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How We Know the so Called ‘Civil War’ Was Not About Slavery

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How We Know The So-Called “Civil War” Was Not Over Slavery

By Paul Craig Roberts

When I read Professor Thomas DiLorenzo’s article the question that lept to mind was, “How come the South is said to have fought for slavery when the North wasn’t fighting against slavery?”

Two days before Lincoln’s inauguration as the 16th President, Congress, consisting only of the Northern states, passed overwhelmingly on March 2, 1861, the Corwin Amendment that gave constitutional protection to slavery. Lincoln endorsed the amendment in his inaugural address, saying “I have no objection to its being made express and irrevocable.”

Quite clearly, the North was not prepared to go to war in order to end slavery when on the very eve of war the US Congress and incoming president were in the process of making it unconstitutional to abolish slavery.

Here we have absolute total proof that the North wanted the South kept in the Union far more than the North wanted to abolish slavery.

If the South’s real concern was maintaining slavery, the South would not have turned down the constitutional protection of slavery offered them on a silver platter by Congress and the President. Clearly, for the South also the issue was not slavery.

The real issue between North and South could not be reconciled on the basis of accommodating slavery. The real issue was economic as DiLorenzo, Charles Beard and other historians have documented. The North offered to preserve slavery irrevocably, but the North did not offer to give up the high tariffs and economic policies that the South saw as inimical to its interests.

Blaming the war on slavery was the way the northern court historians used morality to cover up Lincoln’s naked aggression and the war crimes of his generals. Demonizing the enemy with moral language works for the victor. And it is still ongoing. We see in the destruction of statues the determination to shove remaining symbols of the Confederacy down the Memory Hole.

Today the ignorant morons, thoroughly brainwashed by Identity Politics, are demanding removal of memorials to Robert E. Lee, an alleged racist toward whom they express violent hatred. This presents a massive paradox. Robert E. Lee was the first person offered command of the Union armies. How can it be that a “Southern racist” was offered command of the Union Army if the Union was going to war to free black slaves?

Virginia did not secede until April 17, 1861, two days after Lincoln called up troops for the invasion of the South.

Surely there must be some hook somewhere that the dishonest court historians can use on which to hang an explanation that the war was about slavery. It is not an easy task. Only a small minority of southerners owned slaves. Slaves were brought to the New World by Europeans as a labor force long prior to the existence of the US and the Southern states in order that the abundant land could be exploited. For the South slavery was an inherited institution that pre-dated the South. Diaries and letters of soldiers fighting for the Confederacy and those fighting for the Union provide no evidence that the soldiers were fighting for or against slavery. Princeton historian, Pulitzer Prize winner, Lincoln Prize winner, president of the American Historical Association, and member of the editorial board of Encyclopedia Britannica, James M. McPherson, in his book based on the correspondence of one thousand soldiers from both sides, What They Fought For, 1861-1865, reports that they fought for two different understandings of the Constitution.

As for the Emancipation Proclamation, on the Union side, military officers were concerned that the Union troops would desert if the Emancipation Proclamation gave them the impression that they were being killed and maimed for the sake of blacks. That is why Lincoln stressed that the proclamation was a “war measure” to provoke an internal slave rebellion that would draw Southern troops off the front lines.

If we look carefully we can find a phony hook in the South Carolina Declaration of Causes of Secession (December 20, 1860) as long as we ignore the reasoning of the document. Lincoln’s election caused South Carolina to secede. During his campaign for president Lincoln used rhetoric aimed at the abolitionist vote. (Abolitionists did want slavery abolished for moral reasons, though it is sometimes hard to see their morality through their hate, but they never controlled the government.)

South Carolina saw in Lincoln’s election rhetoric intent to violate the US Constitution, which was a voluntary agreement, and which recognized each state as a free and independent state. After providing a history that supported South Carolina’s position, the document says that to remove all doubt about the sovereignty of states “an amendment was added, which declared that the powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States, respectively, or to the people.”

South Carolina saw slavery as the issue being used by the North to violate the sovereignty of states and to further centralize power in Washington. The secession document makes the case that the North, which controlled the US government, had broken the compact on which the Union rested and, therefore, had made the Union null and void. For example, South Carolina pointed to Article 4 of the US Constitution, which reads: “No person held to service or labor in one State, under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered up, on claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be due.” Northern states had passed laws that nullified federal laws that upheld this article of the compact. Thus, the northern states had deliberately broken the compact on which the union was formed.

The obvious implication was that every aspect of states’ rights protected by the 10th Amendment could now be violated. And as time passed they were, so South Carolina’s reading of the situation was correct.

The secession document readsas a defense of the powers of states and not as a defense of slavery. Here is the document.

Read it and see what you decide.

A court historian, who is determined to focus attention away from the North’s destruction of the US Constitution and the war crimes that accompanied the Constitution’s destruction, will seize on South Carolina’s use of slavery as the example of the issue the North used to subvert the Constitution. The court historian’s reasoning is that as South Carolina makes a to-do about slavery, slavery must have been the cause of the war.

As South Carolina was the first to secede, its secession document probably was the model for other states. If so, this is the avenue by which court historians, that is, those who replace real history with fake history, turn the war into a war over slavery.

Once people become brainwashed, especially if it is by propaganda that serves power, they are more or less lost forever. It is extremely difficult to bring them to truth. Just look at the pain and suffering inflicted on historian David Irving for documenting the truth about the war crimes committed by the allies against the Germans. There is no doubt that he is correct, but the truth is unacceptable.

The same is the case with the War of Northern Aggression. Lies masquerading as history have been institutionalized for 150 years. An institutionalized lie is highly resistant to truth.

Education has so deteriorated in the US that many people can no longer tell the difference between an explanation and an excuse or justification. In the US denunciation of an orchestrated hate object is a safer path for a writer than explanation. Truth is the casualty.

That truth is so rare everywhere in the Western World is why the West is doomed. The United States, for example, has an entire population that is completely ignorant of its own history.

As George Orwell said, the best way to destroy a people is to destroy their history.

Apparently Even Asians Can Be White Supremacists If They Are Named Robert Lee

ESPN has pulled an Asian-American named Robert Lee (Lee is a common name among Asians, for example, Bruce Lee) from announcing the University of Virginia/Wiliam & Mary footbal game in Charlottesville this Saturday because of his name.

What We Learned From Charlottesville

By Paul Craig Roberts

We learned, although we already knew it, that the US media has no integrity.

We learned that the liberal/progressive/left holds fast to myths that justify hate.

We learned that misrepresentation is the hallmark of American history.

We learned that some websites that we thought were brave are not.

We learned that Identity Politics has a firm hold and that the demonization of white people is now an ideology that rivals in strength the neoconservative ideology that Americans are the exceptional and indispensable people. Obviously, we cannot simultaneously be both deplorables and the best people on earth.

We learned that the liberal/progressive/left will cooperate with the military/security complex to bring down a president whose intent was to normalize relations with Russia and reduce the dangerously high tensions between the two major nuclear powers.

In brief, we learned that the US is on a firm course of both internal and external conflict.

=====

Dr. Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy and associate editor of the Wall Street Journal. He was columnist for Business Week, Scripps Howard News Service, and Creators Syndicate. He has had many university appointments. His internet columns have attracted a worldwide following. Roberts’ latest books are The Failure of Laissez Faire Capitalism and Economic Dissolution of the West, How America Was Lost, and The Neoconservative Threat to World Order.

How We Know The So-Called “Civil War” Was Not Over Slavery

By Paul Craig Roberts

Once people become brainwashed, they are more or less lost forever. http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/47672.htm


Source: http://tapnewswire.com/2017/08/how-we-know-the-so-called-civil-war-was-not-about-slavery/


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    Total 11 comments
    • unidentified

      it did bring about the end of slavery, that was a big step for american values, however it would still be a while before african americans and women could legally vote and participate in government

      • LifeIs

        It was 1870 when the 15th amendment was adopted. “The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.”

        The (1868) 14th amendment guaranteed equality under the law. “… nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”

        Between 1863 and 1877, fifteen hundred blacks held office, including 600 in southern state legislatures. The first black member of Congress was elected in 1870.

        “Separate but equal” was from the Plessy v Ferguson decision of the US Supreme Court, in 1896. The Court began to reverse that in the (1954) Brown v Board of Education decision.

        The (1920) 19th amendment granted women the right to vote.

        • Anonymous

          The word united states means a federal corporation which is the district of Columbia not the actual states of the union . So read that amendment with that in mind. You obviously never tried to look up the words you are stating in a law dictionary or using the government’s own statutes.

      • Anonymous

        That was the lie that hides the truth if you read my comment below you will see by abraham Lincolns own mouth he says he wanted to win the war without freeing any slaves. So what war was he fighting where he could win without freeing any slaves. You need to actually find history books that are older and closer to that time. Do you even know who writes are textbooks ?

      • DK

        The end of Slavery began with Britain(United Kingdom) being the first nation on Earth to outlaw the practice(1830) and have its Royal Navy the premier force in the world at that time blockade the West coast of Africa from 1807 stopping the slave ships plying the trade as they had done for a century from the Ivory coast to the Americas with cotton and tobacco to the Port of Liverpool. Those same ships carried Britains 500,000 indentured white servants(white slaves) from 1700 to 1775/6 and from that time carried the black slave trade from Africa in the same ships. A greater distance with far less cargo per mile/year therefore the US received from Africa perhaps 160,000 OR LESS black slaves until 1807 making up the difference by importing those from Britains Caribbean Plantation owners, breeding and importing from Latin America.

    • pet rock

      the civil war was about the confederate states making too much money on exports , especially cotton picked by slaves. The feds wanted more of that profit through higher taxes. Ending slavery, which was going to end – the process of ending it in the carib had started- was the ‘weapons of mass destruction’ to rally the northerners to fight

    • Anonymous

      A quote from Abraham Lincoln “If I could win the war without freeing any slaves I would do that and if I could win the war by freeing only half the slaves I would do that also. ” this proves it was not about slavery . It was actually a coup by the federal government over the states and the people.

    • Fox Maine

      Slavery is attributed to being started in the US by a “BLACK MAN” Anthony Johnson who filed a lawsuit to have “a legal slave” ! Anthony Johnson was captured in his native Angola by an enemy tribe and sold to Arab slave traders. He was eventually sold as an indentured servant to a merchant working for the Virginia Company.[2]

      He arrived in Virginia in 1621 aboard the James. The Virginia Muster (census) of 1624 lists his name as “Antonio not given,” recorded as “a Negro” in the “notes” column.[3] There is some dispute among historians as to whether this was the Antonio later known as Anthony Johnson, as the census lists several “Antonios.” This one is considered the most likely.[4]

      Johnson was sold to a white planter named Bennet as an “indentured servant” to work on his Virginia tobacco farm. Servants typically worked under an indenture contract for four to seven years to pay off their passage, room, board, lodging and freedom dues. In the early colonial years, most Africans in the Thirteen Colonies were held under such contracts of indentured servitude. With the exception of those indentured for life, they were released after a contracted period with many of the indentured receiving land and equipment after their contracts expired or were bought out.[5] Most white laborers also came to the colony as indentured servants.
      When Anthony Johnson was released from servitude, he was legally recognized as a “free Negro.” He developed a successful farm. In 1651 he owned 250 acres (100 ha), and the services of five indentured servants (four white and one black). In 1653, John Casor, a black indentured servant whose contract Johnson appeared to have bought in the early 1640s, approached Captain Goldsmith, claiming his indenture had expired seven years earlier and that he was being held illegally by Johnson. A neighbor, Robert Parker, intervened and persuaded Johnson to free Casor.
      Handwritten court ruling.
      March 8, 1655

      Parker offered Casor work, and he signed a term of indenture to the planter. Johnson sued Parker in the Northampton Court in 1654 for the return of Casor. The court initially found in favor of Parker, but Johnson appealed. In 1655, the court reversed its ruling.[10] Finding that Anthony Johnson still “owned” John Casor, the court ordered that he be returned with the court dues paid by Robert Parker.[11]

      This was the first instance of a judicial determination in the Thirteen Colonies holding that a person who had committed no crime could be held in servitude for life
      The Casor lawsuit demonstrates the culture and mentality of planters in the mid-17th century. Individuals made assumptions about the society of Northampton County and their place in it. According to historians T.R. Breen and Stephen Innes, Casor believed he could form a stronger relationship with his patron Robert Parker than Anthony Johnson had formed over the years with his patrons. Casor considered the dispute to be a matter of patron-client relationship, and this wrongful assumption ultimately lost him the court and the decision. Johnson knew that the local justices shared his basic belief in the sanctity of property. The judge sided with Johnson, although in future legal issues, race played a larger role.[21]

      The Casor lawsuit was an example of how difficult it was for Africans who were indentured servants to prevent being reduced to slavery. Most Africans could not read and had almost no knowledge of the English language. Planters found it easy to force them into slavery by refusing to acknowledge the completion of their indentured contracts.[1] This is what happened in Johnson v. Parker. Although two white planters confirmed that Casor had completed his indentured contract with Johnson, the court still ruled in Johnson’s favor

    • seataka

      During my first year on the internet, back in 1993, a friend of mine, who used the nick [email protected], a distinguished lady from Charleston SC, told me a family story. She said that she was the great great great (not sure how many) grand daughter of the Treasurer of South Carolina, before the US Civil war.

      When forced to sell the old family plantation house… having lost the rest of the land to taxes over decades, a locked strong box was found secreted in a far corner of the attic. In it, were love letters between the Treasurer and his wife in Charleston, while he was in Washington DC just before the shelling of Ft Sumter started the US Civil War.

      The treasurer was writing his wife from Washington, D.C.. He had been provided a blank check from the South Carolina Treasury, duly authorized by the South Carolina legislature, whose members had unanimously fulfilled all the necessary requirements to secede from the Union. However, there was just one last step to be done for a legal secession per the Georgia Constitution which stated “Reimburse the Federal government for the cost of any facilities it owned or built in the state”

      Seems he was getting the run around. He was getting shuffled around from State Dept, to the Department of the Interior, to Treasury, then to Congress, and the White House and NO ONE WOULD TELL HIM HOW MUCH TO WRITE THE AMOUNT FOR ON THE CHECK! After months of this run around, seems an ash, fell from a cigar on a cannon fuse, firing the first shot at Ft Sumter, starting the 1st American Civil War.

      From: https://arnielerma.wordpress.com/2017/08/16/the-charlottesville-theatrical/

    • Pink Slime

      I always wondered why Lincoln (if such a good man) got blasted. Now I know why. Guy was an evil basturd. Wanted a BOOT on your neck, yet was suppose to be against slavery (which we now know is BULL).

      Methinks, wanted WHITES as slaves – to the Federal Government, which is happening today, with their phony Federal Courts, Federal Reserve, and Federal Agencies. :cool:

    • Canderson

      Are we not very close to the end when the powers that be let real truths by?

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