SouthernUnkleRitchie
Verified User
"Trader"? Are you making a joke or just stupid?
Lee traded the usa for the confederacy.
"Trader"? Are you making a joke or just stupid?
Doesn't change the fact that Lincoln did first ask Lee to lead the Union Army and if you have to hate on Lee then great, but the man wasn't anywhere near as evil as some people try to make him out to be.
Treason isn't,jay walking
Sorry but that just wrong, in fact several Northern states discussed seceding in 1812. It wasn't until the war was over that the Union decided that secession was not allowed. In fact, with true irony, the Northern states kicked the secession states out and then insisted they petition for reentry.
I know. All I'm saying is the decision as to how to proceed after the war was made at the time, long before you and I were born. I think trying to rewrite history long after the fact just because some people are uncomfortable with the reality is a very bad idea. Whether anyone likes it or not Robert E. Lee was an important figure in American history.
The British abolished slavery throughout the empire in 1833, they would have ensured that the South would have done the same. The Brits also paid huge compensation to slave traders, if Lincoln had. Done the same then there would have been no war.
I know. All I'm saying is the decision as to how to proceed after the war was made at the time, long before you and I were born. I think trying to rewrite history long after the fact just because some people are uncomfortable with the reality is a very bad idea. Whether anyone likes it or not Robert E. Lee was an important figure in American history.
The Civil War most assuredly was about slavery.
The idea of a perpetual union has a long history:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perpetual_Union
Yes other factions in the US had at times tried to secede, but that hardly justifies it. In practice states almost never allow unilateral independence by a federal unit. Stop listening to lost cause propaganda that you probably picked up with all your white nationalist youtubing you old fart.
Also, yes, in the initial aftermath of the war the union did put conditions on "reentry", but in 1869 in Texas v. White the supreme court declare that Texas had always legally been a part of the union and that any declarations to the contrary were illegal and not in effect:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_v._White
And that's been the law of the land ever since. The constitution forbids withdrawal from the union, in order to withdraw you would need a constitutional amendment.

Are you retarded? Lincoln would've been glad to settle the issue on a compensated end of slavery. In practice he was willing to let them do much more, he offered to amend the constitution to protect slavery as long as the union would stay together. After the south declared independence out of pure stubborness and lost the war, obviously, the north was not at all in a forgiving mood and there was no chance that they'd give the plantation owners compensation.
It was the south who was stubborn, refused a compensated end of slavery, a continuation of slavery, or anything.
^southern states thinking the confederacy was a good idea was a non starter from the git go.
Furthermore, Lincoln did not at the time have the constitutional authority to force those four states to abolish slavery.
The British abolished slavery throughout the empire in 1833, they would have ensured that the South would have done the same. The Brits also paid huge compensation to slave traders, if Lincoln had. Done the same then there would have been no war.
Robert E Lee turned on his country,that was treason,then and it's still treason now.
The idea of a perpetual union has a long history:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perpetual_Union
Yes other factions in the US had at times tried to secede, but that hardly justifies it. In practice states almost never allow unilateral independence by a federal unit. Stop listening to lost cause propaganda that you probably picked up with all your white nationalist youtubing you old fart.
Also, yes, in the initial aftermath of the war the union did put conditions on "reentry", but in 1869 in Texas v. White the supreme court declare that Texas had always legally been a part of the union and that any declarations to the contrary were illegal and not in effect:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_v._White
And that's been the law of the land ever since. The constitution forbids withdrawal from the union, in order to withdraw you would need a constitutional amendment.
The South could have and should have won the war. Lee was a poor general. Too offensive-minded.
Yes, and that was not the case before the war, so kindly stop putting the cart before the horse!!
Are you retarded? Lincoln would've been glad to settle the issue on a compensated end of slavery. In practice he was willing to let them do much more, he offered to amend the constitution to protect slavery as long as the union would stay together. After the south declared independence out of pure stubborness and lost the war, obviously, the north was not at all in a forgiving mood and there was no chance that they'd give the plantation owners compensation.
It was the south who was stubborn, refused a compensated end of slavery, a continuation of slavery, or anything.
They didn't trust the North and I can't really blame them. They were stiffed for taxes to pay for Northern industrialisation and didn't believe their promises. The Brits should have joined forces with the South, used their expertise to industrialise and then freed the slaves.