L
Lujack
Guest
I don’t think I’ve read an uglier pro-Southern argument.Oh, I didn’t want to get pulled into this topic any deeper to hijack the OP and turn it into a history discussion and have to spend a lot of time revisiting all the history. I’ll particpate bit more since I am learning some new things…
So they needed to keep the slaves because they were making money off of them. And because their entire society was based on it. So you’re admitting, flat out, that antebellum Southern society was based on the institution of slavery. Which is true; it is, after all, what Alexander Stephens said in his famous cornerstone speech.I was curious so was just researching the numbers this morning and found a reference that says there were an estimated nearly 4 million slaves all together - mostly in the South but also boarder states and a few out west. The largest concentration was in Virgina at 491,000 followed by Alabama 435,080. What is very illuminating is examining the ratio of free citizens to slaves in the Lower South to get an idea of the economic leverage the south had. As well it should suggest how immediate in the minds of Southerns it would have been to imagine the social horror of suddenly finding themselves a minority in their own states by a Federal fiat that suddenly freed them all. The slaves by numbers could have easily taken over the south (esp. in Miss. & S, Carolina) by shear numbers if they had later organized themselves politically or elected to reverse the relationship to takeover the southern states by force. The South was already committed to an economy based on slavery and had invested itself fully in that and also put itself in SEVERE socio-economic jeopardy if the Fed. Gov. suddenly forced its policies on them.
But the argument that follows is horrendous and immoral: in order to preserve that society, you’re arguing that it was worth maintaining slavery. So, by that token: when should the slaves have been freed? Your argument has answered the question: essentially never.
Like the Civil War that happenned after 1865? Waitaminute, there weren’t any massacres of whites by blacks! That’s not what happenned!From the Southern perspective there had to be real fears that they would become dominated by the slaves if forced to release them and might reasonably expect retributions and civil unrest and conflict. In a very real sense the election of Lincoln ignited the realization that the Southerner’s very lives were in jeopardy if nearly 4 million slaves who had limited exposure to the American culture were suddenly turned loose on the streets. Southerners knew that there would be a different kind of civil war and massive bloodshed.
And you’re ignoring that Lincoln’s platform was against the expansion of slavery; abolitionists voted Republican, but the Republican Party did not favor immediate emancipation until after Abraham lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. Before that, it was all about the restriction of slavery.
And limited exposure to American culture? The slaves had been in America for quite some time! No slave had been imported to the United States legally since 1808, and while the illegal slave trade continued, it was on a very small scale.
What were Lincoln’s wishes? He hadn’t taken office yet. And I think you are now the first living person I’ve had contact with who has the temerity to argue that the South was right to oppose abolition because it would have been bad to free the slaves.The South clearly preferred to take its chances warring with the Federal Government over what they had to imagine was a surety of the complete chaos, civil unrest and rupture to society that would occur if the bowed to Lincolns wishes.
Opportunistic nations and interests like slavetraders, slave auctioneers, and slave owners?Gladness has nothing at all to do with it. They were victims of Islamic expansion and opportunistic nations and interests.
Ladies and gentlemen, introducing Roger B. Taney!The slaves were not US citizens and were not entitled to constitutional rights at the time - nor apparently where the states.
Their worst fears, based on racial imagery of blacks as bloodthirsty monsters. You’re arguing that it was okay for white southerners to be racist, and okay for them to support slavery. From that perspective, then yes, the South was right. But that requires you to take up the John C. Calhoun argument that slavery was good.I am seeing this all now from a new perspective of the general Southerner who had no slave suddenly realizing what it meant to him and his family if near equal numbers of slaves were suddenly released from the “wealthy plantation” owners and were forced to compete with cheap labor, mass poverty, and non educated people who did not share any cultural or common values now wandering the streets and homeless. It would have been social chaos. The common Southerner must have been terrified at the prospects for what would happen and that is no doubt what is behind any brutality that was seen. They were afraid for their lives and losing their way of life. There was nothing to lose in resisting the Federal government since capitulation would bring their worst fears.
Oh, and by the way: none of it happened after emancipation. There was no race war in the South. Terrorism by the KKK in some areas, maybe, but a flat-out race war: never happenned. So the fears were groundless. Except for one: blacks got rights.