Fabian Socialist Dream Come True!

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The Fabian Society began in England in 1887 by a very small group of elitist socialist that sought to reform society gradually into one of socialism instead of through violent revolution. At first their purpose was to be an alternative in Britain for the more dominate Marxist Social-Democratic Federation, but their true goal was to accomplish socialism through a very gradual process using the voting booth and representative democracy as their instrument of change. In fact, one of their symbols is a Turtle with the motto: "When I Strike, I Strike Hard". Another symbol is the Wolf in Sheep's Clothing and the Globe on an Anvil being hammered into the Fabian model.

The Fabian Plan for gradual Socialist Revolution was as definitive as it possibly could be, to say it has been a conspiracy is simplistic in the extreme. It instituted a widespread educational program for its leadership and its minions, as time progressed, it opened schools, such as the London School of Economics, and the New School of Social Research.

One stroke of genius was that instead of advocating a Socialist State, they assisted in the implementation of the Welfare State, which as we should all know is merely a few steps away from a purely Socialistic State. It was, of course, implemented gradually, and played upon the weaknesses of human nature to gain popularity. Unlike the usual Socialist points of views, the Fabians didn't advocate complete State ownership of businesses, industry, agriculture or land, instead they sought to involve the State into very specific areas of importance such as electric power production, transportation, precious metals and of course, credit. The remaining balance of economic systems would be left to the private sector however; it would be highly regulated by the State and operated according to the wishes of the State.

If you look at Britain, you will see that they accomplished their goals with ease and while American has been more difficult, the goals are the same and they have made enormous advances toward those goals, as we all know. Much of their accomplishments have been realized without using that dreaded word: Socialism. They have brought the Fabian Dream to America through an extremely brilliant system that has been openly accepted by the voters of this country without the hint of suspicion on their part that they were voting a Socialistic system into place.

Now, make no mistake about it, Fabian Socialists are Statist, they are absolutely authoritarian in their philosophy. Their long-term goal has always been a Socialistic Dictatorship with full-imposition of a very legalistic society where the individual is simply a part of the collective. An example of this can be found in the writings of one of the founders of the Fabian Society, George Bernard Shaw speaking of the Socialist Utopia, he said: "Under Socialism, you would not be allowed to be poor. You would be forcibly fed, clothed, lodged, taught, and employed whether you liked it or not. If it were discovered that you had not the character and industry enough to be worth all this trouble, you might possibly be executed in a kindly manner; but whilst you were permitted to live, you would have to live well."

Of course, all of this would be in the best interest of society as a whole and the whole made up simply of parts, individuals merely cogs in the machine of social justice. This idea of social justice is the biggest selling point and perhaps the easiest to peddle to the people. Programs of social reform, incremental at first, allowed for the tempering of the people; allowing for them to grow accustom to the intervention of the State in the affairs of the individual. Of course, such reforms are never an end unto themselves only stepping-stones to a greater Socialist construct of society.

Regarding the great strides made toward these goals, Max Beer stated with confidence: "There was no reason for Socialists to wait for revolution. The realization of socialism had begun the moment when the State became accessible to social reform ideas." Indeed, the revolution was already half realized at the moment when the State stepped over the threshold of progressive social construction and intervention into the private lives of the people.

The first step in any Socialist plan is the reform of capitalism, when the capitalist system is sufficiently neutralized the rest comes relatively easy. The first step to an efficient plan of capitalist neutralization is control over the money supply and for that a central bank is required along with a fiat monetary system, in this country that was initiated with the advent of the Federal Reserve. Later, of course must come effective controls over major infrastructure and services, all accomplished through the New Deal. The New Deal accomplished substantial feats toward the Fabian Socialist construct with numerous price controls, quotas, subsidies, inspections, regulations, licenses, fees, penalties and massive government interventions into what was formerly private enterprise. Although you would never hear politicians of either political party to admit to support the ideals of socialism, they nevertheless not only support such measures, but also promote them.

We have recently seen a greater push toward socialism, though few realize it. The government is assuming more and more responsibility for and authority over the economy, all under the guise of protecting the people from potentially unscrupulous free marketeers. We are being moved yet another step closer to the dream-society of the Fabians. Of course, these are simply steps, essential parts to a much broader agenda, one that is authoritarian in nature and execution, even the centrally planned economy is a mere step, not the end product. It is all carefully crafted, manufactured to ensure the most popular support possible for "people-friendly" solutions while instituting a fraudulent system of central control over the unsuspecting public. The system has been marketed to the public, one specific component at a time, each component essential to the completion of the whole and that is the brilliance of this gradual imposition of Fabian Socialism in this country.

The greatest bulwark against tyranny in America has always been the system of private ownership and free enterprise, it is the cornerstone of our system of government and without it our freedoms and liberty are in jeopardy. Central economic planning is, in a very basic sense, the keystone to Fabian Socialism, for in order for it to succeed, central State planning and control must replace the system of free enterprise. While it was not necessary for the State to actually own or directly control all the elements in the economy it is enough for the State to have the right to assert itself in any area that it deems necessary. The Fabians called it "the democratization of economic power", in other words socialized and centralized control over economic direction within the country.

In 1942, Stuart Chase, in his book "The Road We Are Traveling" spelled out the system of planning the Fabians had in mind; the interesting thing is to look at that plan in comparison to 2008 America.

1. Strong, centralized government.

2. Powerful Executive at the expense of Congress and the Judicial.

3. Government controlled banking, credit and securities exchange.

4. Government control over employment.

5. Unemployment insurance, old age pensions.

6. Universal medical care, food and housing programs.

7. Access to unlimited government borrowing.

8. A managed monetary system.

9. Government control over foreign trade.

10. Government control over natural energy sources, transportation and agricultural production.

11. Government regulation of labor.

12. Youth camps devoted to health discipline, community service and ideological teaching consistent with those of the authorities.

13. Heavy progressive taxation.

It should be evident that while Socialist no longer use the name that the plan is Socialism at its heart. The Fabian Socialist Revolution began in earnest in this country in 1933 with the imposition of the Welfare State and has been steadily progressing since. Those who are promoting this system, whether in the Republican Party or Democratic Party, are nothing less than Traitors, guilty of a type of high treason that deserves the most punitive penalty for such treachery. Listen carefully to the propositions of both McCain and Obama; I suspect that you will quickly find both of their positions are not only similar, but propose in essence and detail the Fabian Socialist construct. The system that these marauders are imposing upon us will ultimately alter our system of government beyond recognition.

It is all accomplished with the utmost respectability of course, they would not dream of such an imposition without popular support and they will make sure that they have popular support.

In 1933, they proposed that private enterprise had failed leaving the jobless to starve, hope to fade and that the State must step in to save the country and protect the people from the dangers associated with the inherent problems of free enterprise. Today, the call is very similar, the State must step in to protect the people. The Corporate State is, in the minds of Fabians, the ultimate protector of the common man, the provider of security on all fronts, but it requires our complete compliance and the relinquishment of our liberty in exchange. The State is to ultimately be the only one allowed wealth, the problem is that wealth is the people's wealth confiscated in exchange for their hard labor. It is, in essence, a plan for a modern feudal society of peonage and the people are the peons.

The Neo-Cons, by the way, are just a branch of the Trotskites who had formerly infiltrated the Democratic Party in the 40's and 50's changed Party affiliation during the late 60's and early 70's. I could have indeed gone into depth about Leo Strauss and his rabid ideology of Trotsky's Continual Revolution and how that has posed a huge threat to our country. The major differences is technique, the RED Neo-Con Trotskites are bold and brash while their RED Fabian cousins are far more subtle in their approach. I consider them all TRAITORS to the Republic!

Proofs of a Conspiracy? Look around...

In Liberty and Eternal Vigilance,

Republicae-Seditionist

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Extremely well done! Thank

Extremely well done! Thank you for this post. What's so frustrating is that so many Americans are living in such a fog and state of denial that they can't and don't want to see what is happening. Since you mentioned Leo Strauss, here is an excellent article that sums up his philosphy called "Leo Strauss and the Neocon Lust for Terror". Check it out!

http://georgewashington2.blogspot.com/2008/05/strauss-and-ne...

Doc Holladay
Nashville, TN
http://www.myspace.com/docholladaymusic

www.reverbnation.com/docholladaymusic

Truth is treason in an empire of lies.

Thanks, I will check it out

Thanks, I will check it out and I appreciate the comment...

check out my blog at
http://www.1776solution.blogspot.com

http://militantjeffersonian.com

"Men do not willingly read unpalatable truths of themselves. The People like those best who fool them most, by pandering to their vices and flattering their foibles" Raphael Semmes

Cool, thanks for the

Cool, thanks for the link.

~peace~

Doc Holladay
Nashville, TN
http://www.myspace.com/docholladaymusic

www.reverbnation.com/docholladaymusic

Truth is treason in an empire of lies.

Excellent explanation.

At the end, where you explain the difference between the neo-con's and the Fabians is very well thought out. We could almost look at McCain as the Trotskyite and Obama as the Fabian horses in the race. We have a choice between two kinds of socialists for President of a Republic. Only in the good old USA. (But wait, there is another choice. A vote for Ron Paul is a vote for the Constitution and Liberty.) Very informative post!

Great info...

Thanks, For presenting a confusing subject in a way thats easy to read and understand.
I had a good understanding that neo-con/rep. & dem. were working to the same goal but I didn't know the why/how they acted so different but ultimatly the same. this explains it all.

The only true conservitive now is the liberatarian? right

" When policemen break the law there is no law, just the fight for survival"
~ Quote by Billy Jack

Another Terrific Post Republicae!

I have spent a good bit of time lately reading UK based sites and I take it that Blair and Brown (New Labour) are Fabian Socialists. The general consensus online is that they have ruined Britain with tax and spend policy whilst not tending the economy, allowing immigration to soar and causing manufacturing to be moved out of the country. Where have I heard these complaints before....hmmm. I read calls for a return to the Conservatives party leading the country all the time in various posts on their news sites. How do these parties compare to our Democrats and Republicans? Are their major differences or do they basically correlate?

Thanks Susan, yes, both

Thanks Susan, yes, both Blair and Brown, in fact most of the Labor Party are also Fabians. Actually, the Labor Party got its start from the Fabian Society, more or less. Back in the 50's and 60's, what we now call Neo-Cons were leftist in the Democratic Party, they then migrated into the Republican Party during the 70's. The Conservative Party in Britain is more closely associated with the Tory's, those who are Monarchist, similar to the Hamiltonian version of Early America. The Labor Party traces its heritage directly back to Marx and Lenin.

Of course, the Republican Party in this country got its start under the Hamiltonian ideal of a strong centralized government, thus we have Lincoln strong-arming the South, instead of the consent of the People, Lincoln believed that the People did not have a right to determine their own future and form of government, even though in earlier years he had expressed that: "This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing Government, they can exercise their constitutional right of amending it or their revolutionary right to dismember or overthrow it."

Lincoln's goal, along with the Radical Republicans, was to centralize the government, to eliminate the Constitutional Order which enumerated that the States, along with the People, the Sovereignty in this country. He and his Radicals desired and got, by force, a central power, with the seeds of sovereignty within it. Before that, the federal government was a reflection of the States, in compact, forming a voluntary union. Each State was a Republic, thus this country was formed as a Republic of Republics with the federal government operating completely with delegated powers only without in inherent powers of its own except as allowed. It was a wonderful system, brilliant in concept and execution until the usurpers destroyed it. By the way, Lincoln appears to have had close ties to the Marxists of the day, many of the 48's came from their failed socialist revolution in Germany to end up as high-raking generals in Lincoln's army.

So, today the Democratic Party is no longer the Party of Jefferson, but the Republican Party has returned to its Radical and Dangerous Lincolnite Roots. The Republican Party of the 1950s was perhaps the closest it came to being Jeffersonian in principle, but alas that too has faded into history. Dr. Paul of course, is the closest this country has come to Jefferson in a long, long time.

By the way Susan, I have posted several other articles that you may enjoy, but they seem to filter through the DailyPaul rather quickly before people really get to read them. Hope you enjoy.

http://militantjeffersonian.com

"Men do not willingly read unpalatable truths of themselves. The People like those best who fool them most, by pandering to their vices and flattering their foibles" Raphael Semmes

what should Lincoln have done?

There must be scholars who've suggested other ways than war of rectifying the extreme problem posed by slavery in the confederate states. Libertarians today can look at similar situations in various countries around the world and say our government should not use war as a mode of change since that punishes innocents as well as the guilty, plus war diverts resources from making this country a free, safe example and refuge for those seeking freedom.
But during Lincoln's administration with slavery rampant in states of the union, what would be a solution that could spare innocent blood yet achieve freedom and justice for all? It was inadequate to rely on heroic independent freedom fighters like John Brown.
Today the Bush administration blocks trade and even access to supplies, to bully countries that don't please the NeoCons. But I doubt the young U.S. had the clout for such measures to be even an option.
Despite Lincoln't theoretical views, many in the union were desperate for some way to end slavery. What should they have done?

Ah History.....Republicae, Thanks for taking the time to teach

a very enlightening post!

First, it is very important

First, it is very important to understand that there is a massive misconception in this country that the War was caused by the issue of slavery. While slavery was an issue in both North and South, it was in a much broader context in terms of the War.

First, slavery could not have been the issue in the North since Lincoln proposed a Constitutional Amendment to protect the institution of slavery forever if the South would only return to the Union. Likewise, slavery could not have been the issue in the South for Secession since all they would need to is remain in the Union, accepting Lincoln’s deal and they could have easily continued life as it was, with slavery forever protected by Constitutional Amendment.

So, if slavery was not the issue, then what was? Obviously, we must look back at the history of the period preceding the War years to answer that question. As far back as the 1820s, a type of sectionalism began to develop with the Northern States pressing their power in Congress over the Southern States. With this power they began to impose heavy tariffs on the South, draining the effectiveness of the Southern economy. Now, it is also very important to understand that several things were happening in history at the period, the industrial revolution was taking place and at first it made slavery even more important to the Southern economy, but soon it began to prove that slavery was becoming an obsolete institution. In fact, by 1840 slavery was rapidly becoming uneconomical as a agri-business. Slavery was a dying institution by the time the War began. Slavery may have lasted into the 1870s, but I have my doubts about that. The fact that many knew that slavery was dying, Jefferson Davis stated that no matter who won the War, that slavery would end either way. The Southern Leadership knew very well that slavery was no longer a profitable endeavor for the Southern economy.

Most of the people in the South understood that and had been in the process of manumission for decades, freeing over 300,000 slaves during a few decades. However, the Southern plan for emancipation had the slaves in mind with preparations for those slaves to integrate into society. We must also understand that both by law and social standards, slave ownership was a life-long proposition. In other words, it was a cradle to grave institution and it was the responsibility of the owner to care for those slaves from the time they were born, through old age until their death. That was an extremely expensive proposition to undertake. Contrary to our impressions about slavery, the fact is if you read the Slave Narratives you will find that over 70% of those former slaves spoke well of their former masters and of their time in bondage. There were very strong social pressures on slave owners to treat their slaves with “christian” charity, now obviously there were those who didn’t treat their slaves with such charity, but those appear to be the exception not the rule.

Now, to Mr. Lincoln, he was a pawn for the Northern War Party, otherwise known as the Republican Party, filled with Radicals who could not wait to get their hands of the wealth of the South and indeed they plundered the South through War and so-called Reconstruction. They cared less about the slaves, proof of that is easily seen by the fact that after the War they allowed nearly a million slaves to starve to death, along with numerous whites in the South. Remember, the South had a plan in place for gradual emancipation of the slaves, preparing them for freedom and preparation that they would desperately need to integrate into society and be successful. By the way, the Northern Leadership wanted to free the slaves and then deport them out of the country, while in the South they were prepared to bring the slaves to freedom through preparation integrating them into society as productive citizens, they had, after all, been doing just that for years. We must understand however, that in order to do that there would have to be a strong economic base in place to handle such integration, otherwise the freed slaves would find themselves in the same horrible conditions that freed slaves in the North had to endure..

To reiterate, slavery could not have been the reason for Lincoln waging war on the South since he offered to save and protect slavery forever if only the South remain in the Union. On the other hand, slavery could not have been the reason for the South's Secession since they could have easily saved and protected the institution of slavery simply by agreeing to Lincoln's deal and remaining in the Union.

Even the act of Secession itself was not the cause of the War, nor was Lincoln a dye-hard Unionist prior to the events that lead up to Secession. Lincoln and indeed, the entire country was well aware of the Right of Secession because it had been taught and espoused by just about every educational institution and politician from the time of the Ratification of the Constitution. In fact, every single Resolution for Constitutional Ratification included clauses declaring the Right of Secession if the federal government or a majority of the Several States did not adhere to the Articles of the Constitution. It was taught in every Military Institution in the country, including West Point, until after the War when the doctrine and all textbooks that expounded the Right were systematically purged by the Radical Republican Party.

So, if slavery and secession were not the real reasons behind the War, what was? It appears that money was the only reason for the War; it was the only reason behind Lincoln's actions. This fact becomes evident when reading excerpts from many of the Northern Newspapers, many expressing the view even prior to Lincoln's Inauguration. For a few years prior to 1960, many of the Northerners, including newspapers and politicians, including Lincoln expressed that the South should Secede and the sooner the better in their minds.

So what changed? It was one of those "eureka" moments that caused a drastic change in the hearts and minds of the Northern people when they realized that without the heavy and unequal tariff income levied on the South that the North and indeed, the federal government itself would be forced into economic ruin by the disunion of the South. So, the real reason was the utter devastating prospect that if the South left the Union that the government's coffers would be bled dry with the lost of revenues and likewise, that the Northern economy would be decimated.

Lincoln himself stated that if the South was allowed to secede: "What then will become of my tariff?"

Now, it was evident that the Northern newspaper editors were well aware of the issues at hand and also aware of what was needed to secure the Tariffs for the federal government and protection of Northern manufacturers, even as far back as 1860 [you will notice that during that period slavery was never mentioned]:

"In one single blow our foreign commerce must be reduced to less than one-half what it now is. Our coastwise trade would pass into other hands. One-half of our shipping would lie idle at our wharves. We should lose our trade with the South, with all of its immense profits. Our manufactories would be in utter ruins. Let the South adopt the free-trade system or that of a tariff for revenue and these results would likely follow."

"In the enforcement of the revenue laws [the heavy, one-sided Tariffs] the forts [like Fort Sumter] are of primary importance. Their guns cover just so much ground as is necessary to enable the United States to enforce their laws. Those forts the United States must maintain. It is not a question of coercing South Carolina, but enforcing the revenue laws. The practical point, either way, is whether the revenue laws of the United States shall or shall not be enforced at those three Ports, Charleston, Beaufort and Georgetown, or whether they shall or shall not be made free ports, open to the commerce of the world, with no other restriction upon it than South Carolina shall see proper to impose. Forts are to be used to enforce the revenue laws...not to conquer a State."

When South Carolina seceded on December 21, 1860, the Northern newspapers were quick to suggest:

"The government cannot well avoid collecting the federal revenues at all Southern Ports, even after the passage of secession ordinances; and if this duty is discharged, any State which assumes a rebellious attitude will still be obligated to contribute revenue to support the federal government or have her foreign commerce entirely destroyed"

Now, once again concerning the reasons behind the actions of the Southern States in their urge to cuts the binding ties of the union, if you look at the actions of the Congress of the 1860 and the platform of the Radical Republican Party of 1860 then you would quickly recognize that the South had very few alternatives. By early 1861 there was one of the highest tariffs in history imposed upon the South by Congress called the Morrill Tariff. In the House, Rep. John H. Reagan of the State of Texas stated about the long list of punitive tariffs:

"You are not content with the vast millions of tribute we pay you annually under the operation of our revenue laws, our navigation laws, your fishing bounties, and by making your people our manufacturers, our merchants, our shippers. You are not satisfied with the vast tribute we pay you to build up your great cities, your railroads, your canals. You are not satisfied with the millions of tribute we have been paying you on account of the balance of exchange, which you hold against us. You are not satisfied that we of the South are almost reduced to the condition of overseers of Northern Capitalist. You are not satisfied with all this; but you must wage a relentless crusade against our rights and our institutions."

Indeed, the reasons for the South's desire to break the bind of union was the same as our Founders, it had much more to do with over-taxation without representation than any other issue. Lincoln was basically in the pocket of the Northern industrialist and was obligated to them to impose heavy tariffs on the South while maintaining protection for the Northern manufacturers. However, it was not only the desire for trade protectionism that the North desired, but also the aggrandizement of what they saw as Empire. In the Quarterly Review in Britain, commentary stated:

"Fate has indeed taken a malignant pleasure in flouting the admirers of the United States. It is not merely that their hopes of its universal empire have been disappointed; the mortification has been much deeper than this. Every theory to which they paid special homage has been successively repudiated by their favorite statesmen. They were Apostles of Free Trade: America has established a tariff, compared to which our heaviest protection-tariff has been flimsy. She has become a land of passports, of conscriptions, of press censorship and post-office espionage; of bastilles and lettres de cachet [this was a letter that bore an official seal which authorized the imprisonment, without trial of any person named in the letter] There was little difference between the government of Mr. Lincoln and the government of Napoleon III. There was the form of a legislative assembly, where scarcely any dared to oppose for fear of the charge of treason."

Ah yes, the government of Lincoln, one where fear ruled not only the average man and woman on the street, but in every Newspaper, every church, every Legislature and even the courts.

To ensure the execution of the Tariffs imposed upon the South, Lincoln imposed a de facto blockade when the South decided to declare a tariff-free trade zone in the Southern State Ports for all Southern products imported and exported to Europe. Of course, this would circumvent the heavy Tariffs of the North on the South and thereby would deplete the coffers of the federal government and endanger the economic viability of Northern Industrialists. Why on earth would The State Republic of South Carolina dare to fire on a federal fort Sumter? Was it out of shear pleasure; was some crazy man in charge of the Battery on Charleston Harbor? Did they just want to start a War with the North? Could it be that they were protecting their Constitutional Rights as one of the Several States that voluntarily entered into the Constitutional Convention to join this federation based upon the ideals of federalism called the United States of America and that those Rights and its Sovereignty to exercise, by the Consent of the Citizens of The Republic of South Carolina, their desire to defend their economic interests against the infringement by a powerful and rich force within Congress?

Yes, Lincoln was pressured by some extremely strong special interests, to impose a blockade against the Sovereign States that made up the South. Under the guise of supplying Fort Sumter, Lincoln, in effect, ensured action by the South to begin the War he and his Industrialist patrons so desperately wanted and needed. It was the perfect ploy to demonize the South while allowing the North and the federal government to remain pure. It worked exactly as planned!

Read the archives for yourself, in newspapers like the Chicago Daily Times, in the 1860, Dec 10 edition, before the War started the editorial of that paper stated the real reason for the War:

"In one single blow our foreign commerce must be reduced to less than one-half what it now is. Our coastwise trade would pass into other hands. One-half of our shipping would lie idle at our wharves. We should lose our trade with the South, WITH ALL ITS IMMENSE PROFITS. Our manufactories would be in utter ruins. Let the South adopt the free-trade system, or that of a tariff for revenue, and these results would likely follow."

The Philadelphia Press in their 1861 edition proposed one of the most interesting ideas that made its way to Lincoln, January 15. This also seems to be the basis for Lincoln's Inaugural Address. The paper said that: If South Carolina were to take the forts by force, this would be levying war against the United States and high treason against the Constitution" In other words, if South Carolina could be "tricked" into firing on the Forts in Charleston Harbor, that would be enough to go to War to stop the State from Seceding and thus reeking havoc on Northern and government revenues. The paper went on to say:

"In the enforcement of the revenue laws, the forts are of primary importance. THEIR GUNS COVER JUST SO MUCH GROUND AS IS NECESSARY TO ENABLE THE UNITED STATES TO ENFORCE THEIR LAWS. Those forts the United States must maintain. IT IS NOT A QUESTION OF COERCING SOUTH CAROLINA, BUT OF ENFORCING THE REVENUE LAWS. The practical point, EITHER WAY, is whether the revenue laws of the United States shall or shall not be enforced at those three ports."

YES, LINCOLN TOOK NOTE.

Like Lincoln, on March 2, 1861, The New York Evening Post headed its editorial with these words: "WHAT SHALL BE DONE FOR A REVENUE?"

"That either the revenue from duties must be collected in the ports of the "rebel states", or the port must be closed to importations from abroad, is generally admitted. If neither of these things de done, our revenue laws are substantially repealed; the sources which supply OUR TREASURY will be dried up; we shall have no money to carry on the government; the nation will become bankrupt before the next crop of corn is ripe. There will be nothing to furnish means of subsistence to the army; nothing to keep our navy afloat; nothing to pay the salaries of public officers; THE PRESENT ORDER OF THINGS MUST COME TO A DEAD STOP."

It went on with an amazing disclosure of the real reasons why the North and why Lincoln did not want, nor could allow the South to secede from the Union:

"WHAT, THEN, IS LEFT FOR OUR GOVERNMENT? SHALL WE LET THE SECEDING STATES REPEAL THE REVENUE LAWS FOR THE WHOLE UNION IN THIS MANNER? Or will the government choose to consider all foreign commerce destined for those ports where we have no custom-houses and no collections as contraband, and stop it, when offering to enter the collection districts from which our authorities have been expelled?"

In less than two weeks of a barrage of such editorials, Lincoln took that fateful action that would ensure the shelling of Fort Sumter; he sent reinforcements to the Fort. It was the action he needed to fulfill his deed of treachery and begin the long destructive path into un-Constitutionalism, and Treason against the duly elected government of the United States.

The War was totally about tariffs and the desire of certain Radical Republicans to create a "nation-state" and that is exactly what was created by this war, a centralized national government with the power to impose its national will over the State Republics which were Sovereign and too powerful in the eyes of certain people and special interests.

Of course, there were no illusions behind the reasons of the War in the South; they were fighting for what they saw as the original Constitutional Republic and the ideals upon which it was founded. The New Orleans Daily Crescent stated that the causes of secession were simply this:

"The know that it is their import trade that draws from the people's pockets sixty to seventy millions of dollars per annum, in the shape of duties, to be expended mainly in the North, and in the protection and encouragement of Northern interests. These are the reasons why these people do not wish the South to secede from the Union. They, the North, are enraged at the prospect of being despoiled of the rich feast upon which they have so long fed and fattened, and which they were just getting ready to enjoy with still greater gout and gusto. They are mad as hornets because the prize slips them just as they are ready to grasp it."

For a very interesting discourse on the reasons behind the War read Charles Dickens, yes the same author that wrote A Christmas Carol, his discourse on the subject is extremely enlightening and extremely honest in its condemnation of Lincoln, the federal government and the extremely powerful special interests that helped guide Lincoln's hand toward outright tyranny and eventual destruction of the South.

Slavery was an evil institution in this country, both in the North and the South however, we fail to understand the real issues concerning the War Between the States. My suggestion is that you read: The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government by Jefferson Davis-1881, or War of the Rebellion: Official Government Records of the Union and Confederate Armies-1884, or the Slave Chronicles (a true shocker) compiled from interviews of last living former slaves during the Great Depression. Another is: The Southern States of the American Union by J.L.M. Curry-1894. Read a booklet written by a Slave named Harrison Berry in 1861 called: Slavery and Abolitionism, as Viewed by a Georgia Slave, an amazing little book that completely contradicts and flies in the face of the accepted history of the South, the Union and Slavery. Read the 1864 report called: The Conduct of Federal Troops in Louisiana it will make you sick.

Read the Lincoln-Douglas Debates, another amazing eye-opener. I could provide you will numerous others, which tell a very different story then the one most of us, have learned in school. Books, papers and newspaper editorials of that period which would shock most Americans, but we have been so well indoctrinated into a very specific view of the Union's victory that all else is forgotten, ignored and all intelligent discourse ostracized. We fail ourselves when we avoid the truth of any issue, including the so-called "Civil War" and the real reasons for that War.

The Southern States actually voted to ban the slave trade as early as 1820 however, the Northern Slave traders continued to import and smuggle slaves into the South. The first State to pass the prohibition of the importation of slaves was Virginia. In addition, a vast majority of Southern States voted to extend the Missouri Compromise to the Pacific, but that too was voted down by a majority of Northern States. A strange fact is that no law was ever passed in the North that granted freedom to a person enslaved, that came in 1865, long after the falsely called Emancipation Proclamation which, by the way, only freed slaves within in the South, but did nothing to free those within any areas actually controlled by the Union. That should be considered one of those inconvenient truths that most histories avoid. The problem was that slave-ownership was never very profitable in the North except for those who engaged in the actual importation and trade of slaves, conducted exclusively by Northern shipping companies.

In the population of the South, only 3% were large Slave owners, which begs the question as to why so many people, non-slave owners volunteered to wage a war against the North if Slavery was the real issue. Another interesting fact is that the Union leaders were extremely shocked that the Slave uprising never materialized as they expected, instead they found just the opposite.

The black population of the South was essential to the War effort, but contrary to Unionist propaganda, the black population was not forcefully induced to support that effort, the vast majority of them volunteered their time and labor. Yes, the slaves were even paid for their labors, at times more than their white counterparts. Slaves, by enlarge, remained on the plantations, without supervision, without compulsion and helped maintain the war effort. Had it not been for the black volunteers, the South could have never maintained its effort for freedom and liberty as long as it did. Sure, there were some blacks that ran away, but the vast majority of them did not, they remained, they helped. Read about Bill Yopp, former Slave and Confederate Veteran that was offered a permanent residence at the Confederate Soldier's Home. Even after the War, ex-Slaves chose to remain with their former masters and even helped sustain them during one of the most devastating impositions of Unionists misnomers called "reconstruction".

A British observer, Captain Fremantle witnessed an unusual site in a captured Northern town, he states that he saw a Confederate soldier leading a captured Union soldier down the street all alone, but the strange part of it was that the Confederate soldier was black. He went on to say: "This little episode of a Southern slave leading a white Yankee soldier through a Northern village, alone and on his own accord, would not have been gratifying to an abolitionist, nor would the sympathizers both in England and in the North feel encouraged if they could hear the language of detestation and contempt with which the numerous Negroes with Southern armies speak of their [Northern] liberators."

Another shocker is to read just how Unionist armies treated Slaves in conquered territories of the South it was, to be restrained, despicable, to say the least. Not to mention the general atrocities committed by Union armies on the general population of the South.

Read the Census data of 1860, the North repelled the possibility of free black immigration. In that year the black population in the North was 1.7%, strange that there was so little migration allowed into the North if the North was so concerned with the plight of Slaves. Do some research and find out just how the freed Slave were treated in the North, then read the Slave Chronicles and see how they were treated, for the most part, in the South.

Another amazing fact is that Robert E. Lee and others called for the immediate emancipation of all Slaves, while there were those like Jefferson Davis who believed that it was the responsibility of Slave owners to educate and prepare them for freedom. Everyone in the South knew that the economic reality of Slavery was rapidly diminishing long before Secession and the War and would have probably been completely economically unviable by 1870 due to progress in agricultural machinery. Jefferson Davis stated that no matter who won the War, that Slavery would eventually become a defunct institution. The concern of many in the South was the method of emancipation. In the writings of Jefferson Davis you will find he was of the opinion that the slaves should be well prepared for freedom; that they should be educated and made aware of the responsibility of freedom. Instead, the War of Northern Aggression released the slaves into a life filled with generational poverty, hatred and hardship. If you read the Slave Chronicles you will see that many former slaves felt that they were recklessly thrown into a freedom that was far from free.

In a Confederate soldier's journal was found the following words: "I was a soldier in Virginia in the campaigns of Lee and Jackson, and I declare I never met a Southern soldier who had drawn his sword to perpetuate slavery. What he had chiefly at heart was the preservation of the supreme and sacred right of self-government. It was a very small minority of men who fought in the Southern armies who were financially interested in the institution of slavery"

So many volunteered to fight for the Confederacy that thousands initially had to be forced to return home instead. Can you imagine anyone fighting a War for an institution such as Slavery when the vast majority of the Southern population had no connection with slavery and never owned a slave? They fought for something far more valiant, far more noble and that was the same cause that inspired the Declaration of Independence in 1776.

The Northern States pasted exclusion laws that made it hard or impossible for freed Slaves to enter or settle in their jurisdictions. Massachusetts passed laws that allowed the flogging of blacks that remained in the State over 2 months, Indiana's constitution stated, "no negro or mulatto shall come into or settle in the state. Most of the Northern States crafted similar laws and imposed harsh penalties on freed or runaway Slaves. John Sherman, William Tecumseh's brother declared in 1862 that: "We do not like the negroes. We do not disguise our dislike. As my friend from Indiana said yesterday: The whole people of the Northwestern States are opposed to having many negroes among them and that principle or prejudice has been engraved in the legislation for nearly all the Northwestern States." There were actually far more beatings and lynching in the North during that period then in the South during the "Jim Crow" period.

Former Slave and Legislator Richard Harris, elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in 1890. On February 23, 1890 he delivered a speech on the floor:

"Mr. Speaker! I have arisen here in my place to offer a few words on the bill [raising funds for a Confederate Monument]. I have come from a sick bed, perhaps it was not prudent for me to come, but Sir, I could not rest quietly in my room without contributing a few remarks of my own. I was sorry the hear the speech of the young gentleman from Marshall County. I am sorry that any son of a soldier should go on record as opposed to the erection of a monument in honor of the brave dead. And, Sir, I am convinced that had he seen what I saw at Seven Pines and in the Seven Days' of fighting around Richmond, the battlefield covered with the mangled forms of those who fought for their country and for their country's honor, he would not have made that speech.

When the news came that the South had been invaded, those men went forth to fight for what they believed, and they made no requests for monuments. But they died, and their virtues should be remembered. Sir, I went with them. I too, wore the Gray, the same color my master wore. We stayed four long years, and if that war had gone on till now I would have been there yet. I want to honor those brave men who died for their convictions. When my mother died I was a boy. Who, Sir, then acted the part of a mother to the orphaned slave boy, but my "old missus"? Were she living now, or could speak to me from those high realms where are gathered the sainted dead, she would tell me to vote for this bill. And, Sir, I shall vote for it. I want it known to all the world that my vote is given in favor of the bill to erect a monument in honor of the Confederate dead."

On the day of the vote, former Slave John Harris was joined in equaled zeal by 6 other Black Representatives in the Mississippi Legislature to pass the bill for the Confederate Memorial. It is amazing how much history has been deliberately buried and suppressed.

So, what about this man called Lincoln and why have we, as a country, been collectively indoctrinated into thinking that he was not only a hero, but he has almost been deified through a well crafted history intent on doing just that: deification!

George Edmonds, in his Facts and Falsehoods Concerning the War on the South 1861-1865, written in 1904 is perhaps one of the most scathing accounts of the War, Lincoln and the Radical Republicans. He describes his work in the following way:

"The greater number of the facts herein laid before the reader was not drawn from Southern or Democratic sources, but from high Republican authorities. Part first of this work presents Abraham Lincoln to the people of this generation as his contemporaries saw and knew him. The characteristics portrayed will be a revelation to many readers. As an offset to the falsity of Republican histories of the war of the 60's, permit me to express the hope that in the near future our people will make more general use of those histories which are truthful and just to the South." ~Edmonds

Edmonds continues by saying that:

"Even in the South the real Lincoln is lost sight of in the rush and bustle of our modern life, and many Southerners accept the opinion of Lincoln that is furnished them ready made by writers who are either ignorant, or else who purposely falsify plain facts of history." ~Edmonds

Indeed, the process of indoctrination upon the People of the South by the Radical Republican Nationalists was without precedent in this country. The Northern Politicians, especially during the Reconstruction, were intent on inbreeding such a sense of shame upon the Southern People that the methods and effectiveness of their propaganda program would rival any "re-educational" program by any radical communist group such as the Khmer Rouge.

Another historian, one whose history has been effectively suppressed for decades was that of William Herndon. Herndon's Life of Lincoln is probably one of the best written because he was a personal friend and Law Partner of Lincoln. This is an extremely difficult book to find because, like most that did not slap the truth about Lincoln with a healthy coat of varnish, they either went out of press or were forced out by heavy Party suppression. You may be able to find it on Amazon, but I'm not sure. I have an original copy and it is, yet another eye-opener about Lincoln.

In "American Bastile", written by John A. Marshall, originally published in 1881 and reprinted by the Crown Rights Book Co., describes (in 767 pages) the false arrests of innocent citizens during Lincoln's dictatorship, and their ordeal in the different prisons around the North."

"Were these citizens from the South? Actually, they came from the "loyal" states, and they were Democrats. These innocent citizens were judges, lawyers, doctors, U.S. Senators, U.S. Representatives, farmers, ministers, women, editors, state legislators, merchants, colonels, captains, professors, etc. There is a high probability that those mentioned in the book are only a sampling of those falsely arrested during Lincoln's reign of terror.

As is the usual pattern, these false arrests occurred by surprise for the most part, usually in the middle of the night or the early morning hours such as 4 or 5 a.m. In two cases, a lawyer was participating in a trial when he was falsely arrested, and a minister was conducting a religious service, when he was also falsely arrested.

Most of the prisoners were never told of the charges against them, never knew who their accusers were, when asked about their authority to arrest, there was none, no trials except occasionally a prisoner would be brought in front of a "military commission" which was, of course, illegal. They were imprisoned without knowing what they had done wrong, and when they were eventually released months or years later, they still did not know.

Just voicing an objection to Lincoln's administration, supporting the Constitution of the United States, voicing an opinion against the illegal draft, refusing to pray for Lincoln, discouraging enlistments, etc. could land you in prison.

Detectives and spies were placed by the Lincoln administration at religious services and conventions held by Democrats, reading local newspapers, which supported the Democrats' viewpoints, etc., and they reported their findings to the proper authorities. This they did, and false arrests ensued.

At one point, the whole Maryland legislature was imprisoned at Fort McHenry as well as the Mayor of Baltimore, Mr. Brown, and a Maryland U.S. Representative, Mr. May. One such Maryland legislator was Frank Key Howard, Esq., and the grandson of Francis Scott Key. He was awakened around midnight when several armed men entered his home, and searched the premises. He demanded to see the warrant and the nature of the accusation, but none was given.

Another unfortunate citizen, who was falsely arrested, was Senator James W. Wall from Burlington, New Jersey. On September 11, 1861, the Marshal informed him that he had a warrant for his arrest, and when Mr. Wall asked him "at what suit?" the Marshal responded by saying "at the suit of the government." Senator Wall, in turn, replied, "I do not owe the Government anything." He, too, demanded to see the affidavit and to know the nature of the accusation, but none was given. When Mr. Wall refused to be the Marshal's prisoner, several deputies entered the room at which point, Mr. Wall seized the Marshal by the throat and hurled him across the room. More deputies came forward, and Mr. Wall struck one of them. He was eventually assaulted by four deputies, and was taken to Belder's Hotel. Shortly thereafter, he boarded the train, which eventually took him to Fort Lafayette in New York Harbor.

Senator Wall's only crime was that he denounced the war and unconstitutional violations of citizens' rights. Additionally, he was never able to find out the grounds of his arrest. Upon discharge from the prison and returning home, about a thousand persons at the train depot, whereby he gave an eloquent speech regarding the cruel injustice he had experienced as well as constitutional rights, greeted him.

Furthermore, Senator Wall denounced the proposal of the Emancipation policy to "purchase" slaves from the State of Missouri by the Federal government, and also denounced the "Bill of Indemnity" which basically would protect the president and his subordinates from any legal consequences of their unconstitutional and arbitrary acts.

William Hewitt Carlin, son of Governor Carlin of Illinois, was a lawyer, post-master under President Buchanan, state senator of Illinois, and clerk of the Circuit Court of Greene County, Illinois, was also falsely arrested without ever knowing the charges against him, and additionally, he was a personal friend of Lincoln, even though they were political enemies. No charges were ever filed against him, and he died in prison.

Robert Elliott from Freedom, Maine, who was a member of the Maine Legislator, and also a member of the Governor's Council, was falsely arrested around midnight on September 7, 1861, at his home by Marshal Charles Clark and a dozen deputies. Mr. Elliott claimed that not one of these men resided in his county. He, too, was not told of any charges other than Secretary of War Simon Cameron ordered his arrest. About two months later, he was discharged from Fort Lafayette in NY harbor without ever learning of the nature of the accusation. On August 16, 1863, his two barns were set on fire, and after building another barn, this, too, was set on fire on December 31, 1866 while he was in Boston to arrange for its sale.

Cyrus Sergeant, a merchant, originally from Yarmouth, Maine, who lived in New Orleans and in Arkansas conducting business, returned to Maine upon hearing of his wife's death. He attended a convention at Portland, Maine, sponsored by the Democrats, and he was asked the sentiment of the Southern people to which he replied "the people of the South felt that the war was forced upon them, and all they asked was that the Government should be administered according to the Constitution, and not as Abraham Lincoln said it should be...."

When Mr. Sergeant left Portland for Boston, he was attacked by four men on the train at the South Berwick, Maine, and junction while reading a newspaper. He demanded to know what authority attacked him, and the Marshal produced a paper, but refused to let him see it. Mr. Sergeant then asked the Marshal to read it to him, but this was refused, too. He was transferred to Fort Lafayette, and never knew the nature of the charges against him."

Another historian was Ward Hill Lamon; he too was a personal friend of Lincoln's and served as a bodyguard for Lincoln. Lamon, like many of Lincoln's friends, was abhorred by the push of the Radical Republicans to varnish the truth about Lincoln and his motives. It was this abhorrence that caused many, like Herndon and Lamon, to write an accurate history of Lincoln and the events of the period.

As Lamon put it: "the press continued to teem with pretended lives of Lincoln, not one of- which deserved one particle of respect. These pretended biographies are fostered and praised and cherished by Republicans. The falser they are, the higher the praise."

"Certainly no right thinking man would erect a statue or put a portrait in their legislative hall of a self-seeking, cunning, coarse-minded politician, a man scorned by his own official family and by the most powerful and prominent of his Republican contemporaries. Amid the universal din of praise that it has become the fashion to sing of Lincoln, only the student remembers the real facts, only the student knows not only that the Lincoln of the popular imagination of today bears little or no resemblance to the real Lincoln, but that the deification of Lincoln was planned and carried out by the members of his own party, by men who but a few short hours before Booth's bullet did its deadly work at Ford's theater, were reviling him as a buffoon, a coarse, vulgar jester"-Edmonds

The pro-Radical Republican Newspaper Globe-Democrat Paper: "One thing is certain, Lincoln was apotheosized after his death. Had he lived 4000 years ago his name would now be enrolled among the gods of Greece and Rome."

"The men who bestowed that honor upon Lincoln, though of his own party, though having known him well during his Presidential life, had during that period openly disliked, despised, and distrusted him, and had persistently lavished upon him the most "venomous detractions" the English language afforded. These facts will be proved by indisputable evidence. Why the Republican leaders .who had always "venomously vituperated" the dying Lincoln, the hour after his death made frantic haste to perform the apotheosis ceremony, and hoist their dead President up to the sublime realm of the gods, it is the purpose of the writer to show. We entreat the reader not to make the mistake of supposing that the apotheosis ceremony was a mere holiday affair gotten up to amuse or astonish the public.

Its conception was a flash of genius. It was the last act' of the dreadful tragedy of war, and the prelude of political plans of deep and far-reaching importance. The apotheosis ceremony and its successful upholding during all the years (thirty-eight) since Lincoln's death, has done more to prolong the power of the Republican Party than its victories and conquest of the South. The old saying that "facts are stranger than fiction" is as true as it is trite. The most fertile fictionist earth ever produced has never created so unique, so incongruous, so unparalleled a character as was Abraham Lincoln, mentally, morally and physically, nor has the most inventive ever thought out so unexampled a career as was his from cradle to coffin bed. Nor could the most ingenious romancer, delving 'in his closet, have devised so original, so daring a scheme and so successfully carried it out as that apotheosis ceremony, planned on the spur of the moment by the Republican leaders, confused, confounded, alarmed as they were by the sudden taking-off of their first President.

Although the writer of this has no authentic account of any secret caucus held by the Republican leaders in Washington City at the time of Mr. Lincoln's death, their entire unity of action in the unexpected emergency that confronted them is presumptive evidence that a caucus was held, almost before Mr. Lincoln's body was cold; that plans were made and secret instructions sent forth to the foremost men of the party, advising them of the course necessary to pursue, the tone, the attitude, it was the duty of every man to assume toward their dead President. The men composing the caucus saw as by a flash of lightning the vital necessity of concealing from the world the opinions they and their whole held of the living Lincoln.

The preservation of party power was their first thought. They saw the black gulf into which their triumphant party would sink unless swift measures were taken. They realized the fact that if their President were known to the world as they knew him, the glory of their victory would fade; as he stood, so their party would stand. If he were despised, they and their party would be despised. If made public, every venomous word they had flung on the living ¨Lincoln would rebound on their party. To exalt the dead President became the vital necessity of the hour. The passion of the Republican heart is to possess power. They had won power through seas of blood; to lose it now would be anguish to their very souls. To exalt to the high realm of god-ship the dead man they had in life despised as the dirt under their feet, was the first thought that darted on their agitated brains.

To bury with their dead President's body every mental and physical quality which had so prominently distinguished him from his kind, and which had provoked from them so many gibes and jeers and contemptuous flings, was the first duty they saw before them; the next was to manufacture an effigy of their dead President, clothe it from head to heels in attributes the very reverse of those the living President had been clothed in, and then boldly, under the wide light of the Nineteenth Century, start that effigy, that fake of their own creation, down the ages, labeled: " Abraham Lincoln, First President of the Republican party, the greatest, wisest, godliest man that has appeared¨ on earth since Christ."-Edmonds

While The New York Independent was a strong Republican paper, it is interesting that in its issue of August 9th, 1862 this article on Lincoln's state papers appeared:

"Compare the state papers, messages, proclamations, orders, documents, which preceded or accompanied the War of Independence, with those of President Lincoln's papers. These are cold,' lifeless, dead. There has not been a line in any government paper that might not have been issued by the Czar of Russia or by Louis Napoleon of France." The state papers of the War of Independence were inspired by the highest, the most generous emotion of the human heart-love of freedom. The state papers of President Lincoln were inspired by the meanest, the most selfish the passion for conquest. Is it strange that in tone and spirit, Lincoln s state papers should resemble those of the Czar of Russia? Both men stood on a despot's platform. "Our state papers," continues the New York Independent, "during this eventful period (the war of conquest on the South) are void of genius and enthusiasm for the great doctrine on which this government was founded. Faith in human rights is dead in Washington." Never spoke journal a more lamentable truth. Faith in human rights was not only dead in Washington, but the Government in Washington was using all the machinery in its power to trample down that faith deep in bloody mire on a hundred 
battlefields. The Washington Government had gone back hundred years to the old monarchic doctrines of George III and was doing its utmost to quell and kill the patriotic spirit of '76, which had rescued the Colonies from kingly rule." --Dunning, President of Columbia University

At a speech at Cooper's Union in 1864, Wendell Phillips of the Republican Party said the following: I judge Mr. Lincoln by his acts, his violation of law, his overthrow of liberty in the Northern States. I judge Mr. Lincoln by his words and deeds, and so judging, I am unwilling to trust Abraham Lincoln with the future of this country. Mr. Lincoln is a politician; politicians are like the bones of a horse's fore shoulder; not a straight one in it. I am a citizen watchful of constitutional liberty. Are you willing to sacrifice the constitutional rights of seventy years? A man in the field (the army) said: 'The re-election of Lincoln will be a national disaster.' Another said: 'The re-election of Lincoln will be national 
destruction.' I want free speech. Let Abraham Lincoln know that we are stronger than Abraham Lincoln; that he is the servant to obey us."

Once again, another strongly Republican paper called the Sentinel stated the following:

"The rail splitter called for more, and more, until he had over 2,000,000 armed men, and he sent 'me down to burn and pillage, to kill, conquer or annihilate traitors to our glorious Union, the Constitution all the while in the Capitol cellar. Although every intelligent man in the Republican party knows that their party despised the Constitution, still as the great body of the North's people had not lost love and reverence for it, few Republicans openly denounced it Wendell Philips, Lloyd Garrison, and other bold men, time and again, had publicly denounced the Constitution and shouted aloud their desire to tear it in pieces. Beecher, from his pulpit, contemptuously called the Constitution a "sheep skin" government deserving no respect." In fact, many in the North were known to have burned the Constitution, denouncing both the Republic and the guarantees enumerated in the Constitution.

If you read the Salmon P. Chase Paper and his diary, you will see indisputable evidence to prove the fact that before Lincoln entered on the Presidency, certainly during the first month of his incumbency, he and Seward were determined on war, and determined to make the Northern people believe the South began it.

In his book "Constitutional Problems Under Lincoln", James G. Randall stated:

"Lincoln unconstitutionally suspended the writ of habeas corpus and had the military arrest tens of thousands of Northern political opponents, including dozens of newspaper editors and owners. Some 300 newspapers were shut down and all telegraph communication was censored. Northern elections were rigged; Democratic voters were intimidated by federal soldiers; hundreds of New York City draft protesters were gunned down by federal troops; West Virginia was unconstitutionally carved out of Virginia; and the most outspoken member of the Democratic Party opposition, Congressman Clement L. Vallandigham of Ohio, was deported. Duly elected members of the Maryland legislature were imprisoned, as was the mayor of Baltimore and Congressman Henry May. The Border States were systematically disarmed in violation of the Second Amendment and private property was confiscated. Lincoln's apologists say he had "to destroy the Constitution in order to save it."

A very interesting subject is what happened after Lincoln and how his Radical Republican Party dissolved the Southern States, destroyed and replaced their State Constitutions against the wishes of the Citizens of those States and then broke up the South into 5 Military Districts each with Military Administrators. New Military Governments were erected in place of the duly appointed governments of those States. These were nothing less than a continuation of the Lincolnite Policies. New Governments were set up, not voted into office, but set up under the direction of a Northern Congress under the harsh and powerful hand of the federal Military regime.

What Constitutional Right or Authority did that Northern Controlled Congress have to remove those State governments, nullify their Constitutions that were founded prior to the ratification of our own country's Constitution?

"That no State, without its consent, shall be deprived of its equal suffrage in the Senate." Yet, that is exactly what happened after the War, those who were victorious ignored the Law of the Land once again. There was no elected Representation of the Citizens of those States and the "dogs heeled to their master's wishes" doing the bidding of those Radicals in Washington, the People of those States, including former slaves were forced at the end of Unionist Bayonets to vote in accordance to those same hard Task-Masters. Indeed, the chains of servitude were expanded; slavery was not ended only transformed into an equally insidious form.

The period called Reconstruction was no less insidious then the actual War itself, it was just as destructive, if not more so because it drastically changed the entire structure of the government of the United States and the proper relationship between the federal and State governments.

The actions of the Radicals was almost thwarted when New Jersey, Ohio and Oregon rescinded their former ratification of the 14th Amendment, or course this was ignored and each of those States were counted as ratifying the amendment, contrary to the will of the People of those States, contrary to the Consent of the People of those States.

THIS IS ONE OF THE MOST DAMNING CONDEMNATIONS AND PROOFS THAT LINCOLN AND HIS FOLLOWERS SUBVERTED THIS REPUBLIC!

Now, a very interesting point concerning the ratification of the 14th Amendment and the expansion of federal control and national citizenship, is that initially the votes came in as 22 votes yes and 12 votes no and 3 not voting there were 28 votes needed to ratify the Amendment. With the defeat of the Amendment the Northern Unionist Congress members changed rules to ensure passage by declaring the Southern States remained outside the Union, to deny majority rule in the Southern States by the disfranchisement of large voting blocks of voters. Then to put the icing on the cake, they required all the Southern States to ratify the Amendment in other to be allowed back into the Union. So, in 1861 the North refused to allow the South to leave the Union and in 1867.

The most amazing, most revealing and one of the most important pieces of Legislation to ever come out of a State came from a Northern State after the War. Suddenly, it appears they realized what the goals of Lincoln and his followers had done.

The Joint Resolution, No.1 of the State of New Jersey on the Rescission of the 14th Amendment had some harsh words for those who sought to continue Lincoln's usurpation of the Constitutional government.

In the Rescission, the Resolution states:

"The Legislature of the State of New Jersey having seriously and deliberately considered the present situation of the United States do declare and make known:

"That it being necessary, by the Constitution, that every amendment to the same should be proposed by two-thirds of both Houses of Congress, the authors of the said proposition, for the purpose of securing the assent of the requisite majority, determined to, and did, exclude from the said two Houses eighty Representatives from eleven States of the Union, upon the pretence that there were no such States in the Union; but, finding that two-thirds of the remainder of said Houses could not be brought to assent to the said proposition, they deliberately formed and carried out the design of mutilating the integrity of the United States Senate, and without any pretext or justification, other than the possession of power, without the right, and in palpable violation of the Constitution, ejected a member of their own body, representing this State, and thus practically denied to New Jersey its equal suffrage in the Senate, and thereby nominally secured the vote of two-thirds of the said House."

As you can see, the Radical and Totally Dishonest Policies of Lincoln were still wielding the usurping hand of good "ole honest Abe".

It goes on to say:

"The objective of dismembering the highest Representative Assembly in the nation, and humiliating a State of the Union, faithful at all times to all its obligations, and the object of said amendments were one to place new and unheard of powers in the hands of a faction, that it might absorb to itself all Executive, Judicial and Legislative POWER, NECESSARY TO SECURE TO ITSELF IMMUNITY FOR THE UNCONSTITUTIONAL ACTS IT HAD ALREADY COMMITTED, AND THOSE IT HAS SINCE INFLICTED ON A TOO PATIENT PEOPLE.

The subsequent usurpations of these once national assemblies in passing pretended laws for the establishment, in ten States, of martial law, which is nothing but the will of the military commander, and therefore inconsistent with the very nature of all law, FOR THE PURPOSE OF REDUCING TO SLAVERY MEN OF THEIR OWN RACE IN THOSE STATES, OR COMPELLING THEM, CONTRARY TO THEIR OWN CONVICTIONS, TO EXERCISE THE ELECTIVE FRANCHISE IN OBEDIENCE TO THE DICTATION OF A FACTION IN THOSE ASSEMBLIES; THE ATTEMPT TO COMMIT TO ONE MAN ARBITRARY AND UNCONTROLLABLE POWER, WHICH THEY HAVE FOUND NECESSARY TO EXERCISE TO FORCE THE PEOPLE OF THOSE STATES INTO COMPLIANCE WITH THEIR WILL; THE AUTHORITY GIVEN THE SECRETARY OF WAR TO USE THE NAME OF THE PRESIDENT TO COUNTERMAND THE PRESIDENT'S ORDERS AND TO CERTIFY MILITARY ORDERS TO BE THE DIRECTION OF THE PRESIDENT, WHEN THEY ARE NOTORIOUSLY KNOWN TO BE CONTRARY TO THE PRESIDENT'S DIRECTION, THUS KEEPING UP THE FORM OF THE CONSTITUTION TO WHICH THE PEOPLE ARE ACCUSTOMED, BUT PRACTICALLY DEPOSING THE PRESIDENT FROM HIS OFFICE OF COMMANDER IN CHIEF, and suppressing one of the great departments of the government that of tribunal of the nation the jurisdiction to examine and decide upon the conformity of their pretended laws to the Constitution, which was the chief function of that august tribunal as organized by the Fathers of the Republic; all are but ample explanations of the power they hoped to acquire by the adoption of the said amendment.

TO CONCEAL FROM THE PEOPLE THE IMMENSE ALTERATIONS OF THE FUNDAMENTAL LAW THEY INTENDED TO ACCOMPLISH BY THE SAID AMENDMENT, THEY GILDED THE SAME WITH PREPOSTIONS OF JUSTICE, DRAWN FROM THE STATE CONSTITUTIONS; BUT LIKE ALL THE ESSAYS OF UNLAWFUL POWER TO COMMEND ITS DESIGNS TO POPULAR FAVOR IT IS MARKED BY THE MOST ABSURD AND INCOHERENT PROVISIONS.

It proposes to make it part of the Constitution of the United States, that naturalized citizens of the United States shall be citizens of the United States; as if they were not so without such absurd declaration. It lodges with the Legislative Branch of the government the power of pardon, which properly belongs, BY OUR SYSTEM, to the Executive.

It denounces, and inflicts punishment for past offenses, by Constitutional provision, and thus would make the whole People of this great nation, in their most Solemn and Sovereign Act, guilty of violating a cardinal principle of American Liberty: that no punishment can be inflicted for any offense, unless it is provided by law before the commission of the offense.

It usurps the power of punishment, which, in any coherent system of government, belongs to the Judiciary, and commits it to the people in their Sovereign capacity.

It degrades the nation, by proclaiming to the world that no confidence can be placed in its honestly or morality.

It appeals to the fears of the public creditors by publishing a libel on the American People, and fixing it forever in the national Constitution, as a stigma upon the present generation, that there must be Constitutional guards against a reputation of the public debt; as if it were possible that a people who were so corrupt as to disregard such an obligation would be bound by any contract, Constitutional or otherwise.

It imposes new prohibitions upon the power of the Senate to pass laws, and interdicts the execution of such parts of the common law as the national Judiciary may esteem inconsistent with the vague provisions of the said amendment, MADE VAGUE FOR THE PURPOSE OF FACILITATING ENCROACHMENTS UPON THE LIVES, LIBERTIES AND PROPERTY OF THE PEOPLE.

It enlarges the Judicial power of the United States so as to bring every law passed by the State, and every principle of the common law relating to Life, Liberty or Property, within the jurisdiction of the federal tribunals, and charges those tribunals with duties, to the due performance of which they, from their nature and organization, and their distances from the People, are unequal.

IT MAKES A NEW APPOINTMENT OF REPRESENTATION IN THE NATIONAL COUNCIL, FOR NO OTHER REASON THATN THEREBY TO SECURE TO A FACTION A SUFFICIENT NUMBER OF THE VOTES OF A SERVILE AND IGNORANT RACE TO OUT WEIGH THE INTELLIGENT VOICES OF THEIR OWN [IT] WAS INTENDED TO OVERTHROW THE SYSTEM OF SELF-GOVERNMENT UNDER WHICH THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES HAVE FOR EIGHTY YEARS ENJOYED THEIR LIBETIES, AND IS UNFIT, FROM ITS ORIGIN, ITS OBJECTS AND ITS MATTER, TO BE INCORPORATED WITH THE FUNDAMENTAL LAW OF A FREE PEOPLE."

The Resolution by the State of New Jersey says it all, and it is still at the heart of what has happened to this country since the War of Southern Independence. Today, we still suffer from the legislative usurpations of Unionist ideology that promoted a completely centralized national government over the Constitutional Republic of the United States of America. Now that we are on the Constitution an interested read was written by William Rawle in 1825 called Views of the Constitution and another work by James Kent called Commentaries on American Law written in 1827, both are definitive works on what was considered until 1861 as the Right of the States to cede from the Union which was always considered a voluntary agreement between the States until Lincoln.

By the way, both books were used to teach Constitutional law at West Point until after the War; at that point the West Point Library was purged of any original Constitutional analysis that supported the foundation of a voluntary union between independent States. In Rawle's book he stated: "It depends on the State itself to retain or abolish the principle of representatives, because it depends on itself whether it will continue a member of the Union. To deny this right would be inconsistent with the principle of which all our political systems are founded, which is, that the people have in all cases, a right to determine how they will be governed. This right must be considered as an ingredient in the original composition of the general government, which, through not express, was mutually understood.

The secession of a State from the Union depends on the will of the People of such State. The People alone as we have already seen, hold the power to alter their Constitution. But in any manner by which secession is to take place nothing is more certain than that the act should be deliberate, clear, and unequivocal. To withdraw from the Union is a solemn, serious act. Whenever it may appear expedient to the People of a State, it must be manifested in a direct and unequivocal manner." Remember that was written in 1827. The States, all States were sovereign and independent and the Union was purely reflective of the Constitutional Authority that rest primarily within the States, reserved to the States and the People.

In my judgment, it is necessary to understand the real reasons behind the entire episode of the War, both in the decades preceding it and the decades proceeding. If we look at the subject, not from the view point of Unionist victory, but from a sober and realistic point, researching the actual history and documents of the time then an entirely different view arises from those we have been taught and are comfortable accepting.

I will leave you with these words, I find them absolutely amazing in the light of history:

"This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing Government, they can exercise their constitutional right of amending it or their revolutionary right to dismember or overthrow it." Abraham Lincoln-----spoken before Lincoln came under the strong influences of Northern Industrial Special Interests and before he became drunk with power normally associated with autocratic tyrants.

http://militantjeffersonian.com

"Men do not willingly read unpalatable truths of themselves. The People like those best who fool them most, by pandering to their vices and flattering their foibles" Raphael Semmes

Again, I genuflect at the

Again, I genuflect at the altar of your knowledge and mastery of the written word. Well said.

Doc Holladay
Nashville, TN
http://www.myspace.com/docholladaymusic

www.reverbnation.com/docholladaymusic

Truth is treason in an empire of lies.

The Confederate constitution

The Confederate constitution actually banned slave trade. The goal was to phase it out. It would have much better for everyone. Jefferson Davis educated slaves and then freed them. Lee also freed slaves. The proof is at his home in Virginia: letters from slaves thanking him.

The northern states didn't end slavery. They only sold most of their slaves to the south. 5 slave states were still in the north and New Hampshire ( a free state) wanted to join the south.

The only reason the north didn't want slavery anymore was they found a cheaper form of slavery: employees. They didn't care about slaves. Lincoln hated them. He said many times that the war wasn't about slavery until later in the war he needed a moral reason to rally people to destroying the south.

Don't forget, the place where most people in the country learn about the "civil war" is in the government controlled schools. Do you actually think the government doesn't lie?

Read "The Real Lincoln". It's on the reading list at the end of Dr. Paul's book.

confederate constitution

I'm so glad you brought up the book,( The real lincoln by Thomas Dilorenzo,) he was on c-span 2 on 8-14-08 look in there archives and find the video. He Was Great! and also at the end of the video he talkes about his support for Dr. Paul.( I wish I new how to have his interview put on youtube! or some where,) Please check it out! P.S he's going to be interviewed on Lou Rockwell I think he said on the 8-16-08

thanks for the book suggestion

and thanks to all for this interesting, important discussion for freedom advocates.

Actually, there was a move on in Congress to purchase the.......

....slaves and free them, right before the war broke out. Dr. Paul even mentioned it once, I believe. The War Between the States was never a war to end slavery. It was a war to determine which kind of slavery we would have, whether the institution of physical slavery would continue, or we would institute the more profitable form of economic slavery.

physiscal vs economic slavery

thanks for that post. I had heard that a private group in recent times has been purchasing and freeing slaves in a country that still has that nightmare situation; I wonder why the Congress in Lincoln't time chose war over such a beautiful, peaceful approach, if it actually could have been implemented.
I'd guess that most people, if forced to choose between physical slavery and economic slavery, would choose enonomic slavery. It was the physical slavery at that time which had to be dealt with. When people act in horrific ways they invite horrific responses that often have long-lasting unanticipated consequences.

We must also understand the

We must also understand the reasoning behind the War, make no mistake, it was a War of Conquest, nothing more.

"Slavery was a legal institution in this country for over 200 years. Africans were brought here by northern slave traders to be used in northern industry, long before the antebellum South or the Confederacy ever existed. The first American colony to legalize slavery was Massachusetts in 1641, only 17 years after the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock. "The slave trade became very profitable to the shipping colonies and Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut and New Hampshire had many ships in the triangular trade," (72). "The moral argument against slavery arose early in the New England shipping colonies but it could not withstand the profits of the trade and soon died out." (73).

Thomas Jefferson condemned the slave trade in the original draft of the Declaration of Independence, but the New England slave traders lobbied to have the clause stricken. In a short eleven year period form 1755 to 1766, no fewer than 23,000 slaves landed in Massachusetts. By 1787, Rhode Island had taken first place in the slave trade to be unseated later by New York. Before long, millions of slaves would be brought to America by way of 'northern' slave ships. After all, there were no Southern slave ships involved in the triangular slave, it was simply too cruel.

William P. Cheshire, the senior editorial columnist for the Arizona Republic recently noted, the New England Yankee who brought slaves to America, "were interested in getting money, not in helping their cargo make a fresh start in the New World." He adds that northern slave ownership "isn't widely known - American textbooks tend to be printed in Boston, not Atlanta - but early New Englanders not only sold blacks to Southern planters but also kept slaves for themselves as well as enslaving the local Indian population," (74).

Slavery did not appear in the deep South until northern settlers began to migrate South, bringing with them their slaves. It was soon discovered that while slaves were not suited to the harsh climate and working conditions of the north, they were ideal sources of cheap labor for the newly flourishing economy of the agricultural South. Of the 9.5 million slaves brought to the Western Hemisphere from 1500 - 1870, less than 6% were brought to the United States. This means that our Hispanic, British and French neighbors to the south owned over 94% of the slaves brought to the New World. In the South, less than 7% of the total population ever owned a slave. In other words, over 93% of Southerners did not own any slaves, (75).

Attempts to outlaw the slave trade in the north only increased the profits of smuggling. In 1858, only two years prior to the birth of the Confederacy, Stephen Douglas noted that over 15,000 slaves had been smuggled into New York alone, with over 85 vessels sailing from New York in 1859 to smuggle even more slaves. Perhaps it was their own guilt that drove the abolitionists of the day to point an accusing finger at the South, while closing their eyes to the slavery and the slave trade taking place in their own back yards.

For more than 200 years, northern slave traders mad enormous profits that furnished the capitol for future investments into mainstream industries. Who is more responsible for slavery in America, the Southern plantation owner who fed and clothed his slaves, or the New England "Yankee" slave trader who brought the slaves here in the first place?

From 1641, when Massachusetts first legalized slavery, until 1865, when the Confederate struggle for independence ended, slavery was a legal institution in America that lasted over 224 years. The Confederate battle flag flew for 4 of those 224 years, but the U.S. flag and its colonial predecessors flew over legalized slavery for ALL of those 224 years. It was the U.S. flag that the slave first saw, and it was the U.S. flag that flew on the mast of New England slaves ships as they brought their human cargo to this country. It is clear, that those who attack the Confederate flag as a reminder of slavery are overlooking the most guilty and hateful of all reminders of American slavery, the U.S. flag."

Bibliography:

72. The Concise Dictionary of American History, (Scribner & Sons), p.876
73. Ibid
74. The Arizona Republic, June 11, 1995
75. Rober William Fogel and Stanley L. Engerman, Time on the Cross - The Economics of American Negro Slavery (New York: Norton, 1974), p.14

The argument is not whether slavery was evil, we know that fact, but if we are to understand the intricacies of that institution and the social structure built upon it then would it not behoove us to investigate the facts regardless of the emotions we may have on the subject? Are we to blind ourselves to the reality of the period because we hold a deep repulsive emotional response to the subject? I prefer to delve into the facts regardless of my own personal feelings on the subject and let the fact speak for themselves, not regarding a moral judgment on the subject, but to actually find out what that life was like.

Oh, there is no other judgment of the institution of slavery but condemnation, of that we agree, but that is not what I am seeking to explore. I think you also have the wrong impression of what I am saying. I am not making excuses for the institution of slavery, I am however, saying that the picture we have been taught over the years has been distorted and it has painted to show the North as heroic while portraying the South as totally cruel.

Particularly the acts of the federal government under Radical Republican rule. The vast majority of history takes a view that the North was heroic in its actions when just the opposite was true, and that is what I find offensive.

Yes, Africans were kidnapped from their land, tortured, murdered by Northern slave traders. Africans were also involved with the slave trade in Africa, raiding neighboring tribes, kidnapping people not only to enslave them but also to sell them to slavers. There were no innocents involved in the slave trade, whether that trade was trans-Atlantic or internal in Africa itself. There were very few hands without the guilt of slave blood during that period and centuries before.

I am not seeking to make a moral judgment about slavery, there is absolutely no room for a moral judgment for it was completely and absolutely immoral, that is not the argument that I have sought to impart. I have sought to explore the facts behind the institution, behind the social structures of the period, the reality of that life without bringing the need to judge it on its morality because it is already condemned. The point is to understand the attitudes of that period, the way those attitudes expressed themselves in that society.

Slave owners were people, some good some very bad. On a whole however, I have found that even though they were engaged in that horrible act of slavery, which was an economic institution, there were those who followed a very specific code of stewardship over their slaves. I have read the codes of stewardship and it contradicts the impression that every slave owner was cruel and harsh in their treatment of their slaves. I mean I grew up thinking that every slave was whipped, starved, sold off when they came of age being separated from their families, but when I began to research the issues of slavery I found a very different story.

Around the world, poor free people starved, even in the South, nearly 92% of the white population bordered, at times, on starvation. As I stated, nearly 70% of the Slave Narratives portray a positive view of their time in slavery, this doesn’t imply that slavery was good, but that they viewed their captivity in ways that we simply can’t understand today. Today, we can’t understand how a slave could volunteer to fight along side his master, or to simply volunteer to fight with the Confederacy, but it happened and there was a reason behind such volunteerism that we simply fail to grasp in our modern minds. We view slavery from a very different point of view today than it was viewed then, by both slave and free.

The code of duties of slave owners was very specific, while there were, as I said, exceptions to the rule; those duties compelled the slave owner to provide for the slaves under his responsibility. I was very surprised to learn about the social duties and responsibilities that slave owners were expected to maintain regarding their slaves. The duties included hours of labor, holidays, leisure time, the “Sabbath”, housing, clothing, payment for any overtime worked, the care for the sick and elderly and even the responsibility for those who were hired as overseers. While there has been a widely held view, a stereotypical view, of the inhumanity of the slave owners, the truth is far from that. I mean I held that view for decades until I began to read more on the subject. As I stated, I do not excuse the fact that there were acts of cruelty, but as a whole the picture that I see is totally different. This in now way excuses the horrible institution of slavery, but it should not exclude delving into the issue for factual information.

Slavery was a reality, that fact cannot be avoided or changed despite our emotional feelings on the subject, but we should not avoid the reality of that period just to mollify our emotional outrage on the subject. Once again, I have never said that slavery was a good thing, but that the picture that has been painted of it is erroneous. The subject, once again, is not the defense of slavery as an institution, nor is it that those who engaged in the institution were better or worse, the subject is whether the issue has been explored beyond the stereotypical understanding in this country.

By the way, in South Carolina, in 1830, the proportional percentage of white ownership of slaves was only about 1.4% of the white population, while the population of freed slaves who owned slaves was around 25%. Such facts underscore that even former slaves of the period viewed slavery in a very different way then we do today. I mean it boggles my mind that someone who was enslaved could turn around and enslave others. Certainly, some of those former slaves purchased relatives, of that there is no doubt, but here in South Carolina it was a practice that went beyond protecting those who were relatives, it was an economic system that they not only accepted, but many highly profited from during that time.

Of course, it is easy to forget that slavery was not just a white institution; it was also a long practice in Africa itself, whether it be by the North African Arabs or Africans Tribes themselves. In fact, slavery was practiced in Africa long before a white man set foot on its shores. The African kingdom of Ashanti was actually very upset when the British outlawed the slave trade because much of the wealth of that kingdom came from the trade of slaves. There is evidence as far back as the middle ages that West African kingdoms sold their own people to Muslim traders in exchange for goods. Slavery was a particular institution that had roots far deeper than those found in this country. By the time slavery was abolished in this country there were many more slaves owned by blacks in Africa then in the United States. This is a hard fact, one that is horrifying and astounding, but it wasn’t that whites or even Arabs of the period between the 1600s and the 1800s thought that blacks were a race to be singled out to be slaves, it was the fact that Africans were the only ones around the world who were selling their own people. That is a horrible and disturbing fact of that period. It is estimated that over 12 million Africans were sold by Africans, whether from competing tribes or inter-tribal trade.

Most slaves knew nothing else but the life they were born in, that was “normal” to them therefore they really had no relative concept of what freedom meant or how it would affect them one way or another. Once again, in the Slave Narratives, many expressed the attitude that they were better off under the slave system then under harsh circumstances of the emancipation. The knew nothing else, that is not an excuse for slavery, but fact of their lives at that point. They didn’t know what it meant to be free so it would have been relatively impossible for them to crave that which they had never had

Hannah Irwin, a former slave stated: “I suppose the Yankees was all right in their place, but they never belonged in the South. As for them setting me free! We on the Bennett place were free as soon as we were born. I’ve always been free!”

Aunt Adeline, a former slave said: “After the war many soldiers came to my mistress, Mrs Blakely, trying to make her free me. I told them I was free but I didn’t want to go anywhere, that I wanted to stay in the only home I ever known. Sometimes I was threaten for not leaving but I stayed on.”

Betty Curlett said: “When Mars Daniel come home he went to my papa’s house and said ‘John, you free’ Papa said: ‘I been free as I want to be what I is’.”

Cora Gilliam, said: “I tell you lady, if the rough element from the North had stayed out of the South the trouble of reconstruction would not have happened. They tried to excite the colored against their white friends. The white folks was still kind to them what had been their slaves. The would have helped them get started. I know that. I always say that if the South could have been left to adjust itself both white and colored would have been better off.”

It is a stance of intellectual bankruptcy to conclude the feelings of those who were held in the captivity of the institution of slavery when there are thousands of examples of testimony to the contrary. This does not presuppose that there were not horrendous examples of cruelty, but from my readings of existing documentation, there were far more examples of a reciprocal relationship between slaves and slave owners, between their families and the social structure of the period.

I am not a Southern Apologist for the institution of slavery, I am however a very proud Son of Confederate Veterans who were not slave owners, who cared less about fighting for the survival of slavery in the South, but fought for their country, under their flag, for the same reasons the Revolutionary War was fought. By the way, there are also black Sons of Confederate Veterans who are just as proud of their heritage under the banner of the Confederacy. The South recognized as far back as the 1840s that slavery was a dying institution; it was an even heavy moral millstone around the necks of even slave owners of the period. It is hard to realize today that the South contained far more Abolitionists than were found in the North. As I stated, there was a plan in place for the eventual elimination of the institution in the South, one which would ensure not only that the lives of former slaves would be secure in their freedom, but that they would be given every opportunity to succeed in that freedom and adjust to it as they integrated into the various communities. That plan however was preempted by Lincoln’s War machine, which was purely political and economical at its inception and had nothing to do with the plight of the slaves in the South.

Of course there are those who firmly believe that the accepted history of both the Confederacy and the institution of slavery is factual however, facts throw a very important light onto the reality of the period, a reality that, in many cases, contradicts the accepted history.

Now it is interesting to consider that in the North there were very militant, very radical abolitionists. The only problem is that those Northern Abolitionists had tunnel vision toward the South while ignoring the North. They were paid contributions by the very people, the Northern Industrialists, who bought, for their textile mills, Southern cotton picked by slaves and the Abolitionist also seemed to have a rather close relationship to the actual Shipping companies who traded in slave flesh up to the later part of the 1850s. The problem about that was the Northern Industrialist and Shippers knew that the Abolitionists would never be able to emancipate the slaves in the South, but they knew that the Abolitionists could agitate politics to the point of war, and that is what the Northern Industrialists wanted, it would be the perfect time to plunder the wealth of the South.

Another heinous hypocrisy of the Northern Abolitionists was their attitude toward the child labor in the Northern Mills, why ignore one form of slavery while condemning another? Well, the answer to that is: “follow the money”. The horrible conditions that children, of both black and white, in the Northern Mills had to endure was far worse than the majority of Southern slaves had to endure. Children were whipped, maimed, killed in those mills, but the Abolitionists turned a blind eye, the same blind eye that they turned from the slave traders in the North. By the way, it is estimated that there were close to 800 slave ships in Northern Ports. Why would the Abolitionist focus on the South while conditions in the North were probably worse in terms of conditions, and was the main culprit in the slave trade? For every slave the Northern slaver ships brought into America, they sold 10 in the Caribbean and South America, but that fact was ignored the Northern Abolitionist and politicians.

I realize that there are those on this forum who have voiced the opinion that 100% of those held in slavery wanted their freedom. The question is what did freedom mean to those who were enslaved? While I condemn the institution of slavery, that does not mean that I must neglect the reality of the facts that history presents to us concerning that time and the institution of slavery itself.

It was common for elderly and dying plantation owners to include his slaves in his will, in most cases his slaves were freed upon his death. Not only was that common, but it was not uncommon for the will of the dead master to will his slaves land and money to start a new life in freedom. There was also a common practice across the South to grant freedom to any slave that could prove he or she was skilled enough and could provide from himself or herself without becoming a burden to the State. The problem with the emancipation in the North is that it was really not emancipation at all; the Northern slaveholders didn’t want to loose their investment and sold off the healthy men and women to the South before the Northern Laws took effect.

It would surprise those who, as we have seen, ardently supports the commonly held and accept view of history to find that Virginia and several other Southern States found it necessary to pass legislation to allow freed slaves to return to slavery. Virginia had so many freed slaves requesting to return to that institution that the legislature had to craft a law that would allow such a conversion. The passed a law that would not only allow a freed slave to return to the life of slavery but that the freed slave could actually choose the master he wished to own him. Now that is history that you rarely will hear or read in the accepted history books.

There are also numerous, perhaps hundreds of songs that give a very different view of slave life than the one we have been accustom to about the institution and the life of the slave.

For instance:
“I’ve hoed in fields of cotton,
I’ve worked upon the river
And I always thought if I got away
I would go back, no never!
But times have changed the old man
My head is bending low
My heart turns back to Dixie
And to Dixie I must go!”

What does all of this mean, well from my reading and research it shows that it is impossible for us in our modern mentality to impose out attitudes on factual history. We have absolutely no concept of the feelings, the attitudes and the reasoning of those who were held in slavery and those who held those people in slavery. We are quick to accept a history that has been carefully varnished over, but that polished history is not always in concert with the facts of the period.

By way of a Post Script, I leave you with this nugget of consideration:

The assassination of Lincoln was perhaps, next to the War, the worse thing that could have happened to the South. Lincoln, although a Radical, was perhaps one of the more moderate of the bunch. He had planned to bring the Southern States back into the Union after the War with the full rights of Statehood. That was not the plan of the War Party Radicals who sought to completely treat the South as a Conquered Territory, plunder and subject it to all the horrors of a Carthage-like Solution. Who had the most to gain by Lincoln's assassination? It certainly wasn't the South. VP Johnson was a close friend of John Wilkes Booth, Booth actually visited the hotel where Johnson was staying the night before the assassination. In fact, if you look at who had the most to gain it was Edwin Stanton, Thaddeus Stevens and Andrew Johnson, along with numerous Northern Industrialists.

http://militantjeffersonian.com

"Men do not willingly read unpalatable truths of themselves. The People like those best who fool them most, by pandering to their vices and flattering their foibles" Raphael Semmes

They didn't have enough

They didn't have enough money to buy them. That was the days before the Fed.

Actually, it would have been

Actually, it would have been far less expensive than the War, and the deaths of over 600,000 American citizens at the time and probably another million freed slaves who died of starvation after their "liberators" won the War, but forgot the actual men, women and children they had freed. If it had not been for both the Southerners, both white and black, more would have died in the South then actually did. They helped each other, cared for each other as best they could under the circumstances of a plundered and pillaged land, their Beloved Country.

http://militantjeffersonian.com

"Men do not willingly read unpalatable truths of themselves. The People like those best who fool them most, by pandering to their vices and flattering their foibles" Raphael Semmes