You can look at the moon and see a thing on fire, but I just told you precisely what I thought. So either do a better job of ignoring me or a better job of understanding me. In either event refrain from speaking for me. You have enough on your plate as it is.
I think for now I will quote you, but thanx for bossing me again, I kinda missed it...kinda
Town says, "You can look at the moon and see a thing on fire"
And that is quite beautiful and perhaps he should use that as the title for a story with sadly horrific mistakes.
Maybe the opposite of it is what the South thought could happen if they tried to secede, for when they reached for the moon they got the ball of fire. But I think this description is also accurate about many views of the South's past.
I know of one man, born and reared in a Carolina who fought in the Revolutionary War. His reward was land in the area of Tennessee where he would settle it with others and produce a family. Out of all his offspring and he had many- only one would become a farmer, or rather have an orchard to produce wine, and he had slaves. His siblings were towns folk, running a family owned store mostly.
This one slave owner had an alienated son who stole some money his father had buried during this Civil War time and he went to Texas where the farm land was cheap to settle the land.
And there the people built farms and roads and small bridges to cover washed out road areas and before there was a town in this rural area they shared one church building taking turns getting to use it about once every third Sunday for their particular Christian faith.
When there were no slaves any more this man still grew cotton, a town was formed, three cotton gins existed, and he had families of color living in small houses on his farm, helping him work the fields with his family. No slaves, but what stopped cotton production wasn't the abolition of slavery - it was the tired exhausted land giving increasingly poor grade cotton.
I do not know how this man's relatives fared back in Tennessee because of the Civil War, but he left and the times that stopped him from growing any bigger or richer really had nothing to do with the North.
So when some idiot says why so many Southerners joined in seceding from the Union when so few had any slaves at all and were not plantation owners, I have to rely on what I know instead of his overly confident inability to understand.
The people did not have authority over them telling them to build the land - they listened to themselves. The towns, the churches the graveyards - they did it all. They were their own government.
This site below will say the poor southern farmers backed the secession because they all hoped to be wealthy plantation owners one day with slaves of their own.
Those who believe that are even more ignorant than the one who wrote it. He at least thought he had to come up with something since he was going to try to answer the question. He can't very well write an article and say, "I have no idea."
But the same kind of people who create their own volunteer fire department, build their own buildings and so on do not want someone infringing on their rights to self govern. Is that hard to understand, I don't think so.
And that is the kind of people who made up the South.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/outlo...e-south-seceded/2011/01/03/ABHr6jD_story.html