GraniteStater wrote:We who like to run a computer program that simulates the conflict of 1861-1865 should take a moment today and remember those who died in it. We who are US citizens should most especially remember the sacrifices made; those of other nations I am sure would wish to acknowledge the tragedy of having to fight a war that perhaps should have been averted if we Americans had listened to the better angels of our nature.
The ways of the Almighty, Providence, or Fate, howsoever you wish to express it, are not our ways, and the highest purposes are sometimes attained by paths not easily seen.
May all the Blue and Gray rest in peace.
Gray_Lensman wrote:The 600,000 deaths could not have been avoided. The conflict was a result of a fatal "birth defect" built into the constitution itself.
In 1860, it had only one way left to be expunged. Blood!
Now, if you look at if from today's viewpoint, who knows how it would have worked out?
For sure however, in 1860, "Four Score and Four Years" of compromise after compromise, drifting further and further apart, the only way to resolve it was Blood, and it could not have been avoided at all at that point.
Gray_Lensman wrote:The 600,000 deaths could not have been avoided. The conflict was a result of a fatal "birth defect" built into the constitution itself.
In 1860, it had only one way left to be expunged. Blood!
Now, if you look at if from today's viewpoint, who knows how it would have worked out?
For sure however, in 1860, "Four Score and Four Years" of compromise after compromise, drifting further and further apart, the only way to resolve it was Blood, and it could not have been avoided at all at that point.
Gray_Lensman wrote:The 600,000 deaths could not have been avoided. The conflict was a result of a fatal "birth defect" built into the constitution itself.
TheDoctorKing wrote:Capitalism was more efficient, and the southerners knew this. They had a very valuable product, but they knew that their system was ultimately bound for the junkheap. The money power of the north was already taking control of their system. Many plantations in Virginia and Maryland had gone bankrupt in the crash of the 1830s, and many Chesapeake Bay farmers were only keeping going by selling their slaves, the source of their wealth, to planters farther south. Plantations in the Deep South were profitable, but payments on their debts meant that most of the profits were actually reaped by northern banks.
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