I have read some. They sounded to me like they thought the North wanted to either get a huge cut of their income or stop their ability to make a huge income. I do not know of any writer but A
Lincoln who wrote as both one who cared about both principle and politics. Show me another Yank back then that did value humans highly, please.
...
You could also point out that prior to the closing of the Atlantic slave trade, many in the North were perfectly happy to make their living off of the filthy industry, and that the rise in the abolitionist movement coincides with the transition of the slave system into a regional interest.
Yes but you did it so well.
But that still doesn't change the fundamental moral calculus of human ownership.
For a Christian like myself slavery was doomed for Christians if they wanted to be Christians free from being convicted by the Bible.
However, nothing like that protects employees who may feel helpless and forced in order to live. YOU may not care about things like this... But I do.
If it took a change in the economic situation to make the moral situation clearer, then better sooner than later.
We differ here, but child labor laws and other such things have made things better.
If tenement farming was such a great system by comparison, why did the South require laws that stripped the former slaves of the normal freedoms that this country was supposedly built to protect?
Please don't be a dummy now at this late date. Tenement farming is not great. And the South did not have laws that stripped former slaves of freedoms - it did try to control something, I think. But I don't want to get into that. Have you looked at what was done to the South?
You still aren't dealing with the fundamental nature of slavery in the South.
Yes well it was a hundred and fifty something years ago.
... There's nothing illegitimate about not wishing to compete with countries that don't follow fair labor practices. That's still the subject of a great deal of our free trade diplomacy, as American workers have a right to be worried that if we open up trade with other countries that don't have robust worker protections in place, they'll end up competing for jobs against people very nearly in slave conditions themselves. It degrades all of us to permit that, even as it makes some goods cheaper and thus more accessible...
Wow are you glad you didn't live in Colonial days? You would've been a Tory!! A pro Brit colonial! A Benedict Arnold!
Unlike Town who is only partially a turncoat.
Yeah, that can happen when you commit yourself to aggressive human rights violations on a mass scale. People stop letting you run your own affairs. The period of reconstruction was intolerable to the South, but it was necessary, and it should have been longer to really achieve what it had set out to do. And before long, the former slave states were back to mostly getting their way, no longer formally holding slaves, but negating in significant part the hard-won freedom of many of their citizens again. Even if the South once had something to complain about here, they no longer do, and didn't for nearly a century before the Civil Rights era.
I can't read that above but at a glance it looks shallow...
Oh, another one who reads about this stuff and thinks about it but doesn't have clue about living it?? Great.
Gotta go
Oh wait...
No one needs to tell black people what the war was about. They lived the reality of it.
The black people of today ARE living something.
It's not slavery. Duh.
But something needs to change - yes it does.
But I'm not going to let empty headed liberals over simplify and thus encourage a race war...
Reality? Yes. Apparently.
Then it seems you're as eager to change what the killer said he was trying to do as you are to read a different motive into the actions of the South. Like his forebearers, the killer was pretty clear about what he was trying to do, and there are just a fair number of people who can't face that fact honestly. He didn't just go into any church. He went into a church with certain membership, and history. The sooner you face that fact, the better we'll all be.
So, by your calculus, angry, mostly peaceful, black people in the North demanding what are supposed to be Constitutional rights and something like equal treatment are a mob that justifies violence against innocent people. But white Southerners engaging in armed insurrection is a worthy attempt to preserve states' rights regardless of their underlying reasoning? There couldn't be a clearer demonstration that the work of Reconstruction was left unfinished.
Strange how looking to tomorrow seems to involve resurrecting a false narrative of an imaginary past.
Bbl8ter