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Main Forums => Politics => Topic started by: freakazoid on August 18, 2017, 04:53:03 AM

Title: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: freakazoid on August 18, 2017, 04:53:03 AM
This time from a graveyard. http://www.nbc15.com/content/news/Mayor-Soglin-releases-statement-on-removal-of-Confederate-memorials-in-Madison-cemetery-440911493.html
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Hawkmoon on August 18, 2017, 06:14:39 AM
It doesn't matter. The revisionists won a long time ago, and this is just final cleanup. Schools were teaching that the Civil War was fought over slavery even when I was in school, in the 1950s and early 1960s. I don't remember when I first began to catch on that there was a lot more to it than just slavery, but it was well into adulthood, and it wasn't from any level of formal education.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 18, 2017, 06:54:38 AM
It doesn't matter. The revisionists won a long time ago, and this is just final cleanup. Schools were teaching that the Civil War was fought over slavery even when I was in school, in the 1950s and early 1960s.

That's because it was fought over slavery. Must we do this again?
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: K Frame on August 18, 2017, 07:35:04 AM
Apparently the Lefty "Make America Not Upsetting To Us" groups have targeted the statue of the "racist" Teddy Roosevelt at, I believe, the museum of Natural History.

Some of the crap now on the web is making it seem as if the protests happened in response to Charlottesville, but that's not the case.

Still, though...
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: RoadKingLarry on August 18, 2017, 08:12:09 AM
So far we've seen statues of Lincoln vandalized right along with those evil confederates.
We've even got calls for blasting the sculpture off of Stone Mountain and even taking down Mt. Rushmore. Black activists are calling for Washington to be removed from parks in Chicago.
If this bullshit keeps up this business will get out of control. It will get out of control and we'll be lucky to live through it.



Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: T.O.M. on August 18, 2017, 09:06:30 AM
It doesn't matter. The revisionists won a long time ago, and this is just final cleanup. Schools were teaching that the Civil War was fought over slavery even when I was in school, in the 1950s and early 1960s. I don't remember when I first began to catch on that there was a lot more to it than just slavery, but it was well into adulthood, and it wasn't from any level of formal education.

It's funny that you mention this.  I was at the open house for my son's high school last night, and I overheard the popular American History teacher talking with some parents about how slavery was not the reason for the Civil War.  This same teacher accurately predicted Trump winning the election before the race was down to Trump vs. Hillary. 
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: BobR on August 18, 2017, 09:13:36 AM
It will get out of control and we'll be lucky to live through it.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0-JA1ffd5Ms
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Pb on August 18, 2017, 09:27:26 AM
It doesn't matter. The revisionists won a long time ago, and this is just final cleanup. Schools were teaching that the Civil War was fought over slavery even when I was in school, in the 1950s and early 1960s. I don't remember when I first began to catch on that there was a lot more to it than just slavery, but it was well into adulthood, and it wasn't from any level of formal education.

The South left because:
1) they opposed tariffs, which Lincoln supported
2) they opposed fed spending on internal improvements in the states, which Lincoln supported
3) they wanted to expand slavery to the territories which Lincoln opposed

The North fought the war because:
1) they wanted to "save the union"
2) Jefferson Davis was stupid enough to attack them first.

Those are the facts.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: makattak on August 18, 2017, 09:56:58 AM
The South left because:
1) they opposed tariffs, which Lincoln supported
2) they opposed fed spending on internal improvements in the states, which Lincoln supported
3) they wanted to expand slavery to the territories which Lincoln opposed

The North fought the war because:
1) they wanted to "save the union"
2) Jefferson Davis was stupid enough to attack them first.

Those are the facts.

You left out "They were afraid that if they didn't expand slavery it would eventually be abolished."

As people have noted previously, it WAS about slavery. It wasn't ONLY about slavery, just as every human war, heck, every human action has more than one cause/reason/motivation. But it was about slavery.

Not everyone who fought for the South supported slavery and not everyone who fought for the North opposed it (leaving alone those who didn't do any of the fighting.)

So, although it was about slavery, that doesn't immediately make one side evil incarnate and the other pure as doves. There was honor and villainy on both sides. Sometimes even within the same person.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 18, 2017, 10:14:31 AM
There was honor and villainy on both sides.


(https://armedpolitesociety.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Ffiles.abovetopsecret.com%2Ffiles%2Fimg%2Fdy5859e3df.gif&hash=3fe8cecf6d21497472344b56e0be0f5d5a194566)


A great many white Northerners saw slavery as a problem for them. That doesn't mean they wanted their daughters raising black babies in hippy communes, and it doesn't mean that there weren't other issues involved. It doesn't even mean they wanted to free the slaves in the South. They just didn't want it getting in their way.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: K Frame on August 18, 2017, 10:22:20 AM
It's funny that you mention this.  I was at the open house for my son's high school last night, and I overheard the popular American History teacher talking with some parents about how slavery was not the reason for the Civil War.  This same teacher accurately predicted Trump winning the election before the race was down to Trump vs. Hillary. 

And I'm sure that he's now on "vacation" at one of Antifa's finest re-education camps.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: RevDisk on August 18, 2017, 10:58:16 AM

I'm conflicted. On one hand, I definitely believe that Sherman was way too light handed and didn't accomplish enough. On the other, I'm not a huge fan of ripping down statutes just because of modern sensibilities.

Any detail of slavery as being a major driving factor of the Civil War is willfully lying. It was a huge deal on both sides.

https://www.civilwar.org/learn/primary-sources/declaration-causes-seceding-states

In various declarations, "slave" was mentioned 83 times.

It was not the only reason. They have other complaints too. Some being very valid. But it is a false rewriting of history to claim that slavery was not a substantial reason why the South declared independence. Call it early attempts at political correctness, polite lies to dance around the cold truth. And no non-slave state joined the Confederates. Though admittedly slave states stayed with the union. Another sign that it was a fairly complex situation.

Any slaver deserves death. Any slaver deserves ignominy. We threw off the yoke of European oppression in large part because we did not believe people were property. In the case of the Revolution, that the people were not owned by the crown. Sadly, we didn't carry that forward and apply it to all persons. Largely because, well, money talks. It is legitimately a stain on our history that we let money override our judgement and the words we put down in the Constitution.

Quote
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.

Tariffs and fed overreach were legit reasons to be very angry. And possibly justification for pulling out of the union. But keeping slaves warranted the absolute devastation upon their people. The sin of the civil war is that it was not harsh enough. It didn't burn out the Southern aristocracy. Slaves remained slaves for decades under other names. 'Apprenticing' and arbitrary sentencing to hard labor were common. Then Jim Crow.

That said, every Roman of note owned slaves. At certain points, certain individual Romans probably owned more slaves than the entire South combined. Demanding that we pull down and smash a single Roman statute should be met with a proper amount of righteous fury at attempting to destroy history. While I'm leery as hell of the attempt of the South to whitewash their own history as "the War of Northern Aggression", I'm equally leery of the stated reasons why folks want to rip down Confederate statutes.

Once we start, I sincerely doubt it will stop with certain Confederate generals and politicians.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: makattak on August 18, 2017, 11:13:40 AM
I'm conflicted. On one hand, I definitely believe that Sherman was way too light handed and didn't accomplish enough. On the other, I'm not a huge fan of ripping down statutes just because of modern sensibilities.

Any detail of slavery as being a major driving factor of the Civil War is willfully lying. It was a huge deal on both sides.

https://www.civilwar.org/learn/primary-sources/declaration-causes-seceding-states

In various declarations, "slave" was mentioned 83 times.

It was not the only reason. They have other complaints too. Some being very valid. But it is a false rewriting of history to claim that slavery was not a substantial reason why the South declared independence. Call it early attempts at political correctness, polite lies to dance around the cold truth. And no non-slave state joined the Confederates. Though admittedly slave states stayed with the union. Another sign that it was a fairly complex situation.

Any slaver deserves death. Any slaver deserves ignominy. We threw off the yoke of European oppression in large part because we did not believe people were property. In the case of the Revolution, that the people were not owned by the crown. Sadly, we didn't carry that forward and apply it to all persons. Largely because, well, money talks. It is legitimately a stain on our history that we let money override our judgement and the words we put down in the Constitution.

Tariffs and fed overreach were legit reasons to be very angry. And possibly justification for pulling out of the union. But keeping slaves warranted the absolute devastation upon their people. The sin of the civil war is that it was not harsh enough. It didn't burn out the Southern aristocracy. Slaves remained slaves for decades under other names. 'Apprenticing' and arbitrary sentencing to hard labor were common. Then Jim Crow.

That said, every Roman of note owned slaves. At certain points, certain individual Romans probably owned more slaves than the entire South combined. Demanding that we pull down and smash a single Roman statute should be met with a proper amount of righteous fury at attempting to destroy history. While I'm leery as hell of the attempt of the South to whitewash their own history as "the War of Northern Aggression", I'm equally leery of the stated reasons why folks want to rip down Confederate statutes.

Once we start, I sincerely doubt it will stop with certain Confederate generals and politicians.


I've got to disagree about it being money that caused the founders to avoid the slavery question. As I noted before, human motivations are never purely one thing or another.

In this case, the founders knew that freeing all slaves would be a massive disruption to at least half of the states (that's where the "economic" issues come in) which is a concern and it would result in the country not being united- the slave states would never ratify any government that freed the slaves. We'd have had the country of Virginia, of Carolina, of Pennsylvania, etc... that would either war with each other or war with Britain and eventually be reconquered. (If you will recall, even United, we barely made it through the next war with Britain.)

Of note, even the slaveholders were aware of this compromise with evil. The famous Jefferson quote, "Indeed, I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just: that his justice cannot sleep forever" is about slavery.

So, yes, they were hypocrites, in that they considered slavery evil, but owned slaves. They did, however, plant the seeds for the ending of slavery by drafting the Constitution as under the Articles of Confederation the country would not have been able to do so. As I mentioned, it's mixed and those who want to hate everything about our culture want only to see the evil and not the struggle. (And, of course, ignore the state of most of humanity through history.)
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Firethorn on August 18, 2017, 11:21:27 AM
Put me in the category of the civil war being about many things, including slavery.

But to deny that the Civil war was, ultimately, primarily, about protecting the "property right" of being able to own slaves is equivalent to denying the holocaust, I think.

Individual confederate soldiers each had their own reason for fighting.  But the confederate constitution was written to protect the "rights" of slaveholders and the plantation system.  The leaders, those supporting the war at the highest levels, were by and large doing it to protect their wealth.  And that wealth was in the form of owning others.

Remember, back in the day, the single biggest asset plantations had were its slaves.  The land, buildings, equipment, and everything else amounted to rounding errors compared to the value of the slaves.  As such, any threat to slavery was a threat to 90% of the wealth of the plantation owners.

Slavery was the casus belli - without slavery, with the other issues, no war.  Without the other issues, with slavery, war.

Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: MechAg94 on August 18, 2017, 11:32:00 AM
I'm conflicted. On one hand, I definitely believe that Sherman was way too light handed and didn't accomplish enough. On the other, I'm not a huge fan of ripping down statutes just because of modern sensibilities.

Any detail of slavery as being a major driving factor of the Civil War is willfully lying. It was a huge deal on both sides.

https://www.civilwar.org/learn/primary-sources/declaration-causes-seceding-states

In various declarations, "slave" was mentioned 83 times.

It was not the only reason. They have other complaints too. Some being very valid. But it is a false rewriting of history to claim that slavery was not a substantial reason why the South declared independence. Call it early attempts at political correctness, polite lies to dance around the cold truth. And no non-slave state joined the Confederates. Though admittedly slave states stayed with the union. Another sign that it was a fairly complex situation.

Any slaver deserves death. Any slaver deserves ignominy. We threw off the yoke of European oppression in large part because we did not believe people were property. In the case of the Revolution, that the people were not owned by the crown. Sadly, we didn't carry that forward and apply it to all persons. Largely because, well, money talks. It is legitimately a stain on our history that we let money override our judgement and the words we put down in the Constitution.

Tariffs and fed overreach were legit reasons to be very angry. And possibly justification for pulling out of the union. But keeping slaves warranted the absolute devastation upon their people. The sin of the civil war is that it was not harsh enough. It didn't burn out the Southern aristocracy. Slaves remained slaves for decades under other names. 'Apprenticing' and arbitrary sentencing to hard labor were common. Then Jim Crow.

That said, every Roman of note owned slaves. At certain points, certain individual Romans probably owned more slaves than the entire South combined. Demanding that we pull down and smash a single Roman statute should be met with a proper amount of righteous fury at attempting to destroy history. While I'm leery as hell of the attempt of the South to whitewash their own history as "the War of Northern Aggression", I'm equally leery of the stated reasons why folks want to rip down Confederate statutes.

Once we start, I sincerely doubt it will stop with certain Confederate generals and politicians.

I can understand your hatred of the institution but things like that are rarely well aimed and a whole lot more innocent people would be devastated and killed in the process.  It is the main reason most us don't really want vigilante movements to organize for other crimes as they have historically gotten out of control and gone well beyond their purpose.  Sherman's March accomplished the military purpose it aimed for.  Reconstruction efforts after the war attempted to do what you wanted to see.  The hatred and resentment over that (among ALL Southerners) lasted quite a while.  

Also, the bolded part was a problem everywhere, not just the South.  Full equality under the law was something that took a lot longer to happen.  Black people continued to be second class citizens in lot of ways.  Slavery was bad and needed to end, but there is plenty of blame to go around for everything else.  
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: MechAg94 on August 18, 2017, 11:38:47 AM
Put me in the category of the civil war being about many things, including slavery.

But to deny that the Civil war was, ultimately, primarily, about protecting the "property right" of being able to own slaves is equivalent to denying the holocaust, I think.

Individual confederate soldiers each had their own reason for fighting.  But the confederate constitution was written to protect the "rights" of slaveholders and the plantation system.  The leaders, those supporting the war at the highest levels, were by and large doing it to protect their wealth.  And that wealth was in the form of owning others.

Remember, back in the day, the single biggest asset plantations had were its slaves.  The land, buildings, equipment, and everything else amounted to rounding errors compared to the value of the slaves.  As such, any threat to slavery was a threat to 90% of the wealth of the plantation owners.

Slavery was the casus belli - without slavery, with the other issues, no war.  Without the other issues, with slavery, war.


Remembering back to past threads, I do not recall anyone claiming that the slavery had nothing to do with it which is what I get from the first part of your post.  As I recall, that fueled much of the arguments on this site.  One side was saying there were other factors in addition to slavery.  The other side kept saying "but you can't take slavery out it".  The first side essentially said "we aren't, we are just mentioning other factors in addition to it".  ............And on it went with half the people just talking past each other and everyone wanting to put in their two cents.....
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: TommyGunn on August 18, 2017, 12:05:17 PM
That's because it was fought over slavery. Must we do this again?

I guess so.....

This is frustrating.    Slavery was a helluva issue.   There was an abolitionist movement going on back then (but but but "slavery wasn't an issue")  and new states could only enter the union when there was one free state and one slave state, to BALANCE the political power in D.C.  (but but but but "slavery wasn't an issue...").
OK yea there were other "issues"  (many of which are touted by the "states' rights"  arguers were actually mostly resolved by the time the Civil War began)  but


SLAVERY WAS THE #1 ISSUE THE CIVIL WAR WAS FOUGHT OVER.
[/size]
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: zxcvbob on August 18, 2017, 12:05:39 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o80BB0qZoVM
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: RevDisk on August 18, 2017, 12:22:05 PM
I've got to disagree about it being money that caused the founders to avoid the slavery question. As I noted before, human motivations are never purely one thing or another.

In this case, the founders knew that freeing all slaves would be a massive disruption to at least half of the states (that's where the "economic" issues come in) which is a concern and it would result in the country not being united- the slave states would never ratify any government that freed the slaves. We'd have had the country of Virginia, of Carolina, of Pennsylvania, etc... that would either war with each other or war with Britain and eventually be reconquered. (If you will recall, even United, we barely made it through the next war with Britain.)

Of note, even the slaveholders were aware of this compromise with evil. The famous Jefferson quote, "Indeed, I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just: that his justice cannot sleep forever" is about slavery.

So, yes, they were hypocrites, in that they considered slavery evil, but owned slaves. They did, however, plant the seeds for the ending of slavery by drafting the Constitution as under the Articles of Confederation the country would not have been able to do so. As I mentioned, it's mixed and those who want to hate everything about our culture want only to see the evil and not the struggle. (And, of course, ignore the state of most of humanity through history.)

I perhaps should have said economics, but yep. Money/economics was a huge part. Including why the South would not have given up slaves.

Sidenote, but have listened to some interesting lectures and whatnot that slavery makes folks stupid. Not really, just not interested in developing technology. Or spending the capital to invest in equipment. That not having slaves meant the North industrialized far faster and to a greater extent. Aside from the natural human instinct to desire to oppress other folks, slavery allows you to be inefficient by just throwing bodies at a problem rather than figuring out the proper way of doing things. Akin to throwing hardware at a software bottleneck. It's a bad idea, and it's hideously inefficient.

I concur that most of the Founders saw it exactly that way. A compromise with evil against a larger evil.


I can understand your hatred of the institution but things like that are rarely well aimed and a whole lot more innocent people would be devastated and killed in the process.  It is the main reason most us don't really want vigilante movements to organize for other crimes as they have historically gotten out of control and gone well beyond their purpose.  Sherman's March accomplished the military purpose it aimed for.  Reconstruction efforts after the war attempted to do what you wanted to see.  The hatred and resentment over that (among ALL Southerners) lasted quite a while.  

Also, the bolded part was a problem everywhere, not just the South.  Full equality under the law was something that took a lot longer to happen.  Black people continued to be second class citizens in lot of ways.  Slavery was bad and needed to end, but there is plenty of blame to go around for everything else.  

So have civilians in every war since WW1. We killed a lot of innocent French and Germans fighting the Kaiser. More fighting Hitler. More fighting the communists. More fighting terrorists. We killed easily well north of a hundred thousand Iraqis to overthrow Saddam. Probably five times that number. I do think there should be a cost/benefit analysis. In my personal opinion, Iraq was not worth thousands of US lives, let alone trillions of dollars and X hundred thousand Iraqis. The Kaiser, the South, Hitler, communists and terrorism generally? Absolutely worth the cost in blood.

A significant enough number of the population supported or was indifferent. They were allowing an aristocracy to take power. IMHO, even more than slavery, smashing that aristocracy was probably the more important aspect of the civil war. That they held economic power because of slavery is more damning, but they were a significant regional threat.

I'm not a blood thirsty savage, despite it being easily assumed from my earlier posts. I do believe the US government should have made reasonable offers. A hard cutoff in slavery set X years in the future. Offering to buy all slaves for fair market value outright. Offering assistance in industrializing to reduce the need for slaves. Not screwing around with tariffs to benefit wealthy northern industrialists. Just because someone deserves death doesn't mean you should go around killing them. As you say, vigilante movements such as the Klan or Antifa are their own evil and rapidly become worse than whatever alleged purpose they are supposed to serve.


Remembering back to past threads, I do not recall anyone claiming that the slavery had nothing to do with it which is what I get from the first part of your post.  As I recall, that fueled much of the arguments on this site.  One side was saying there were other factors in addition to slavery.  The other side kept saying "but you can't take slavery out it".  The first side essentially said "we aren't, we are just mentioning other factors in addition to it".  ............And on it went with half the people just talking past each other and everyone wanting to put in their two cents.....

Seeing both sides, I think any reasonable person could say "The Civil War was 80% slavery, give or take. Probably higher but we're trying to be nice"

There WERE other factors. But overwhelming, it was slavery and everything else was related.  The states rights argument was largely "the feds were trying to soft ban slavery". Not that I don't believe the feds do trample over states, but enforcing Constitutional protections of citizens against state level oppression is definitely a legitimate task for the feds. The tariffs were part payoff to northern industrialists, but also to punish the south for refusing to industrialize and relying instead on slavery. I'm trying to think of a single "other factor" that was entirely or even substantially unrelated to slavery.

It is a legitimate response to "there were other factors" folks (of which I very much include myself) to say it was overwhelming about slavery to the point where bringing up the other issues should only be of academic consideration. It was virtually all slavery or slavery related subject based.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 18, 2017, 01:56:44 PM
The problem is that dilletantes (and I know 'cause I am one) want to look like smart, independent thinkers, when it comes to history. So people recycle specious things like, "but nobody thought slavery was a big deal!" when the history clearly shows it was one of the most heated issues of the day. Or they mistakenly claim that historians are ignoring the Viking exploration of the Americas; when it's actually considered settled fact, and taught in history books. Or they think Columbus didn't really "discover" America, just because some other people knew about it (nevermind the millions of people that obviously didn't know about it, or they would have started their silver mining operation a whole lot sooner).


Charles Barkley's not too worried about it:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_M9vnv5qIFQ

Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: BobR on August 18, 2017, 02:37:46 PM
https://twitter.com/thebabylonbee/status/898216192393043969

Quote
Margaret Sanger Statue Stifling Laughter

Too bad the "righteous" who want all things oppressive torn down don't know history. :(

bob
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: MechAg94 on August 18, 2017, 04:50:29 PM
I perhaps should have said economics, but yep. Money/economics was a huge part. Including why the South would not have given up slaves.

Sidenote, but have listened to some interesting lectures and whatnot that slavery makes folks stupid. Not really, just not interested in developing technology. Or spending the capital to invest in equipment. That not having slaves meant the North industrialized far faster and to a greater extent. Aside from the natural human instinct to desire to oppress other folks, slavery allows you to be inefficient by just throwing bodies at a problem rather than figuring out the proper way of doing things. Akin to throwing hardware at a software bottleneck. It's a bad idea, and it's hideously inefficient.

I concur that most of the Founders saw it exactly that way. A compromise with evil against a larger evil.


So have civilians in every war since WW1. We killed a lot of innocent French and Germans fighting the Kaiser. More fighting Hitler. More fighting the communists. More fighting terrorists. We killed easily well north of a hundred thousand Iraqis to overthrow Saddam. Probably five times that number. I do think there should be a cost/benefit analysis. In my personal opinion, Iraq was not worth thousands of US lives, let alone trillions of dollars and X hundred thousand Iraqis. The Kaiser, the South, Hitler, communists and terrorism generally? Absolutely worth the cost in blood.

A significant enough number of the population supported or was indifferent. They were allowing an aristocracy to take power. IMHO, even more than slavery, smashing that aristocracy was probably the more important aspect of the civil war. That they held economic power because of slavery is more damning, but they were a significant regional threat.

I'm not a blood thirsty savage, despite it being easily assumed from my earlier posts. I do believe the US government should have made reasonable offers. A hard cutoff in slavery set X years in the future. Offering to buy all slaves for fair market value outright. Offering assistance in industrializing to reduce the need for slaves. Not screwing around with tariffs to benefit wealthy northern industrialists. Just because someone deserves death doesn't mean you should go around killing them. As you say, vigilante movements such as the Klan or Antifa are their own evil and rapidly become worse than whatever alleged purpose they are supposed to serve.


Seeing both sides, I think any reasonable person could say "The Civil War was 80% slavery, give or take. Probably higher but we're trying to be nice"

There WERE other factors. But overwhelming, it was slavery and everything else was related.  The states rights argument was largely "the feds were trying to soft ban slavery". Not that I don't believe the feds do trample over states, but enforcing Constitutional protections of citizens against state level oppression is definitely a legitimate task for the feds. The tariffs were part payoff to northern industrialists, but also to punish the south for refusing to industrialize and relying instead on slavery. I'm trying to think of a single "other factor" that was entirely or even substantially unrelated to slavery.

It is a legitimate response to "there were other factors" folks (of which I very much include myself) to say it was overwhelming about slavery to the point where bringing up the other issues should only be of academic consideration. It was virtually all slavery or slavery related subject based.
1.  The vigilante stuff I was thinking of were unrelated to the Civil War.  The history channel did a show on historical vigilante movements in the US.  Most were local and most all went too far.  They nearly all fixed the problem they were meant to solve.  I recall there was one instance in California where a second vigilante group was set up to oppose the first one.  I am NOT trying to get down on vigilantes too much.  I think that is something politicians and criminals should fear. 

2.  Same as before.  It doesn't matter how you say it.  If I mention one side of the argument no matter how, 3 or 4 people have to chime in and say the same thing as before.   =D
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Ben on August 18, 2017, 09:04:42 PM
"Confederate Flags" removed from NYC subways.

http://twitchy.com/dougp-3137/2017/08/18/peak-ridiculous-here-are-the-confederate-flag-looking-tiles-being-removed-from-nyc-subway/
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Hawkmoon on August 18, 2017, 09:28:42 PM
"Confederate Flags" removed from NYC subways.

http://twitchy.com/dougp-3137/2017/08/18/peak-ridiculous-here-are-the-confederate-flag-looking-tiles-being-removed-from-nyc-subway/

Time to buy a couple of Confederate flags, while they're still available.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 18, 2017, 09:42:02 PM
"Confederate Flags" removed from NYC subways.

http://twitchy.com/dougp-3137/2017/08/18/peak-ridiculous-here-are-the-confederate-flag-looking-tiles-being-removed-from-nyc-subway/


Are they going to start cracking down on the Jamaicans next? Buncha Confederate sympathizers, they are.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: T.O.M. on August 21, 2017, 09:30:00 AM
It's going beyond Civil War statues now...

http://nbc4i.com/2017/08/18/group-calls-for-removal-of-christopher-columbus-statue-downtown/

Calling for removal of the Columbus statue in Columbus, Ohio.  Even suggesting the idea of changing the name of the city.

http://www.theblaze.com/news/2017/08/16/take-down-statue-remove-name-of-slave-owning-george-washington-from-chicago-park-pastor-says/

Calling for removal of Washington and Jackson statues in Chicago, and renaming parks.

Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: RevDisk on August 21, 2017, 09:34:39 AM

Figured that would be the case. I'm curious to how long it will be until FDR statues are demanded to be removed.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Hawkmoon on August 21, 2017, 10:09:14 AM
It's going beyond Civil War statues now...

http://nbc4i.com/2017/08/18/group-calls-for-removal-of-christopher-columbus-statue-downtown/

Calling for removal of the Columbus statue in Columbus, Ohio.  Even suggesting the idea of changing the name of the city.

http://www.theblaze.com/news/2017/08/16/take-down-statue-remove-name-of-slave-owning-george-washington-from-chicago-park-pastor-says/

Calling for removal of Washington and Jackson statues in Chicago, and renaming parks.

Whatever will that large Catholic charitable organization do if they can't be the Knights of Columbus any longer? Will they have to become the Knights of Malcolm X?
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: HankB on August 22, 2017, 08:40:22 AM
Whatever will that large Catholic charitable organization do if they can't be the Knights of Columbus any longer? Will they have to become the Knights of Malcolm X?
I always wondered . . . what happened to Malcolms I through IX?

Anyway, I just saw a story that someone is agitating for the removal of the reliefs of Lee, Jackson, and Davis from Stone Mountain . . . I can't help but be reminded of the Taliban blowing up some ancient standing Buddha carvings in Afghanistan.

Quote
The largest high relief sculpture in the world, the Confederate Memorial Carving, depicts three Confederate figures of the Civil War, President Jefferson Davis and Generals Robert E. Lee and Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson. The entire carved surface measures three-acres, larger than a football field and Mount Rushmore. The carving of the three men towers 400 feet above the ground, measures 90 by 190 feet, and is recessed 42 feet into the mountain. The deepest point of the carving is at Lee's elbow, which is 12 feet to the mountain's surface.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 22, 2017, 08:49:52 AM
Now, as a Republican, I'm not entirely displeased to see Confederate statues removed. My question is, do we replace them with statues of Donald Trump?

Or do we replace them with statues of the prophet Mohammad?

 ???
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: RoadKingLarry on August 22, 2017, 09:00:37 AM
Now, as a Republican, I'm not entirely displeased to see Confederate statues removed. My question is, do we replace them with statues of Donald Trump?

Or do we replace them with statues of the prophet Mohammad?

 ???

Lenin, Stalin, Mao and Che'.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Ben on August 22, 2017, 11:03:39 AM
On the road so can't find the link anymore, but yesterday I read about a 200 year old Columbus monument being destroyed via sledge hammer, apparently videoed by the culprits, who sounded like white trust fund antifa wannnabes.

How is this crap any different than what the Taliban did (still does) regarding destruction of ancient monuments and texts all over the Middle East? Conservatives should be making this comparison, because what these lefty nuts are doing is no different than religious zealotry.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Hawkmoon on August 22, 2017, 12:41:17 PM
Vandalism, in the name of the new socio-political truth, becomes ... heroism.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 22, 2017, 01:01:36 PM
Don't they know Columbus was an undocumented immigrant, who spoke Spanish?  ???


(stolen from one of Mark Steyn's listeners on the Rush Limbaugh show)
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: zxcvbob on August 22, 2017, 01:24:48 PM
http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/HPD-HFD-FBI-on-scene-overnight-at-Rice-11946918.php?ipid=ntk

Quote
Schneck's arrest about 11 p.m. Saturday followed a day of protests and counter-protests over another controversial statue, the Spirit of the Confederacy, in Sam Houston Park. The "Destroy the Confederacy" protest drew hundreds but ended without incident.
Park Ranger Tamara Curtis, who was not allowed to speak to the media Monday, found Schneck near the base of the Dowling statue with two boxes filled with a homemade detonator, a timer, wiring, a battery, a bottle of nitroglycerin and an explosive organic compound known as HMTD, hexamethylene triperoxide diamine, according to the sworn statement by Federal Bureau of Investigations Special Agent Patrick Hutchinson.
After being confronted, he tried to drink some of the liquid explosives but "immediately spit the liquid on the ground ... then proceeded to pour the contents of the bottle on the ground next to him," according to the statement.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: RevDisk on August 22, 2017, 01:53:40 PM

Drinking nitro is not good for the heart.

I hate the Confederacy as much as any person should, but this is getting a bit ridiculous.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 22, 2017, 02:04:32 PM
Maybe someone should let Antifa know that the Confederacy were mostly white, anti-American, and they favored the Democratic Party over the Republicans. Like them.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: just Warren on August 22, 2017, 03:10:22 PM
They also believed that there should be no unemployment for blacks.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 22, 2017, 03:54:03 PM
They also believed that there should be no unemployment for blacks.


It really was a true cradle-to-grave system.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Scout26 on August 22, 2017, 10:40:22 PM
Maybe we should replace them with statues to Kaiser Wilhelm, Napoleon, Wellington, von Clauswitz (along with Gneisenau and Scharnhorst, just to give folks a pronunciation challenge) etc.

Since our history is "bad" maybe we can borrow some from Europe as they didn't own slaves...
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: MechAg94 on August 22, 2017, 11:12:45 PM
http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2017/08/take_down_the_statues_of_robert_byrd.html
Take Down the Statues of Robert Byrd

(https://armedpolitesociety.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fadmin.americanthinker.com%2Fimages%2Fbucket%2F2017-08%2F199985_5_.png&hash=33c786d43f7c3fa0d10c2c970d2e973f8643440b)

A better target.  I doubt they will listen.  It doesn't fit their outrage plan.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Hawkmoon on August 22, 2017, 11:19:31 PM
Don't they know Columbus was an undocumented immigrant, who spoke Spanish?  ???


(stolen from one of Mark Steyn's listeners on the Rush Limbaugh show)

Ole' Chris was an Italian. Dunno if he spoke Spanish, even if he did get funding from Isabella of Spain.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Hawkmoon on August 22, 2017, 11:21:51 PM

Since our history is "bad" maybe we can borrow some from Europe as they didn't own slaves...

They just called them "indentured servants."

A rose by any other name ...
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Scout26 on August 22, 2017, 11:42:07 PM
They just called them "indentured servants."

A rose by any other name ...

Yes, but they weren't Black Slaves, it was OK.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 23, 2017, 12:13:16 AM
Ole' Chris was an Italian. Dunno if he spoke Spanish, even if he did get funding from Isabella of Spain.


As far as I know, he was from Genoa. I believe that's the conventional view. Theories abound that he was actually a Spaniard, perhaps of Jewish extraction. Then again, rumors abound that Hitler was Jewish, and there's a book (https://www.amazon.com/Schmelvis-Search-Elvis-Presleys-Jewish/dp/155022462X) that claims Elvis was Jewish, so...

I presume he spoke Spanish, just due to his involvement with that empire.
Title: Re:
Post by: Neemi on August 23, 2017, 12:21:32 AM
You asked what would replace the statues? There's a petition for a Britney Spears replacement.

https://www.google.com/amp/www.billboard.com/amp/articles/columns/pop/7940876/britney-spears-statue-petition-louisiana-confederate-replace
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 23, 2017, 12:55:14 AM
I thought the Muhammad idea would get a bit more reaction. Seemed humorous to me.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Pb on August 23, 2017, 08:47:04 AM
There is only one logical replacement for these statues:

(https://armedpolitesociety.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.informationliberation.com%2Ffiles%2Ftrump-statue1.jpg&hash=905353385c52b3d804b2be942086dc9604e78776)
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: HankB on August 23, 2017, 08:50:08 AM
Quote from: MechAg
Insert Quote
http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2017/08/take_down_the_statues_of_robert_byrd.html
Take Down the Statues of Robert Byrd

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXT7JlBprik

Hmmm . . . didn't most Indians Native Americans take and keep slaves?

Doesn't that mean we have to purge public statues and paintings of Geronimo, Sitting Bull, Tecumseh, Crazy Horse, Cochise, and a host of others?
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: bedlamite on August 23, 2017, 09:43:40 AM
Taco bell employees remove statue they find offensive:

(https://scontent-ort2-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/20953260_2370422159848760_2123187883966756519_n.jpg?oh=229d02ec28c5e7c9c5f299a4f9185605&oe=5A2ADFC4)
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Scout26 on August 23, 2017, 02:35:01 PM
I thought the Muhammad idea would get a bit more reaction. Seemed humorous to me.

Nah....that would just piss them off more...
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 23, 2017, 02:42:12 PM
Nah....that would just piss them off more...


You say that like it's a bad thing. I think they'd praise it, as a show of love and acceptance to our Islamic brothers and sisters - er, gender-fluid siblings.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Scout26 on August 23, 2017, 02:46:33 PM

You say that like it's a bad thing. I think they'd praise it, as a show of love and acceptance to our Islamic brothers and sisters - er, gender-fluid siblings.

Yeah, until the Muslim's go all BSC and start chopping off heads....
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: BlueStarLizzard on August 23, 2017, 03:06:01 PM
Yeah, until the Muslim's go all BSC and start chopping off heads....

As long as they're chopping off the heads of the loving, accepting brothers and sisters and gender fluid siblings, I don't see this as a bad thing...
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 23, 2017, 03:16:50 PM
Yeah, until the Muslim's go all BSC and start chopping off heads....


Which would also make the alt-left happy.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Scout26 on August 23, 2017, 03:27:10 PM
As long as they're chopping off the heads of the loving, accepting brothers and sisters and gender fluid siblings, I don't see this as a bad thing...

I could get behind that...
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: BlueStarLizzard on August 23, 2017, 06:10:01 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/08/23/charlottesville-covers-robert-e-lee-stonewall-jackson-statues-with-black-shroud.html

Charlottesville can't take them down, so instead they've covered them.

and, despite the "official" reporting (even from fox) slant that the majority wants this, here is an eyewitness:

"Charlottesville Statues...Today the City of Charlottesville could not wait for their cloth to shroud the statues. They took tarps and duct tape and covered the statues as fast as possible. I had planned on going this afternoon and taking Emily to photograph the statues to get a before and after, but then the City reported that they were not waiting any longer. I was down there within an hour and it was all over and so quiet. Both Emancipation Park and Court Square were done. All that was left were statues of US Veterans tarped and taped and people photographing this moment in history. The City wanted to show that we were mourning, and there was a sentiment of mourning. Everyone I spoke to in the parks, both black and white, were just dumfounded. I was shocked to here that everyone (black and white) that I spoke to didn't want this and didn't feel this solved anything. I feel like today Charlottesville just baited the hate groups to come back. I was finally okay and accepting of the statues going away, but not okay with this. I did take Emily to see the statues and explained that this was historical. Of course, then I had to explain slaves. It didn't go well because she couldn't relate to why someone would think being black was different. I heard a white man sing We Shall Overcome today...and a black man cried because this isn't solving the problem. We spoke of Martin Luther King and how did we end up here. How? How did one City Council change the face of the world? My Mom marched for civil rights...she and my dad were extremely liberal. They fought for fair housing and bussing in MD. Today, she cried...how did we go backwards and deface US Veterans...For those of you that don't know our Civil War vets are not traitors. They had been classified US veterans by Congress over 70 years ago.
Emily's lesson of the day...never disrespect a Veteran, never judge anyone by their color and always use peaceful means to affect change.
Many emotions over this and none are good. Hopefully, Emily will remember the day the statues were tarped...as a learning experience to treat people better. So weird to be downtown and smell the wonderful fragrance of the bushes and the beauty of the flowers and the make shift memorials to Heather Heyer and the tarping of the statues"
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Scout26 on August 24, 2017, 08:16:11 PM
Meanwhile Virginia wants to rename the Jefferson Davis Highway.    https://survey.alexandriava.gov/s3/Jefferson-Davis-Highway-Renaming

My suggestions included:

Hershey Highway
Highway McHighwayface
and

Drumroll please.....

Jefferson Davis Highway !!!



Other great suggestions here:

http://twitchy.com/brettt-3136/2017/08/24/virginia-seeks-new-name-for-jefferson-davis-highway-makes-wrong-turn-onto-information-superhighway/
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Ben on August 24, 2017, 09:21:21 PM
I want to rename every road named Martin Luther King Jr Blvd. Maybe then the crime in those areas will drop.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: RoadKingLarry on August 24, 2017, 09:24:55 PM
In keeping with the leftist mentality a few options-
Ernesto "Che" Geuvera Memorial highway.
Mao Zedong Shining Path.
Fidel Castro Memorial Highway
Vladimir Lenin Revolutionary Way.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Angel Eyes on August 24, 2017, 09:27:10 PM
I want to rename every road named Martin Luther King Jr Blvd. Maybe then the crime in those areas will drop.

https://youtu.be/7hJxWr1TKK8?t=28

Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: KD5NRH on August 24, 2017, 10:06:34 PM
In keeping with the tradition of assigning impractically long names to roads, I suggested General Thomas Johnathan "Stonewall" Jackson Memorial Highway.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: zxcvbob on August 24, 2017, 10:20:04 PM
In keeping with the tradition of assigning impractically long names to roads, I suggested General Thomas Johnathan "Stonewall" Jackson Memorial Highway.

Or name one after Raymond J. Johnson Jr >:D but you can call him Ray, or you can call him Jay...  (but you doesn't have to call him Johnson)
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: RoadKingLarry on August 24, 2017, 10:37:41 PM
How about
Gov. William J. Le Petomane Thruway.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Ben on August 24, 2017, 10:44:09 PM
I.P. Freely Highway.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Scout26 on August 25, 2017, 01:18:56 AM
(https://scontent-atl3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/20992755_1600457699985555_2242782139860961390_n.jpg?oh=d1a20c3437f87ea8be50ec2c4b5884a6&oe=5A5F25F3)
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Scout26 on August 25, 2017, 01:21:44 AM
(https://scontent-atl3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/21105624_1770711729624730_2531880384711277328_n.jpg?oh=f624b59d0144db7e1027b9b9ccd4ed82&oe=5A140A3A)
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: K Frame on August 25, 2017, 07:38:12 AM
Meanwhile Virginia wants to rename the Jefferson Davis Highway.    https://survey.alexandriava.gov/s3/Jefferson-Davis-Highway-Renaming

My suggestions included:

Hershey Highway
Highway McHighwayface
and

Drumroll please.....

Jefferson Davis Highway !!!



Other great suggestions here:

http://twitchy.com/brettt-3136/2017/08/24/virginia-seeks-new-name-for-jefferson-davis-highway-makes-wrong-turn-onto-information-superhighway/



I submitted Precious Snowflake McManbun Way.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Perd Hapley on August 25, 2017, 08:06:52 AM
Eventually, when we're all sufficiently woke, we'll need to destroy that monument to racism that we call the Democratic Party.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Ben on August 25, 2017, 05:56:04 PM
Good on Charlie Daniels for this truth bomb calling out the jackwagons that are now after Dolly Parton:

https://twitchy.com/dougp-3137/2017/08/25/bam-charlie-daniels-hammers-activists-setting-sights-on-dolly-parton-business/
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Angel Eyes on August 25, 2017, 05:57:19 PM
Eventually, when we're all sufficiently woke, we'll need to destroy that monument to racism that we call the Democratic Party.

I have a dream . . .
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Ben on August 28, 2017, 04:20:52 PM
Now it's bleeding over to films. Gone With the Wind is now gone with the wind in Memphis.

http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2017/08/28/gone-with-wind-screenings-pulled-from-memphis-theater-for-racially-insensitive-content.html
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: cordex on August 28, 2017, 07:34:35 PM
Now it's bleeding over to films. Gone With the Wind is now gone with the wind in Memphis.

http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2017/08/28/gone-with-wind-screenings-pulled-from-memphis-theater-for-racially-insensitive-content.html
I don't know nothing 'bout censoring history for the sake of overly sensitive babies.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Scout26 on August 28, 2017, 07:37:33 PM
I don't know nothing 'bout censoring history for the sake of overly sensitive babies.

And that's the thread folks....Thanks for playing !!!!
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Ben on August 28, 2017, 07:47:10 PM
This spun up mob with pitchforks *expletive deleted*it is exactly why you'll never catch me living in a Democracy. It's getting enough out of hand in a Republic with constitutional protections.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: 230RN on August 29, 2017, 09:38:52 AM
Eventually, when we're all sufficiently woke, we'll need to destroy that monument to racism that we call the Democratic Party.

Ooooo, a kick right in the gonads. <gender-neutral term.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Hawkmoon on August 29, 2017, 11:18:59 AM
I want to rename every road named Martin Luther King Jr Blvd. Maybe then the crime in those areas will drop.

I live near one of them. If that was the goal, it didn't work.

They went whole hog, too. The official name of the street is "The Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard." On the street signs they kindly abbreviated "Doctor" as DR, "Reverend" as REV, and "Boulevard" as BLVD. It's still probably the longest street name in the entire state.
Title: Re: More Confederate memorial removals
Post by: Hawkmoon on August 29, 2017, 11:29:44 AM
Good on Charlie Daniels for this truth bomb calling out the jackwagons that are now after Dolly Parton:

https://twitchy.com/dougp-3137/2017/08/25/bam-charlie-daniels-hammers-activists-setting-sights-on-dolly-parton-business/

Aren't the Dixie Chicks supposed to be sort of woke? When are they going to change the name of their group?

My suggestion: The Texas Twits.