M
manualman
Guest
Reading this thread makes me understand how ethnic and regional hatreds in Europe that date from wrongs committed centuries ago still have the power to ignite killing and strife (Bosnia, Ireland, etc…) Here we are only a bit over 200 years old and we have our own pet peeves 150 years old that we still feed and let fester.
Having lived with folks from both sides, it is clear to me that NEITHER side is much honest about what the war was really about and BOTH sides exaggerate terribly to make the other side look like the “bad guys.”
Southerners are right to conclude that it is an utter sham for the North to claim they went to war over the moral issue of slavery. Slavery was a moral PR veneer placed over the top. I tend to agree with Southerners that the North feared what the South could do if it industrialized and retained the institution of slavery. The North feared that their power was threatened. As usual, that motivates nations more than moral outrage. The North would no more go to war to free slaves than the USA would go to war today just to free a nation of a despotic dictator - unless that dictator had the power to switch off a hefty percentage of the world’s oil supply!
Southerners are tragically dishonest about their motives as well. States rights ARE something precious and consistent with catholic values of subsidiarity - right up until those rights conflict with more basic human rights. The North may be dishonest about its true motives, but still wins the moral high ground. In the end, basic human rights for all trump the right of states to self rule apart from the federal government. In this case subsidiarity supports federal intervention against the states that were violating basic human rights. I find it amazing to hear southerners STILL arguing that slaves were better off as slaves. Amazing.
In the end, the naked truth is the that THE states right the southern states were fighting for was the right to classify an entire group of human beings as mere chattle property to be bought, owned, bred and used as goods like domesticated animals. No matter how bad the North was in its true motives and conduct, the South was worse.
I am constantly struck by how identical the slavery issue was 150 years ago to the abortion issue today. The defenders use all kinds of smoke screens and rationalizing to take the focus of the REAL issue: what is an unborn child? Answer - a human being just like you and me. What is a black man? A human being just like you and me. It really is that simple in concept (if awfully messy in the implementation in both cases).
Northerners sometimes romanticize the civil war far beyond what is reasonable. Even many abolitionists were beyond the pale. John Brown was no different than Eric Rudolph is today. Neither is a hero. Both are men who made the dreadful mistake of attempting to use violence to end injustice. The ends STILL don’t justify the means. Too many history books make a hero of John Brown, IMO. To me, he’s as tragic as Eric Rudolph. As GK Chesterton put it “Reformers are usually right about what is wrong, but almost always wrong about what is right.”
Having lived with folks from both sides, it is clear to me that NEITHER side is much honest about what the war was really about and BOTH sides exaggerate terribly to make the other side look like the “bad guys.”
Southerners are right to conclude that it is an utter sham for the North to claim they went to war over the moral issue of slavery. Slavery was a moral PR veneer placed over the top. I tend to agree with Southerners that the North feared what the South could do if it industrialized and retained the institution of slavery. The North feared that their power was threatened. As usual, that motivates nations more than moral outrage. The North would no more go to war to free slaves than the USA would go to war today just to free a nation of a despotic dictator - unless that dictator had the power to switch off a hefty percentage of the world’s oil supply!
Southerners are tragically dishonest about their motives as well. States rights ARE something precious and consistent with catholic values of subsidiarity - right up until those rights conflict with more basic human rights. The North may be dishonest about its true motives, but still wins the moral high ground. In the end, basic human rights for all trump the right of states to self rule apart from the federal government. In this case subsidiarity supports federal intervention against the states that were violating basic human rights. I find it amazing to hear southerners STILL arguing that slaves were better off as slaves. Amazing.
In the end, the naked truth is the that THE states right the southern states were fighting for was the right to classify an entire group of human beings as mere chattle property to be bought, owned, bred and used as goods like domesticated animals. No matter how bad the North was in its true motives and conduct, the South was worse.
I am constantly struck by how identical the slavery issue was 150 years ago to the abortion issue today. The defenders use all kinds of smoke screens and rationalizing to take the focus of the REAL issue: what is an unborn child? Answer - a human being just like you and me. What is a black man? A human being just like you and me. It really is that simple in concept (if awfully messy in the implementation in both cases).
Northerners sometimes romanticize the civil war far beyond what is reasonable. Even many abolitionists were beyond the pale. John Brown was no different than Eric Rudolph is today. Neither is a hero. Both are men who made the dreadful mistake of attempting to use violence to end injustice. The ends STILL don’t justify the means. Too many history books make a hero of John Brown, IMO. To me, he’s as tragic as Eric Rudolph. As GK Chesterton put it “Reformers are usually right about what is wrong, but almost always wrong about what is right.”