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SPOILER ALERT!!! SPOILER ALERT!!! Mesa and South Africa

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Re: SPOILER ALERT!!! SPOILER ALERT!!! Mesa and South Africa
Post by hanuman   » Fri Jul 04, 2014 1:14 am

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Namelessfly, as far as I understand things, the Union government's position was that the Constitution's Preamble provided for "a more perfect Union" than the Articles of Confederation, and that by ratifying the Constitution, the States had entered into a binding contract that precluded secession?

I'm not disputing what anyone said. You guys are Americans, so you have a better insight into your own history. I'm simply clarifying my own understanding, from an outsider's perspective. I'm always willing to learn, though, so I find this discussion truly interesting.
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Re: SPOILER ALERT!!! SPOILER ALERT!!! Mesa and South Africa
Post by namelessfly   » Fri Jul 04, 2014 2:49 am

namelessfly

hanuman wrote:Namelessfly, as far as I understand things, the Union government's position was that the Constitution's Preamble provided for "a more perfect Union" than the Articles of Confederation, and that by ratifying the Constitution, the States had entered into a binding contract that precluded secession?

I'm not disputing what anyone said. You guys are Americans, so you have a better insight into your own history. I'm simply clarifying my own understanding, from an outsider's perspective. I'm always willing to learn, though, so I find this discussion truly interesting.



Here is one authoritative opinion on the question of secession that suggests that the manner in which the US Constitution was adopted toreplace the original Articles of Confederation effectively established the precedentforsecession:

. Some argued that abandoning the Articles was the same as seceding from the Articles and thus was legal precedent for future secession(s) from the Constitution. St. George Tucker, a respected jurist in the early republic era, wrote in 1803:

And since the seceding states, by establishing a new constitution and form of federal government among themselves, without the consent of the rest, have shown that they consider the right to do so whenever the occasion may, in their opinion require it, we may infer that the right has not been diminished by any new compact which they may since have entered into, since none could be more solemn or explicit than the first, nor more binding upon the contracting
parties."[22]




Itshould also point out that the secession of Texas from Mexico and subsequent admission to the United States followed by the Mexican-American war was so alarming to some Northern States that they contemplated seceeding from the Southernand Western States.


The bottom line is that the issue of secession was an unsettled question that should have and could have been resolved through negotiation if some idiot General had not decided to occupy Fort Sumpter.
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Re: SPOILER ALERT!!! SPOILER ALERT!!! Mesa and South Africa
Post by runsforcelery   » Fri Jul 04, 2014 4:29 am

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hanuman wrote:Namelessfly, as far as I understand things, the Union government's position was that the Constitution's Preamble provided for "a more perfect Union" than the Articles of Confederation, and that by ratifying the Constitution, the States had entered into a binding contract that precluded secession?

I'm not disputing what anyone said. You guys are Americans, so you have a better insight into your own history. I'm simply clarifying my own understanding, from an outsider's perspective. I'm always willing to learn, though, so I find this discussion truly interesting.



Nameless is essentially correct about the way in which what happened in Charleston changed the tempo and violence quotient of the secession crisis in 1861, although the question of what might have happened had Major Anderson (he wasn't a general yet) not occupied Fort Sumter is certainly arguable. And he's also right that the reasons the war were fought are far more complex than many people are prepared to admit. I have no desire to turn this into a flame war, and I know this is an issue which is near and dear (and important) to a lot of hearts, but I think people who are claiming the war was a holy crusade to abolish slavery and say “history shows” that it was need to be a little careful about the inferences and conclusions they draw and the vigor with which they make their case.

Secession was a tool embraced by citizens of states which felt their legitimate rights were being violated/surpressed under the current national government. The notion first surfaced in New England, not the South, about the time of the War of 1812. Despite assertions by some historians, the Hartford Convention (Dec. 1813-Jan. 1814) did not include secession from the Union among the proposals voted out, but the Federalists very definitely tried to have it added to the pot. There was much opposition to the 3/5 rule (Article I, Section 2 of the US Constitution) under which every five slaves were counted as equivalent to three free citizens for apportionment calculations in the House of Representastives. The opposition in New England in the first quarter of the 19th century had very little (outside strict abolitionist circles, especially among the Quakers) with abolition, however. It had to do with the perception that the South had an unfair advantage in a Federal government which had already been dominated by the “Virginia dynasty” of Southern presidents. The folks in New England felt that the Louisiana Purchase (which the Federalists regarded as an unconstitutional land grab) had been pushed through by Southern interests and a Southern president (Jefferson) and would offer fertile territory for an expansion of the slave-based Southern agrarian economy. The primary concern was that this would institutionalize the 3/5 Rule’s “unfair advantage” for the South and West and leave New England permanently disadvantaged, and they regarded the War of 1812 as a result of what could happen/had happened as a result.

The “Warhawks’” pressure to declare war on Great Britain in 1812 was seen (correctly) as being driven largely by Western (and Southern) political power at the Federal level, while the war itself was ruinous to the New England economy. New England’s support for the war was minimal, to say the least. Virtually none of the New England governors honored requests for militia from the Federal government once the war began, claiming that they were needed for coast defense against the Brits. Because they refused to send the called for troops to serve under regular Army officers, Madison’s administration refused to pay their salaries out of the Treasury, and Massachusetts’ legislature appropriated something like $1 million (a chunk of change in 1812) to raise a state army of around 10,000 men while Caleb Strong, the governor, actually went so far as to send a secret mission to the British to discuss a separate peace.

It would be difficult to exaggerate the extent to which the Federalist Party in New England felt minimalized and threatened by the political equation of the first quarter of the 19th century, and its radicals strongly embraced the theory that secession (and what was later called nullification) was a legitimate response to a central government which was oppressive of their own rights and interests. It should be remembered that the Constitution had been signed only 25 years before the War of 1812 and that there were still a lot of people around who’d had a hand in the nationwide debates which had preceded it. It was still a "new shoe" that needed wearing in, and the people who had created/ratified it might be excused for thinking they could create/ratify yet another "new shoe" just as they had replaced the Articles of Confederation with the Constitution itself. At the time, New England saw its interests as radically threatened by the other sections of the country and virtually all of the recommendations of the Hartford Convention were aimed at reining in the "despotic" Federal (in this case, as NE saw it, Southern and Western) power by, among other things, not counting slaves at all for apportionment and requiring that successive presidents could not be elected from the same state. There was no effort here to declare slaves the equals of free citizens; they were to be deleted from the apportionment count in any way. And the “successive president” rule was clearly aimed at breaking what seemed to be a Virginian monopoly on the presidency. In other words, these were pragmatic, sectional, economic and political issues, and had the more moderate leaders of the Convention not prevailed, the threat of secession would almost certainly have been added to the mix. Unfortunately for the Convention (and the Federalists) about the time their delegates got to Washington with their resolutions, Jackson won the Battle of New Orleans, which was disastrous for the Federalists as a party (they were now seen as disloyal, pusillanimous, self-seeking traitors) and put secession back into its bottle for a time. Nonetheless, I think its significant as an indication if how the whole question of states rights were viewed in the US --- that is, of the fact that it was no a "lunatic fringe" issue --- that prior to the American Civil War the country was referred to as "These United States of America and not The United States of America.

In 1798, Jefferson and Madison’s Virginian and Kentucky Resolutions laid out a separate challenge to Federal authority in what came to be known as the Doctrine of Nullification. That is, the doctrine that states had the right to nullify Federal statues of which they disapproved within their own territory. There were several attempts to apply nullification over the years, including the 1832 Nullification Crisis in which South Carolina declared the Federal tariff provisions nullified within the state and found itself in conflict with the Jackson Administration. This was largely the result of a major shift in US policy following the War of 1812 to build internal US industry through tariffs which placed near-prohibitory duties on imported manufactured goods. In this instance, the tariff policy was supported by the mid-Atlantic and Western states, who saw it as a necessary defense against the cheaper foreign goods (especially British) being exported to the US and sold at prices US manufacturers couldn’t match. The 1828 “Tariff of Abominations” was truly punitive to both the Southern agrarian interests and to the New England shipbuilding and importing interests and was bitterly hated in both sections. It became a contentious issue in the 1828 presidential campaign and Andrew Jackson was elected with the expectation (by many of those who voted for him) that he would repeal it. Instead, he signed a new tariff law in 1832 which, while lower than that of 1828, was still painful for Southern and New England interests. John C. Calhoun, who was Jackson’s vice president at the time, pushed for nullification as a means of self-defense at the state level. The Southern economy, especially, was being hammered by several factors, one of which most definitely was tariff policy. Another factor — the downturn in purchase of Southern cotton by the British textile industry — was related to the US’s tariff policy, as well. American protectionism affected British exports to the US (“balance of trade” concerns, anyone?), which reduced the British ability/willingness to “buy American.” There was also pressure from British abolitionists not to buy slave-grown cotton, just as they were also pressuring British citizens not to buy slave-produced sugar from the Caribbean, but most of the drop in cotton purchases was due to other market forces, including a downturn in the international economy during the same period.

SC’s Ordnance of Nullification was enacted in response to the 1832 Tariff, a compromise which reduced some of the 1828 Tariff’s duties but by no means all of them. The tariff act would become null and void in SC as of February 1833, and the state began military preparation to forcibly resist any effort by the Federal government to enforce it. The crisis was defused in February when Congress passed both a Force Act, authorizing the use of force, and a new Tariff Bill which reduced duties far enough for South Carolina to climb back down from its limb.

My point here is that states rights and sectional concerns didn’t suddenly appear in 1860, nor were they linked directly to the institution of slavery. The South perceived other sections of the country (specifically the mid-Atlantic states) as receiving preferential treatment and major Federal investment in highways and port facilities which were paid for on the backs of Southern interests in the form of the tariffs imposed upon the imported goods the South’s agrarian economy had to have for the befit of Northern manufacturing interests who then turned around and sold their goods to the South at protected and exorbitant prices. New England in 1812 objected not so much to the existence of slavery as to the “unfairness” of the 3/5 rule which gave Southern states undue legislative clout. When the abolition movement began to gather steam on a national level, it was simply one more issue in a continuum of issues which had sharpened sectional divides, and the Secession Ordnance of 1860 was only one more in a series of increasing polarized debates over the power of the Federal government to impose its “despotism” on the states.

The entire issue of the Fugitive Slave Act (based very firmly on Article IV, Section 2 of the Constitution) and the agitation against Slavery on the national level contributed strongly to the South’s sense that it was (1) being simultaneously exploited by Northern industrial interests, (2) being demonized by the abolitionists, (3) seeing the basis for its entire existing economy directly threated (should abolition succeed on the national level), (4) losing its parity in the Federal government because of the admission of “free states” which would be natural allies of its political foes, and (5) likely to see the 3/5 rule come under attack once more (it was being attacked, steadily and loudly, in the Abolitionist press), despite Article V’s specific prohibition of any amendment which would affect Article I, Section 9. They could actually point to evidence that this was happening in the refusal of free states to enforce the Fugitive Slave Act despite the fact that the Constitution specifically required its enforcement. (At least one state — Wisconsin, I think — actually invoked the theory of nullification to absolve it from enforcing the Fugitive Slave Act.)

By the time Lincoln was elected president, the nation had a 50-year history of debating secession and/or nullification (the two theories are legal and philosophical Siamese twins), and while slavery had become the moral “hot button issue” of the day, it was only one of many, many issues which were then dividing — and had been dividing — the nation. There was a half-century legacy of hostility that went to the very core of the economic life’s blood of the sections, and Lincoln’s election was seen by Democrats (North and South) as a triumph of radicalism. South Carolina’s solution was to separate itself from a nation which obviously didn’t care about South Carolina’s interests — political and economic — and go its own way under the theory that it had been a sovereign nation before it signed the Constitution and had the right to be one again if it so chose. The fact that 10 other states — a third of the total states in the country — joined it in secession is an indication not simply of how deep the divisive issues went but also of how much credence the doctrine of secession had. I should also point out that the New York newspapers’ editorial view was that it was “time to let the erring sisters go” . . . until the city (whose extensive ports and bustling import trade had been built on the back of protectionism) discovered that the Confederacy intended to repeal all tariffs and make Charleston, Savanah, and New Orleans duty-free ports, at which point the headlines became “On to Richmond!” or their equivalent. Then, too, there are Lincoln’s pre-Battle of Antietam (i.e., prior to the Emancipation Proclamation) responses to people like Frederick Douglass and Horace Greeley about his war aims. In his 1860 State of the Union address, he specifically said “I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the States where it exists. I believe I have no lawful right to do so, and I have no inclination to do so,” and he laid out his initial position by saying “The power confided in me will be used to hold, occupy, and possess the property and places belonging to the government, and to collect the duties and imposts; but beyond what may be necessary for these objects, there will be no invasion -- no using of force against or among the people anywhere.” The “duties and imposts” remark is a direct reference to the contentiousness of tariff policy and sectional economic hostility and the entire passage was also an indication of the fact that he fully realized an overwhelming majority of US citizens wanted a peaceful resolution and were willing to back off on the issue of abolition to get one.

Whether or not a negotiated settlement was as great a possibility as Nameless is suggesting has to remain one of the "what-if" questions of history, but it's clearly true that Anderson's decision to move his garrison into Fort Sumter --- secretly and by night --- put Lincoln into a position which forced him to act much more forcefully than he clearly wished to act at the same time that it convinced the authorities in Charleston that the Federal government was going to resort to means other than negotiation to settle the crisis. However that may be, Lincoln's 1862 letter to Greeley, which surely constitutes one of the greatest, clearest, and most concise policy statements of any political leader in world history summed up his goal in only 400 words, the heart of which were: “My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or destroy Slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves, I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would also do that.”

It’s highly unfortunate (from the perspective of legal scholars who might argue in favor of the doctrine of secession) that the flashpoint issue was “the peculiar institution,” but that was scarcely the only log on the fire of the American Civil War and people who attempt to reduce the ACW to a great anti-slavery crusade are guilty of gross simplification (and moral censorship) of the complex of fault lines and issues which tore the country apart.

Understand me clearly here. I am not now attempting and never have attempted to justify the institution of slavery in the US. I will note in that regard only that slavery has been a part of every human civilization with which we are familiar and that the slaves on a Southern plantation were no worse treated, by and large, than those on any late-Empire Roman latifundium or those any of any of several other historical periods I could mention. Having said that, I will also observe that African slavery was a peculiarly demeaning form of slavery because it institutionalized the inferiority of an entire chunk of the human race on the basis of skin pigmentation, and also one in which slaves enjoyed fewer legal protections from their owners than in some other forms of the institution. But slavery was — and is; the institution is still with us — slavery, whatever the color of the slave. Slavery of any type has no place in the modern world and, especially, not in a nation whose founding documents extoll the value of the individual and the unalienable nature of human freedom. That’s a fairly important strata of my own moral bedrock, which I hope comes across in the books I write.

Having said all of that, however, I find efforts to dismiss the American Civil War as a War to Defend Slaveholders’ Privileges simplistic, trivializing, demeaning, and culturally (and temporally) centric, saying far more about the cultural preconceptions of the individual than about the realities of the event or of the long-dead people who actually fought and died in it. Even worse, it precludes the possibility of actually learning from what happened because the people who over simplify cull from the experience only those things which support views they already hold. All of us do this to one extent or another whenever we look at any past period in history, but I think it's important for us to remember that we're doing it and make a conscientious effort to avoid doing it to the greatest extent possible.

I was at a science fiction convention, once, when the discussion turned to the Civil War and its causes. Believe it or not, I wasn’t a prime instigator in the conversation; I came into it late, along with a Japanese scientist who was also a guest of the con. He listened to what was going on for the better part of an hour, then said to me “In Japan, we are taught that the American Civil War was entirely about slavery!” I replied “In the United States, we’re taught that the Russo-Japanese War was entirely about Japanese imperial territorial ambitions on the mainland of Asia," to which he replied “No, no, no! It was much more complicated than that!”

At which point I merely raised my eyebrows.


"Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as Piglet came back from the dead.
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Re: SPOILER ALERT!!! SPOILER ALERT!!! Mesa and South Africa
Post by JohnRoth   » Fri Jul 04, 2014 6:27 am

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runsforcelery wrote:
...

Having said all of that, however, I find efforts to dismiss the American Civil War as a War to Defend Slaveholders’ Privileges simplistic, trivializing, demeaning, and culturally (and temporally) centric, saying far more about the cultural preconceptions of the individual than about the realities of the event or of the long-dead people who actually fought and died in it. Even worse, it precludes the possibility of actually learning from what happened because the people who over simplify cull from the experience only those things which support views they already hold. All of us do this to one extent or another whenever we look at any past period in history, but I think it's important for us to remember that we're doing it and make a conscientious effort to avoid doing it to the greatest extent possible.

...



I should note that I've seen efforts to trivialize the Civil War as The War of Northern Aggression; my comment was a direct poke at that, not an attempt to trivialize it.

To your comments on the multiple causes of the war, I could add the conflict on whether the new territories on the Great Plains should be reserved for new southern-style plantations or for small freeholder farms; this lead directly to "Bleeding Kansas," among other things. I see the "slave state vs free state" fight as a direct proxy for that more fundamental conflict. The Homestead Acts, enacted during the Civil War, effectively burned that bridge behind the North and might well have made any form of negotiated settlement impossible.

Another point here is that the plantation system was ruining the soil through mono-culture agriculture; I've seen estimates that the South had to expand or it would have lost its economic viability in a few decades.

Nuff said.
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Re: SPOILER ALERT!!! SPOILER ALERT!!! Mesa and South Africa
Post by hanuman   » Fri Jul 04, 2014 12:37 pm

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I want to thank everyone who participated so far in this discussion, for what has truly become a fascinating and informative thread. I am just not well enough informed about American history to add much to the discussion, but there are a few things I'd like to say from the perspective of an outsider.

I, for one, am very glad that America is one whole nation. Yes, there are many things about the country that frustrates the stinky stuff out of me, but that is besides the point. Nothing human can ever be perfect, so anyone who expects perfection out of something as complex as an entire society should be admitted to a psychiatric ward (and the key thrown away).

But the fact remains that America today is, and hopefully will remain, the champion of freedom in a very harsh and dangerous world. And that came about because Americans, by and large, have been willing and able to export their nation's founding principles and ideals to other parts of the world - sometimes directly, but most often through indirect means, by way of culture, commerce, financial and developmental assistance, diplomatic pressure etc.

Many people throughout the world (French, anyone?) complain about American cultural imperialism, but they miss the point that underneath all the tacky melodrama of your soap operas, underneath all the flash of your science-fiction sagas, underneath all the gore of your horrors and the cussing of your action movies, underneath all of that lies a belief in the value of each and every individual that, should those who complain just open their eyes and ears, come through loud and clear.

And when they do complain about your foreign wars and your muscular diplomacy and your economic hegemony, they forget that today more than half of the world population lives in countries that, at least nominally, proclaim to adhere to the principles that are enshrined in the US Constitution, principles that they had BORROWED from the US Constitution and America's example.

South Africa today is an example of that. Yes, as with America my country too does not always live up to the lofty ideal that all humans are born equal and are entitled to equal treatment under the law, but that's exactly the point, isn't it. We're just human and therefore we are destined to imperfection, but throughout American history there has been a push to move closer to achieving that ideal in full, and America has taught much of the rest of the world to do the same.

Yes, yes, yes, I know that little monologue is terribly sappy and sentimental and what have you, but it's an honest sentiment, so I hope you guys can at least accept that much.

Btw, I'm no American Exceptionalist. I don't believe America is destined to be great; I do believe her people work hard to be great. :grin:
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Re: SPOILER ALERT!!! SPOILER ALERT!!! Mesa and South Africa
Post by dreamrider   » Fri Jul 04, 2014 3:40 pm

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A very tiny sidelight:

When I went to high school (46-50 years ago), in New Jersey!, it was a part of the approved high school history curriculum, state-wide I believe, to teach and discuss that the ACW/WBtS was NOT primarily about slavery/abolitionism.

I still recall clearly the gleeful way my rather jovial sophomore history teacher began that section with the trick question, "So, who can tell me what caused the Civil War?" It was one of those "If you read the assignment you're probably OK; if you didn't you are sunk" teacher's leading questions. :)


dreamrider
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Re: SPOILER ALERT!!! SPOILER ALERT!!! Mesa and South Africa
Post by dreamrider   » Fri Jul 04, 2014 3:52 pm

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hanuman wrote:I want to thank everyone ...<snip>
...Btw, I'm no American Exceptionalist. I don't believe America is destined to be great; I do believe her people work hard to be great. :grin:


On behalf of my people, Hanuman, Thank You.

I promise you, we continue to try to be better; to live up to the starry-eyed, pragmatic, idealist, no-nonsense long-hairs who threw this whole thing together 238 years ago...to improve the world, and to try to control their own taxes.
Hmm...sounds like today.

dreamrider
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Re: SPOILER ALERT!!! SPOILER ALERT!!! Mesa and South Africa
Post by saber964   » Fri Jul 04, 2014 3:58 pm

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Theemile wrote:
hanuman wrote:<snip>
As a solution, Rhodes came up with a rather clever (evil, but clever nonetheless) solution, namely what became known as the 'hut tax'. Essentially, the Cape colonial government levied a tax on every single hut in the Transkei (that part of the far eastern Cape that was reserved for the Xhosa-speaking Southern Nguni peoples), to be paid in cash, not goods. And since the traditional economy of the Nguni peoples was not yet integrated into the cash economy of the rest of the Colony (it was a cattle-based barter system), it meant that young men from the Transkei were forced to seek employment en masse - at the only place that was hiring huge numbers of manual labourers, the gold mines. They were paid partly in cash, but not nearly enough to support themselves while living at the mines AND pay their taxes back home, which meant that they were forced to take loans from moneylenders to pay those taxes. That drew most black mineworkers into an ever-worsening spiral of debt, as they had to make yet more loans to pay back their original loans AND pay their annual taxes. Which meant, of course, that they remained on the mines for longer and longer periods of time in order to earn more money. Some mineworkers managed to spend as little as a week or two only back home with their families, and because they earned so little, it left their families having to struggle to support themselves off an increasingly overpopulated and over-exploited land.

It was a horrible system that guaranteed those black mineworkers' continued debt slavery and laid the basis for many of the later policies that were intended to ensure self-replicating pools of cheap labour for white-owned industries in the cities. It also caused a severe dislocation of family life, with rampant crime, substance abuse and other social diseases - both back in the Transkei and on the Rand. <snip>


What you're mentioning here is very similiar to the company towns in the US that HB of CJ mentioned above.

They too were usually a mine - companies would set up a town to work a mine, and solicited in the port cities for workers. The company owned the town, from the homes to the stores and bars. The salary was set so you just had a living wage, and was usually paid in company script - not actual dollars. So if you wanted new clothes or had to take the kids to the (company) doctor - well, you could go to the Company bank and get a loan.

Many of those conscripted were imigrants, many spoke little or poor English. In a short amount of time, most workers who thought they were earning a living wage, soon owed the company a year or more in pay. And the individuals who did get ahead, the script was worthless outside the company town, so they were just as poor as when they got there with no options to leave.

There were actually some major battles between the miners and the owners and local law enforcement, with the Pinkertons (a Detective/Mercenary organization who at this time had an armed force larger and better equipped than the then US Army) fighting for the owners. If you ever hear the term "redneck" applied to someone from the backwoods in the US, it comes from this period, as the miner army wore red bandanas as their uniform.

That what happened in SA was the Prime Minister driving that for his own profit was pure evil; here in the US, the corporate owners had the politicians in their back pockets, so all that blood and greed was on everyone's hands.

There were more company towns than you think, than just timber and mining towns. Look up Pullman IL or the various steel towns outside Pittsburgh PA or carpart towns Detroit MI.
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Re: SPOILER ALERT!!! SPOILER ALERT!!! Mesa and South Africa
Post by hanuman   » Fri Jul 04, 2014 6:00 pm

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dreamrider wrote:
hanuman wrote:I want to thank everyone ...<snip>
...Btw, I'm no American Exceptionalist. I don't believe America is destined to be great; I do believe her people work hard to be great. :grin:


On behalf of my people, Hanuman, Thank You.

I promise you, we continue to try to be better; to live up to the starry-eyed, pragmatic, idealist, no-nonsense long-hairs who threw this whole thing together 238 years ago...to improve the world, and to try to control their own taxes.
Hmm...sounds like today.

dreamrider


Human nature never changes, does it, no matter how much we change. :grin:
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Re: SPOILER ALERT!!! SPOILER ALERT!!! Mesa and South Africa
Post by kzt   » Fri Jul 04, 2014 6:07 pm

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dreamrider wrote:A very tiny sidelight:

When I went to high school (46-50 years ago), in New Jersey!, it was a part of the approved high school history curriculum, state-wide I believe, to teach and discuss that the ACW/WBtS was NOT primarily about slavery/abolitionism.

I still recall clearly the gleeful way my rather jovial sophomore history teacher began that section with the trick question, "So, who can tell me what caused the Civil War?" It was one of those "If you read the assignment you're probably OK; if you didn't you are sunk" teacher's leading questions. :)

New Jersey was one of the very last slaveholding states, with slaves freed by the 13th amendment in 1865. (Though, with the kind of political correctness loved by the the inhabitants of the NE US, they were called "lifetime apprentices", not slaves.) It's still a giant plantation, run by corrupt overseers and populated by compliant serfs.
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