I would have been more annoyed if I hadn't already seen the video. My annoyance was reserved for the non sequitur.
Morgoth, on 06 July 2015 - 06:37 AM, said:
Nicodimas, on 06 July 2015 - 05:26 AM, said:
Nothing is wrong with the southern flag, people just be crazy. Remember the North Invaded the south. They should have talked more about it as it never should have come to violence. Could have just let the south go you know?
Let them continue treating an entire minority group as property. Sounds like the best plan indeed.
It was slightly more nuanced than that. In other words, this counterargument could be worded better. Slavery still existed in some of the Union states when the war began. The South fought the war to keep slavery. The North fought the war to keep the Southern states in the Union. Slavery was then like any progressive political issue; it had conservatives (keep it) and liberals (change it) in the North and in the South (and the South had far fewer liberals than the North had conservatives). It was that way when the Union was founded, actually; the Enlightenment inspired all sorts of debates about slavery and naturally there were many European countries who depended less on slavery and abolished it before we did. The US was
getting there, finally, when the South seceded because they could see abolition coming at the federal level at some uncertain point in the future. But the North saw the war in terms of unity. Only the South saw it in terms of slavery (thinking it necessary to their own freedom).
I have at least 6 Confederate veterans in my ancestry (among my maternal great-grandparents' grandparents). My maternal-maternal great-grandmother was an officer in the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) and she paid my dues to the Children of the Confederacy (CofC) until I came of age. I got a scholarship to college from the UDC when I first attended in 1996. I was raised with all the Southern myths about the war...but there is some truth in the lore. It doesn't amount to what the Confederate nostalgists tend to claim, but it does give those of us Southerners who broke away from that mold an interesting perspective on the history. People in the North don't pay nearly as much attention to the Civil War as the Confederate nostalgists.
The President (2012) said:
Please proceed, Governor.
Chris Christie (2016) said:
Elizabeth Warren (2020) said:
And no, I’m not talking about Donald Trump. I’m talking about Mayor Bloomberg.