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What if the Confederacy...were the Good Guys!?!


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2013 Oct 15, 3:16pm   7,862 views  59 comments

by John Bailo   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Myth About Slavery/Confederate Policy

In 1864, the Confederate States began to abandon slavery. There are ample indications that even without a war, the Confederacy would have ended slavery sooner than their Northern neighbors.

Most historians believe that the Confederacy only started to abandon slavery once their defeat was imminent. If that is true, then the CSA wanted independence more than they wanted to hold on to slavery. The CSA’s highest ranking generals, Robert E. Lee and Joseph E. Johnston were not slave holders and did not believe in slavery.

And according to an 1860 census, only 31% of families owned slaves. 75% of families that owned slaves owned less than 10 (still unacceptable) and often worked beside them in the fields. The Confederate Constitution banned the overseas slave trade at the beginning of the war in an effort to abolish legal slavery, and permitted Confederate states to abolish slavery within their borders if they wanted to do so.

But take note: Slavery wasn’t abolished until 1868, 3 years after the war. Thus Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland and Delaware still had slaves, all of which were Union States.

http://loganhawkes.com/blog/2012/07/16/myth-about-slaveryconfederate-policy/

10 Surprising Facts About The Confederacy

The confederate Congress specified that black soldiers were to receive the same pay as the white soldiers. The Union army’s black soldiers were paid less than the white soldiers.

http://listverse.com/2010/12/06/10-surprising-facts-about-the-confederacy/

I know is some bizarro alternative history s**t, what if it is true?

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37   freak80   2013 Oct 16, 10:57am  

Dan8267 says

Does the south want forgiveness for all the vile evil it did? Then fucking repent, bitches.

Dan8267 says

If the south wants forgiveness, it must admit it all the things that need to be forgiven. The south needs to confess its sins, repent, and never commit those sins again.

Dan8267 says

They are morally inferior and deserve to be treated as such.

Dan, you sound like a Christian fundamentalist preacher. ;-)

38   humanity   2013 Oct 16, 11:02am  

Dan8267 says

f the south wants forgiveness, it must admit it all the things that need to be forgiven. The south needs to confess its sins, repent, and never commit those sins again. And you can't do these things if you continue to white wash history.

Until then, fuck the south. They are morally inferior and deserve to be treated as such.

I'm no fan of lynchings or southern attitudes and beliefs that blacks were or are somehow inferior.

But the generalizations don't make sense. It's not much different than the hate that exists in some corners of the world toward America. Even if they have some examples of questionable American imperialist actions, that doesn't make generalizing that America is evil correct.

Your an interesting combination Dan, of liberal but also absolutist sort of authoritarian in your thinking. Often liberals are accused of being relativists. Not you. Everything is black and white to you. Good or evil.

Are humans inherently evil, and not worthy of forgiveness ? And if they are, who do they need to beg for forgiveness ?

39   Rin   2013 Oct 16, 12:05pm  

humanity says

But the generalizations don't make sense.

In this case, the lynchings are based around Reconstruction/Jim Crow post-war south.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reconstruction_Era

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Crow_laws

So while things are different today, Dan doesn't want to forget the past without the south accounting for the lost century.

40   Dan8267   2013 Oct 17, 3:55am  

freak80 says

Dan, you sound like a Christian fundamentalist preacher. ;-)

Sometimes you just got to talk to people in the language they understand. And the southern conservative understands moral shaming. It's what they do and it's what they should get when they take the side of evil. Of course, they hate it when outsiders point out their moral hypocrisy and can back it up with irrefutable proof. They like to pretend they are godly when their history and culture is rank.

humanity says

Your an interesting combination Dan, of liberal but also absolutist sort of authoritarian in your thinking. Often liberals are accused of being relativists. Not you. Everything is black and white to you. Good or evil.

It is true that most issues are not black and white, evil vs good. However, some issues are. For example, there really aren't two sides to the Holocaust. The Nazis were the bad guys, period. Same thing for slavery. The question "is slavery morally acceptable" is the easiest moral question you could pose. Of course, it is wrong. There is no subtlety here. And you don't have to present both sides of an issue if one side is complete b.s. That's not being impartial or objective.

And you don't have to claim that both parties are at fought when that's not true either. The Holocaust wasn't the fault of both Nazis and Jews, but just Nazis. It's not a "neutral point of view" to include the Nazi perspective. That's just whitewashing history.

And there are quite a few things in American history that get whitewashed such as slavery, the genocide of the Native Americans, segregation, and voter suppression.

humanity says

Are humans inherently evil, and not worthy of forgiveness ? And if they are, who do they need to beg for forgiveness ?

My reference to beg for forgiveness relates to how the Christian south preach morality. If they were to ever start practicing what they preach they would have to literally beg for forgiveness for their multitude of sins. If this wasn't clear, I apologize. I wasn't implying the belief in literal sin or the necessity of seeking forgiveness from others or a "higher power".

As for the other question, philosophers have asked the question, "Is man inherently good and does evil when something goes wrong, or is man inherently evil and does good only if reformed by outside forces?", for millennia. Half contend that man would be good unless outside forces (poverty, war, oppression, etc.) corrupts him. Half believe man would be selfish and do evil unless outside forces (law, religion, culture, etc.) discourages or prevents him. Both are wrong.

It is human nature to be good when the behavior is expected to be reciprocated, and it is human nature to be selfish, possibly evil, when the expectation is that the behavior cannot or will not be reciprocated. This is exactly why people behave so rudely and selfishly when driving, but would be polite and courteous when meeting the same strangers while walking on the sidewalk. People don't expect to ever see again or recognize the other drivers, and more importantly, that the other drivers won't see them again or recognize them if they did. Thus, there is no chance for reciprocation of behavior outside the immediate timeframe.

Reciprocity, or the lack thereof, is also the reason why you tend to get ripped off and screwed over by certain businesses like car or house purchases and treated well by other businesses like grocery stores, massage parlors, restaurants. In the first category, you are making a large, one-time purchase. It pays the seller to betray and screw you. In the second category, you are making many purchases over a long period of time. It would be unprofitable to betray a recurring customer. Whatever profit gain from taking advantage of the customer would be far offset by the loss of profit should the customer leave. Again, reciprocity explains exactly when man behaves selflessly and selfishly.

Human nature is based entirely on Game Theory and Evolution. It is a purely natural phenomenon.

Rin says

So while things are different today, Dan doesn't want to forget the past without the south accounting for the lost century.

This are only different in the south up to the point that the north has dragged the south kicking and screaming into the early 20th century. Yes, the south has to acknowledge the reality of their history before they can move past it. When the allies won WWII, they made the German citizens bury the people killed in concentration camps. This was done so that no German could deny the holocaust happened or white wash it. Germany had to admit what it did was wrong, and it was through that admission of guilt that Germany could be redeemed. Admission of the crimes is necessary to learn the moral lesson and to change the thinking of a people so that they do not repeat the crimes when given a chance. This has nothing to do with what I want, and everything to do with ending the evil culture that still permeates the south.

And we know it still permeates the south given the recent voter suppression efforts made under the guise of voter ID laws to prevent voter fraud that does not happen. Furthermore, it's not just racism. The same vileness at the heart of racism is also the core of anti-gay bigotry and the "defense" of traditional marriage movement. It is also the reason the south hates Mexicans, wants constant war with the Middle East, and wants to remove all safety social nets least they be used by non-whites. It's a xenophobic culture.

And yes, culture can be bad. A culture that promotes slavery, honor killings, unjust war, oppression of any sub-population, or irrationality is a bad culture. I have no problem calling out a bad culture when it is ripe with historical atrocities.

41   freak80   2013 Oct 17, 4:04am  

Dan8267 says

Sometimes you just got to talk to people in the language they understand. And the southern conservative understands moral shaming. It's what they do and it's what they should get when they take the side of evil. Of course, they hate it when outsiders point out their moral hypocrisy and can back it up with irrefutable proof. They like to pretend they are godly when their history and culture is rank.

Good point.

42   freak80   2013 Oct 17, 4:21am  

Dan8267 says

Human nature is based entirely on Game Theory and Evolution. It is a purely natural phenomenon.

Dan8267 says

The same vileness at the heart of racism is also the core of anti-gay bigotry and the "defense" of traditional marriage movement. It is also the reason the
south hates Mexicans, wants constant war with the Middle East, and wants to remove all safety social nets least they be used by non-whites. It's a xenophobic culture.

But if human nature is a purely natural phenonmenon, why are racism, bigotry, hatred, and xenophobia "immoral"? Didn't evolution create all of those behaviors?

Is it just your opinion that those things are immoral? Or can it be shown objectively/mathematically that those things are immoral?

43   edvard2   2013 Oct 17, 4:44am  

humanity says

the south wants forgiveness, it must admit it all the things that need to be forgiven.

Let me back up the train for just a second. Let me say that as a Southerner who first lived on the East and now West coast, racism, intolerance, and ignorance are prevelant everywhere I've lived so far.

Secondly, while the South still has a lot of conservatives, I'd equate this to the higher concentrations of people living in rural areas rather than the areas themselves. Most of the cities around where I lived were small, but fairly liberal compared to the rest of the surrounding, mostly rural areas. I grew up in a rural area where most of the families there had been living in the general area for sometimes 200 years. There was a very low exposure to other cultures, music, food, places, and people. Most of what they knew was what was present in their own small environments. I am a firm believer that many racist and intolerant attitudes also comes from lack of real exposure to different things. This was the case where I grew up for sure. But let me be clear: MOST people even in the rural area I grew up in were good, decent, and morally sound people who had more moderate political leanings.

But I would say that out of the rest of the country the South is probably changing at a much faster rate culturally than any other part of the country. A LOT of people from other states are moving to those areas, the cities are growing larger, and due to the relative connectivity that even people in rural areas have, there is an increasing growth and understanding. I'd also say that the easy access to things like the Internet have perhaps brought out the loudest of the more conservative in general. A large chunk of the content I see online from the far-right are not at all representative of the greater whole. They simply make the most noise.

I like to think that most people, regardless of where they live or whatever political background are decent, reasonable people with common sense traits and sensible opinions.

So I disagree that the bad behavior of a select few people can be used to personify and entire region, a region that is rich in culture, music, food, and people.

44   Dan8267   2013 Oct 17, 4:48am  

freak80 says

But if human nature is a purely natural phenonmenon, why are racism, bigotry, hatred, and xenophobia "immoral"? Didn't evolution create all of those behaviors?

Whether or not something is natural has nothing to do with whether or not it is moral. Rape and murder occur throughout nature, but they are clearly not moral. Laws and courthouses are not at all natural, but they prevent violations of rights by prohibiting and punishing various acts of evil. Nature is amoral.

But yes, all of human nature, good and evil, comes from our evolution. Luckily we now have frontal lobes that lets us take the issue of morality and cooperation past simplistic and crude rules and into more refined and useful methodologies.

freak80 says

Is it just your opinion that those things are immoral? Or can it be shown objectively/mathematically that those things are immoral?

That is a big subject matter. I'd have to spawn a new thread to answer that adequately. Short answer: no, it's not an opinion, but morality is not absolute either, but there are underlying absolute mathematics that govern moral systems. Maybe this weekend I'll write up a more complete answer to this.

45   freak80   2013 Oct 17, 5:01am  

Maybe cultures are subject to "natural selection" just like individual organisms are. Perhaps cultures that promote "bad" morality die off when individuals "vote with their feet" and move to cultures that promote "good" morality.

Example: I hate going home to visit my parents, because they still live in the culture of medieval Christianity. I'd much rather live in the more secular, mainstream American culture.

Then again, the Amish population is growing and they refuse to have any real contact with the outside world. A counterpoint.

It's just a conjecture on my part. Thoughts?

46   Dan8267   2013 Oct 17, 6:59am  

freak80 says

Maybe cultures are subject to "natural selection" just like individual organisms are.

Cultures are subject to forces of selection, whether they are "natural" or not is another matter. However, selective filtering does not guarantee that cultures will be selected for good morality, cooperation, or happiness of its people.

In any case, gradual ascent does not lead to a global maximum. There is something to be said for intelligent design in the affairs of men. Not all things should be modeled after evolution.

47   Rin   2013 Oct 17, 8:24am  

Dan8267 says

Yes, the south has to acknowledge the reality of their history before they can move past it. When the allies won WWII, they made the German citizens bury the people killed in concentration camps. This was done so that no German could deny the holocaust happened or white wash it. Germany had to admit what it did was wrong, and it was through that admission of guilt that Germany could be redeemed. Admission of the crimes is necessary to learn the moral lesson and to change the thinking of a people so that they do not repeat the crimes when given a chance.

As much as I like the basic vector of the argument, the South is not the same as either Germany or Japan. If you recall, MacArthur put the onus of the WWII Japanese atrocities in Korea & China on the head of General Tojo and left the people and the Emperor out of it. As a result, the Japanese ppl have no sense that that war was an act of aggression and regional genocides. And still, even today, the Germans and the Japanese are not really tolerant of other ppls, since 3rd/4th generation German-Turks are not accepted as true Germans and the Koreans in Japan still need to carry a Green Card w/o a path towards citizenship, regardless of the number of generations in Japan. The difference is that in Germany, denying the holocaust is a crime but despite it all, they have more skinhead problems than we do.

As for the South, it's a region within the same country. People do move around for work and schooling. And thus, it's not such a separated entity as a Germany or Japan. I'm rather certain that bigots in some regions of Maine, upstate NY, west VA, & Idaho have more in common with the KKK crowd in rural Georgia than the university types in Boston or California. Likewise, I'd even argue that Athens Georgia, home of REM & the B-52s, is as liberal as Amherst Massachusetts.

48   Dan8267   2013 Oct 17, 9:09am  

Rin says

the South is not the same as either Germany or Japan

That was never claimed. I used Germany as an example of why atrocities have to be admitted in order for an evil culture to be replaced with a good one. I stand by that statement and example.

In my analysis the South isn't like Germany and that's a bad thing. If the South had been like Germany and had accepted that slavery was utterly evil, admitted its crimes, and purged its criminals in open trials like the Nuremberg Trials then the entire evil history of the South after the Civil War would not have happened. No segregation, no Jim Crow, no assassination of MLK, no voter suppression today. Had the South done the same path as Germany did after WWII, the South would have regain the respect of the rest of the world. It is precisely because they didn't reverse paths that they don't deserve respect.

49   B.A.C.A.H.   2013 Oct 17, 10:03am  

Well they weren't the good guys.

50   Rin   2013 Oct 17, 10:42am  

Dan8267 says

admitted in order for an evil culture to be replaced with a good one

What's the culture here?

I'm not exactly certain that the culture of the South is much different from the culture of West VA, parts of Maine, rural upstate NY, or Idaho. I believe the landed aristocracy of the South, Scarlett O'Hara's clique & so-called high Southern Culture, was pretty much liquidated during the war. What followed was the society of rural America which could be "Redneck" whenever anyone leaves a major metropolis.

As much as I'd like to believe that the North had some abolitionist *solidarity*, it really wasn't the case. The average northerner was not like William Lloyd Garrison nor the infamous John Brown. In fact, Garrison got plenty of death threats from fellow Bostonians, for being such a vocal abolitionist during the pre-Civil War years.

51   freak80   2013 Oct 17, 11:30am  

Dan8267 says

This is exactly why people behave so rudely and selfishly when driving, but would be polite and courteous when meeting the same strangers while walking on the sidewalk. People don't expect to ever see again or recognize the other drivers, and more importantly, that the other drivers won't see them again or recognize them if they did. Thus, there is no chance for reciprocation of behavior outside the immediate timeframe.

And it's why internet arguments can get so nasty! :-D

52   freak80   2013 Oct 17, 11:36am  

It's true that racism isn't limited to the South. There are plenty of racist rednecks in the rural areas outside of Corning/Elmira, NY where I live. The same is probably true for any rural part of the US.

53   HydroCabron   2013 Oct 17, 11:39am  

Blanket condemnations of lynching sow confusion over what's really a mob rights issue.

54   Rin   2013 Oct 17, 11:50am  

freak80 says

There are plenty of racist rednecks in the rural areas outside of Corning/Elmira, NY where I live. The same is probably true for any rural part of the US.

I think pretty much outside of Vermont [ possibly the most tolerant & liberal rural state ], the standard rural model where white=good & dark=bad is the group think of most non-cosmopolitan areas.

55   SoTex   2013 Oct 17, 11:51am  

It was definitely about a LOT more than slavery. That war was in the making for hundreds of years before the Brits settled the west.

You had two cultures in England that didn't like each other are were similar to North and South here. In fact, that is how they settled our East coast! Puritans, Calvinists and they continued to not get along once they were here.

Lincoln was an evil MFer... He didn't care about slavery and didn't even free the slaves in the union states during the war. On the other hand southerners had blacks fighting in the confederacy.

Southerners DID NOT want a war. They were basically poor people who still had muskets. They used slavery because they were so poor. The North had rifles and industry - and still almost got their ass kicked. They were an industrial powerhouse second only the the Brits. The North wanted to start a trade war with the Brits and the Southerners didn't. It was mostly about the North enslaving the south - in a way - by trying to take over their ports, and control their cotton - which the Brits were buying. The South wanted to sell direct.

Lincoln didn't have to start that war and the way it ended was brutal. Slavery would have died out on it's own. If the North would have encouraged industrialization in the South it would have died out even faster.

On the other hand, you win the war, you get to write the history...

I'd thought Lincoln was a great guy for freeing the slaves - that's what my grammar school books taught me. It wasn't until I went to University I learned the other side. This is (slightly) pre-internet as well but I'm sure there is some stuff on the web that is over the top anti-north.

The South was fighting for their 'rights'. Although if you heard them say it you might think they were fighting for their 'rats'. haha.

56   freak80   2013 Oct 17, 11:55am  

Rin says

white=good & dark=bad

In Christianity, Light = Good, Darkness = Evil. That symbolism can work it's way into the subconscious mind and affect one's views on race, IMO.

Oddly enough, in the far-right Christian sect I grew up in, we sang "red and yellow, black and white, Jesus loves the little children of the world." Thankfully racism wasn't part of the program.

57   Entitlemented   2013 Oct 18, 3:39am  

We all look the same in the Infrared!

Saying that the Confed were on the verge of full liberty is a stretch. Likely the beatings encouraged them.

I one heard a guy say the Russians were going to take the Berlin wall down on their own, and if not Mondale (and he darn near won :) ) was fixin' to encourage Gorbochev to do the same.........

58   SoTex   2013 Oct 18, 3:09pm  

Entitlemented says

Saying that the Confed were on the verge of full liberty is a stretch. Likely the beatings encouraged them.

Very true... Slavery still would have died out eventually like it did in other parts of the world.

59   indigenous   2013 Oct 18, 3:20pm  

just_passing_through says

Very true... Slavery still would have died out eventually like it did in other parts of the world

Reality mentioned before that it would have died out sooner if the government did not have the policy/law of returning escaped slaves to their owners.

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