The Southern system of slavery did not benefit anyone but the slave owners--that is pretty simple.
The fact that English slave traders formed the West Indies company to perpetrate slavery for them is also a clue as to the thinking of slave traders in GB.
How can any here deny--with a clear conscious--that the Slave owners and slave traders had any desire to give up slavery and not expand it.
The declarations presented clearly show that was their goal.
Blessings
WL, I won't say that they wouldn't benefit. Many did benefit on both sides of the Mason Dixon. Slavery was wrong. My biggest concern in these discussions is the continued insisting that slavery was the primary issue whether directly or indirectly.
I'd still like Bagtic to explain his statement, " illiterate southern rednecks were conned by 'Massah'". Obviously a statement to stir the pot rather than add to the discussion. Such statements also fly in the face of reason and the simple ability that each now has to resource information. Such statements reflect a lack of reading and study or a refusal to study the issues and understand them. SDJ pointed out that such a view as BT made could be made on both sides.
To say that the northern states were fighting for the freedom of the slave alone is a monumental stretch of the imagination and bends reason to the point of breaking. We need go no further than the title "Union Army" to see the purpose of the men in Blue. They were fighting to stop secession.
What man in this discussion would willingly put his life on the line for those that he did not know? Did the Dough Boys in WWI or the GI's in WWII go to war to fight for those poor oppressed Europeans, Chinese, Phillipino's? (sp?). We know enough of that history to know that they did not. They were fighting for country seeing our Liberty in peril. In the same way, how can we project feelings and emotions on the men in Blue and Gray that we have not witnessed in any recent war that we have observed and studied?
The Unionists saw Liberty defined in terms of preserving the nation as a whole as it had looked prior to the Southern Declaration of Independence. The Secessionists saw Liberty in terms of preserving the right to self government. These are the primary causes of the war. This is backed up by the reasons that the men who fought left us in their writings. To make the primary reason something else is revision of history.
Unfortunately, we are stuck with the hard cold fact that either way, war fought or war averted, the nation has gone down hill since that time in terms of Liberty.
That's mho. However, YMMV.
Striving for consistency,
lc