RE: Civil War (Full Version)

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BamaD -> RE: Civil War (7/11/2015 5:56:39 PM)

FR

What does any of this Nationalism discussion have to do with the American Civil War?




Zonie63 -> RE: Civil War (7/11/2015 6:40:56 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: NorthernGent


quote:

ORIGINAL: Zonie63

The idea of American national identity was still very much associated with the typical white Anglo-Saxon Protestant



Say 20 or 30 years ago, the dominant thinking in England was that the Anglo-Saxons displaced the Romano/Ancient Britons, becoming the predominant people of England.

Recent studies suggest that line of argument is nonsense, supported by genetics suggesting that the people of Britain and Ireland share pretty much the same DNA, which is not derived from Northern Europe at all: we share ancestry with Iberia apparently. Which, in turn, would suggest the Anglo-Saxons didn't displace anyone, nor settle here in large enough numbers.

So, it seems these 'Anglo-Saxon Protestants' in the United States were wide of the mark in that largely they didn't really exist as a predominant people in England, and it just goes to show how misplaced it is to see value in genetics.


I agree, the identity itself was a contrivance which persisted for generations, but since we've been trying to move away from that, we're finding that our true "national identity" is quite a bit more complicated.




dcnovice -> RE: Civil War (7/11/2015 7:02:23 PM)

FR

The "identity" discussion brings to mind a favorite exchange from 1776:

John Adams: That little paper there deals with freedom for Americans!
Edward Rutledge: Oh, really. Mr. Adams is now calling our black slaves "Americans!" Are they, now?
John Adams: Yes, they are. They are people, and they are here. If there's any other requirement, I haven't heard it.




NorthernGent -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 1:24:36 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD

FR

What does any of this Nationalism discussion have to do with the American Civil War?



I agree that this German Nationalism thing has ran its course.

In terms of the link between Nationalism and the United States Civil War, there is one.

The South had been watching events in Europe closely, Italy being a case in point.

The South used the experience of Italy to argue it too was a separate nation with a shared culture, ethnicity, values etc - some of which were distinct from the North.

Such an argument may have given legitimacy to secession, from an international point of view, which really would have helped the South; assuming other countries believed they were in fact two distinct peoples.









NorthernGent -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 1:29:43 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Zonie63


quote:

ORIGINAL: NorthernGent


quote:

ORIGINAL: Zonie63

The idea of American national identity was still very much associated with the typical white Anglo-Saxon Protestant



Say 20 or 30 years ago, the dominant thinking in England was that the Anglo-Saxons displaced the Romano/Ancient Britons, becoming the predominant people of England.

Recent studies suggest that line of argument is nonsense, supported by genetics suggesting that the people of Britain and Ireland share pretty much the same DNA, which is not derived from Northern Europe at all: we share ancestry with Iberia apparently. Which, in turn, would suggest the Anglo-Saxons didn't displace anyone, nor settle here in large enough numbers.

So, it seems these 'Anglo-Saxon Protestants' in the United States were wide of the mark in that largely they didn't really exist as a predominant people in England, and it just goes to show how misplaced it is to see value in genetics.


I agree, the identity itself was a contrivance which persisted for generations, but since we've been trying to move away from that, we're finding that our true "national identity" is quite a bit more complicated.



That's interesting. From a long distance I would have thought there is something that is clearly American - related to culture and values. What would be complicated about it?




NorthernGent -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 1:59:28 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: dcnovice

FR

The "identity" discussion brings to mind a favorite exchange from 1776:

John Adams: That little paper there deals with freedom for Americans!
Edward Rutledge: Oh, really. Mr. Adams is now calling our black slaves "Americans!" Are they, now?
John Adams: Yes, they are. They are people, and they are here. If there's any other requirement, I haven't heard it.


Speaking of slavery, there's a two part programme about Britain's role in slavery starting on Wednesday.

The theme of the programme is that Britain has buried this episode in her history, and slave owning was more widespread than is often assumed.

Lists of slave owning families will be exposed, such as George Orwell and Graham Greene's ancestors, and information regarding the Abolition Act, e.g. tax payers had to pay huge sums to compensate former slave owners and former slaves had to work 45 hours a week unpaid labour for their former owners for 4 years after 'freedom'

Should be interesting and informative.




KenDckey -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 8:24:28 AM)

I was just wondering. Should they discontinue restoration of the CSS Hunley?




Kirata -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 9:07:58 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: KenDckey

I was just wondering. Should they discontinue restoration of the CSS Hunley?

We have more serious problems than that...

Confederate flags adorn Times Square subway station
Tiny Confederate flags are right under the noses of millions of straphangers passing through the Times Square subway station every day.

Note the inset in the photo to help you identify the "confederate flags" in the tiling.

K.




kdsub -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 9:35:21 AM)

quote:

He argues that the United States needs the Civil War to be about slavery


It needs to be about slavery because it is the truth...Slavery was the cornerstone of the Confederacy... there was no other reason for the succession. Those that think state rights had anything to do with it are wrong and just hiding from the truth. All they need to do is read Alexander Stephens speech... All led from slavery and the slave driven economy with state rights as an excuse to justify their enslavement of humans for profit.

I do believe many of the young men who fought and died for the Confederacy were just fighting for home and pride but the war was started because of slavery and greed.

Butch




NorthernGent -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 10:32:58 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

quote:

He argues that the United States needs the Civil War to be about slavery


It needs to be about slavery because it is the truth...Slavery was the cornerstone of the Confederacy... there was no other reason for the succession. Those that think state rights had anything to do with it are wrong and just hiding from the truth. All they need to do is read Alexander Stephens speech... All led from slavery and the slave driven economy with state rights as an excuse to justify their enslavement of humans for profit.

I do believe many of the young men who fought and died for the Confederacy were just fighting for home and pride but the war was started because of slavery and greed.

Butch


Well, from what I've read, admittedly only a couple of books, Lincoln feared that including black Americans in the army would cause the border states to secede; and so black Americans were able to enlist in 1862.

So, what does this tell you? That at the outset of the war maintaining the union was the most important issue for Lincoln? And, that not only in Southern states was there segregation?

Black soldiers did not receive equal pay or equal treatment in the Union Army, and their captains didn't bother training them in some instances as they had no faith in them.

That doesn't sound like a sudden redemption in one part of the country to me.




BamaD -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 12:38:24 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

quote:

He argues that the United States needs the Civil War to be about slavery


It needs to be about slavery because it is the truth...Slavery was the cornerstone of the Confederacy... there was no other reason for the succession. Those that think state rights had anything to do with it are wrong and just hiding from the truth. All they need to do is read Alexander Stephens speech... All led from slavery and the slave driven economy with state rights as an excuse to justify their enslavement of humans for profit.

I do believe many of the young men who fought and died for the Confederacy were just fighting for home and pride but the war was started because of slavery and greed.

Butch

There were many other reasons for succession. I graduated from high school thinking the same thing. However having a great interest in history I was always learning more than schools taught. I soon learned that there were other reasons, just as compelling, for the south's ire. Everything other than slavery is ignored in public schools and many others as well as by the popular culture because facing these issues is "uncomfortable" to say the least. They break up the myth of the moral crusade.




BamaD -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 12:44:54 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: NorthernGent


quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

quote:

He argues that the United States needs the Civil War to be about slavery


It needs to be about slavery because it is the truth...Slavery was the cornerstone of the Confederacy... there was no other reason for the succession. Those that think state rights had anything to do with it are wrong and just hiding from the truth. All they need to do is read Alexander Stephens speech... All led from slavery and the slave driven economy with state rights as an excuse to justify their enslavement of humans for profit.

I do believe many of the young men who fought and died for the Confederacy were just fighting for home and pride but the war was started because of slavery and greed.

Butch


Well, from what I've read, admittedly only a couple of books, Lincoln feared that including black Americans in the army would cause the border states to secede; and so black Americans were able to enlist in 1862.

So, what does this tell you? That at the outset of the war maintaining the union was the most important issue for Lincoln? And, that not only in Southern states was there segregation?

Black soldiers did not receive equal pay or equal treatment in the Union Army, and their captains didn't bother training them in some instances as they had no faith in them.

That doesn't sound like a sudden redemption in one part of the country to me.

They only went to using blacks in large numbers when the volunteers dried up.
Why?
Because while the Irish in particular volunteered in droves to protect the Union, they weren't going to fight to help blacks compete with them at the bottom of the economic ladder. Remember this was a time when "Irish need not apply" was a common statement at the bottom of help wanted signs. It is virtually unknown that Meade could not pursue Lee after Gettysburg because he had to take his army to New York to put down the "draft riots" which was basically Irishmen lynching every black they could get their hands on. Worst outbreak of racial violence in the nations history.




NorthernGent -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 1:02:32 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD


quote:

ORIGINAL: NorthernGent


quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

quote:

He argues that the United States needs the Civil War to be about slavery


It needs to be about slavery because it is the truth...Slavery was the cornerstone of the Confederacy... there was no other reason for the succession. Those that think state rights had anything to do with it are wrong and just hiding from the truth. All they need to do is read Alexander Stephens speech... All led from slavery and the slave driven economy with state rights as an excuse to justify their enslavement of humans for profit.

I do believe many of the young men who fought and died for the Confederacy were just fighting for home and pride but the war was started because of slavery and greed.

Butch


Well, from what I've read, admittedly only a couple of books, Lincoln feared that including black Americans in the army would cause the border states to secede; and so black Americans were able to enlist in 1862.

So, what does this tell you? That at the outset of the war maintaining the union was the most important issue for Lincoln? And, that not only in Southern states was there segregation?

Black soldiers did not receive equal pay or equal treatment in the Union Army, and their captains didn't bother training them in some instances as they had no faith in them.

That doesn't sound like a sudden redemption in one part of the country to me.

They only went to using blacks in large numbers when the volunteers dried up.
Why?
Because while the Irish in particular volunteered in droves to protect the Union, they weren't going to fight to help blacks compete with them at the bottom of the economic ladder. Remember this was a time when "Irish need not apply" was a common statement at the bottom of help wanted signs. It is virtually unknown that Meade could not pursue Lee after Gettysburg because he had to take his army to New York to put down the "draft riots" which was basically Irishmen lynching every black they could get their hands on. Worst outbreak of racial violence in the nations history.


Yes, and in London mid to late 19th century, Irishmen gave the arriving Eastern Europeans a hard time. Just as East Enders had given the Irish a hard time. Over jobs. Where I live there was a massive influx of Irish and you can still hear the phrase from the older generation when things seem untidy: "it's like Paddy's Alley in here". Seems to me that when people, all people, feel their livelihood threatened all reason goes out of the window.




Zonie63 -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 1:02:58 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: NorthernGent


quote:

ORIGINAL: Zonie63


quote:

ORIGINAL: NorthernGent


quote:

ORIGINAL: Zonie63

The idea of American national identity was still very much associated with the typical white Anglo-Saxon Protestant



Say 20 or 30 years ago, the dominant thinking in England was that the Anglo-Saxons displaced the Romano/Ancient Britons, becoming the predominant people of England.

Recent studies suggest that line of argument is nonsense, supported by genetics suggesting that the people of Britain and Ireland share pretty much the same DNA, which is not derived from Northern Europe at all: we share ancestry with Iberia apparently. Which, in turn, would suggest the Anglo-Saxons didn't displace anyone, nor settle here in large enough numbers.

So, it seems these 'Anglo-Saxon Protestants' in the United States were wide of the mark in that largely they didn't really exist as a predominant people in England, and it just goes to show how misplaced it is to see value in genetics.


I agree, the identity itself was a contrivance which persisted for generations, but since we've been trying to move away from that, we're finding that our true "national identity" is quite a bit more complicated.



That's interesting. From a long distance I would have thought there is something that is clearly American - related to culture and values. What would be complicated about it?



Well, as you can see from this and other threads, there's sharp disagreement over the causes of the Civil War, what the flag means (Confederate or otherwise), so it's not quite so cut-and-dried as far as what is "clearly American." A lot of people also argue over what is "un-American," as if there's one twue way of being an American and anyone who doesn't fall into those parameters is "not a real American." Then there was all that hullabaloo over Obama's birth certificate.




NorthernGent -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 1:14:08 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Zonie63


quote:

ORIGINAL: NorthernGent


quote:

ORIGINAL: Zonie63


quote:

ORIGINAL: NorthernGent


quote:

ORIGINAL: Zonie63

The idea of American national identity was still very much associated with the typical white Anglo-Saxon Protestant



Say 20 or 30 years ago, the dominant thinking in England was that the Anglo-Saxons displaced the Romano/Ancient Britons, becoming the predominant people of England.

Recent studies suggest that line of argument is nonsense, supported by genetics suggesting that the people of Britain and Ireland share pretty much the same DNA, which is not derived from Northern Europe at all: we share ancestry with Iberia apparently. Which, in turn, would suggest the Anglo-Saxons didn't displace anyone, nor settle here in large enough numbers.

So, it seems these 'Anglo-Saxon Protestants' in the United States were wide of the mark in that largely they didn't really exist as a predominant people in England, and it just goes to show how misplaced it is to see value in genetics.


I agree, the identity itself was a contrivance which persisted for generations, but since we've been trying to move away from that, we're finding that our true "national identity" is quite a bit more complicated.



That's interesting. From a long distance I would have thought there is something that is clearly American - related to culture and values. What would be complicated about it?



Well, as you can see from this and other threads, there's sharp disagreement over the causes of the Civil War, what the flag means (Confederate or otherwise), so it's not quite so cut-and-dried as far as what is "clearly American." A lot of people also argue over what is "un-American," as if there's one twue way of being an American and anyone who doesn't fall into those parameters is "not a real American." Then there was all that hullabaloo over Obama's birth certificate.


Yeah, but a disagreement over an event and a few left-wingers or right-wingers here and there doesn't mean you have a shared culture surely?




kdsub -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 1:36:34 PM)

Redemption …sure their was… but that was not the direction of my post. There is only one reason for the civil war and that is the south’s fear of losing its slaves… period.

The north’s response was a mixed bag of reasons but just as today, if Texas decided to secede from the union, their would be a military response.

The redemption was in the first steps in removing the yoke of slavery whether it started out that way makes no difference in the end.

The final result… no matter the motivations of individual politicians and citizens was the preservation of the union and the first steps toward the freedom of an enslaved race of people. Nothing else but death and destruction came from this tragedy.

Butch




BamaD -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 1:43:31 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: NorthernGent


quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD


quote:

ORIGINAL: NorthernGent


quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

quote:

He argues that the United States needs the Civil War to be about slavery


It needs to be about slavery because it is the truth...Slavery was the cornerstone of the Confederacy... there was no other reason for the succession. Those that think state rights had anything to do with it are wrong and just hiding from the truth. All they need to do is read Alexander Stephens speech... All led from slavery and the slave driven economy with state rights as an excuse to justify their enslavement of humans for profit.

I do believe many of the young men who fought and died for the Confederacy were just fighting for home and pride but the war was started because of slavery and greed.

Butch


Well, from what I've read, admittedly only a couple of books, Lincoln feared that including black Americans in the army would cause the border states to secede; and so black Americans were able to enlist in 1862.

So, what does this tell you? That at the outset of the war maintaining the union was the most important issue for Lincoln? And, that not only in Southern states was there segregation?

Black soldiers did not receive equal pay or equal treatment in the Union Army, and their captains didn't bother training them in some instances as they had no faith in them.

That doesn't sound like a sudden redemption in one part of the country to me.

They only went to using blacks in large numbers when the volunteers dried up.
Why?
Because while the Irish in particular volunteered in droves to protect the Union, they weren't going to fight to help blacks compete with them at the bottom of the economic ladder. Remember this was a time when "Irish need not apply" was a common statement at the bottom of help wanted signs. It is virtually unknown that Meade could not pursue Lee after Gettysburg because he had to take his army to New York to put down the "draft riots" which was basically Irishmen lynching every black they could get their hands on. Worst outbreak of racial violence in the nations history.


Yes, and in London mid to late 19th century, Irishmen gave the arriving Eastern Europeans a hard time. Just as East Enders had given the Irish a hard time. Over jobs. Where I live there was a massive influx of Irish and you can still hear the phrase from the older generation when things seem untidy: "it's like Paddy's Alley in here". Seems to me that when people, all people, feel their livelihood threatened all reason goes out of the window.


I understand, although you would know better than me, that although England had outlawed African slavery, they were still, in effect, selling Irish into slavery well after the U S Civil war.




BamaD -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 1:46:46 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

Redemption …sure their was… but that was not the direction of my post. There is only one reason for the civil war and that is the south’s fear of losing its slaves… period.

The north’s response was a mixed bag of reasons but just as today, if Texas decided to secede from the union, their would be a military response.

The redemption was in the first steps in removing the yoke of slavery whether it started out that way makes no difference in the end.

The final result… no matter the motivations of individual politicians and citizens was the preservation of the union and the first steps toward the freedom of an enslaved race of people. Nothing else but death and destruction came from this tragedy.

Butch

By declaring themselves above Federal law sanctuary cities have in effect seceded, where is the military response?




Real0ne -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 1:47:10 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

Redemption …sure their was… but that was not the direction of my post. There is only one reason for the civil war and that is the south’s fear of losing its slaves… period.

The north’s response was a mixed bag of reasons but just as today, if Texas decided to secede from the union, their would be a military response.

The redemption was in the first steps in removing the yoke of slavery whether it started out that way makes no difference in the end.

The final result… no matter the motivations of individual politicians and citizens was the preservation of the union and the first steps toward the freedom of an enslaved race of people. Nothing else but death and destruction came from this tragedy.

Butch


What about the present situation where the union is the yoke of slavery to the 51st state? Hotel california, you can check out but never leave? No way to get a divorce from a bad marriage?




Real0ne -> RE: Civil War (7/12/2015 1:49:10 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD

By declaring themselves above Federal law sanctuary cities have in effect seceded, where is the military response?


they arent popular yet, neither are the legal in our feudal society.




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