorable reconciliation and reunion with malice toward none.

When you see the words "The war was not about slavery" you have someone trying to sell you a simplistic sound-bite for modern political or psychological reasons and not historical ones. When you see the words "The cause of the Civil War was slavery period" you have someone trying to sell you a politically correct sound-bite history and dismissing the complexity of event for personal reasons.

Its not a black and white answer. Very few things are.
18 posted on 02/19/2005 1:55:07 AM PST by Arkinsaw
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