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Forum gossip thread
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Re: Forum gossip thread by Blazor
Started by Blazor, December 30, 2022, 01:11:20 PM
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Quote from: Blazor post_id=489505 time=1672423880 user_id=2221
Lee/Jackson day is coming up in 2 weeks! I hope y'all got your Southern flags ready to fly!!!
I know here at the great Blue Cashew, we can discuss things civilly. If you still think that the War of Northern Aggression was over slavery, I'd like to set the record straight. Ask me anything!!!!
For now, I will share this piece, for it has to do with Virginia!! I could add much more to this piece, but will simply share it as it is......"Virginia did not secede in defense of slavery. Indeed, when Lincoln was inaugurated, March 4, 1861, Virginia was still in the Union. Only South Carolina, Georgia and the five Gulf states had seceded and created the Confederate States of America.
At the firing on Fort Sumter, April 12-13, 1861, the first shots of the Civil War, Virginia was still inside the Union. Indeed, there were more slave states in the Union than in the Confederacy. But, on April 15, Lincoln issued a call for 75,000 volunteers from the state militias to march south and crush the new Confederacy.
Two days later, April 17, Virginia seceded rather than provide soldiers or militia to participate in a war on their brethren. North Carolina, Tennessee and Arkansas followed Virginia out over the same issue. They would not be a party to a war on their kinfolk.
Slavery was not the cause of this war. Secession was -- that and Lincoln's determination to drown the nation in blood if necessary to make the Union whole again.
Nor did Lincoln ever deny it.
In his first inaugural, Lincoln sought to appease the states that had seceded by endorsing a constitutional amendment to make slavery permanent in the 15 states where it then existed. He even offered to help the Southern states run down fugitive slaves.
In 1862, Lincoln wrote Horace Greeley that if he could restore the Union without freeing one slave he would do it. The Emancipation Proclamation of Jan. 1, 1863, freed only those slaves Lincoln had no power to free -- those still under Confederate rule. As for slaves in the Union states of Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky and Missouri, they remained the property of their owners." Patrick Buchanan
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