FAQ ABOUT THE WAR FOR
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QUESTION |
ANSWER |
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1. Wasn’t
secession treason and weren’t the Confederates traitors for trying to leave
the Union? |
No. It was
clearly understood in the earliest days of the Liberal and Northern writers often describe our Confederate ancestors as “traitors.” Since they do not have a valid argument over the legality of secession, they resort to name-calling and insult. |
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2. Then why
did Abraham Lincoln declare the seceding states to be “in rebellion”?
What laws did the Confederates break by seceding, if any? |
Abraham Lincoln was
a politician and a lawyer, and politicians and lawyers are trained to argue a
point of view, often regardless of the actual facts or laws. The
Confederates broke no laws by seceding from the |
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3. Didn’t the
Confederates really secede to safeguard the theory of white supremacy? |
No. This is an argument by modern politicians who want to remold history to suit modern political agendas and to give their Northern ancestors a glorious but undeserved rectitude. In the 1860s, virtually all white people believed in “white supremacy,” North, South, East and West. Abraham Lincoln himself was a white supremacist and said so in public statements. The erroneous notion of white supremacy was not in doubt or in dispute at that point in history. |
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4. Didn’t the
South start the war by firing on |
No. It is
widely understood among historians and politicians that it is not he who
fires the first shot that starts a war, but he who made the first shot
necessary. By refusing to yield or negotiate in good faith to transfer A similar example
can be seen in World War II, where the |
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5. Wasn’t the
War really over slavery? |
The question is too
ambiguous to do it justice, and that is why Northern historians and
politicians try to keep it that way. They never come out and say that
the North fought the war out of a sense of morality and a belief in racial
equality, because it is easily refuted. They try to pass this fiction
off as truth by insinuation rather than an overt statement to that effect,
knowing it usually will not be challenged. |
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6. All right,
then how did slavery impact the war? |
Basically, the
dispute over slavery was not that it should be ended, but that the Federal
Government should have the right to stipulate whether new states entering the
The question of
slavery in the new states impacted the struggle between North and South for
political dominance. New slave states would give the South more
Congressional representation and thus more political muscle to resist the
high tariffs imposed by the North. The North opposed the expansion of
slave states for reasons of political control, not because they had moral
qualms over slavery. The impact of slavery on the war deserves more than a brief discussion. We recommend “Myths and Realities of American Slavery” by John C. Perry. |
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7. Surely the
“Civil War” wasn’t fought merely over a legal principle? There had to
be more to it than that. |
You’re right.
The war was fought over the right of the South to secede and form its own
nation. The real reason the war was fought was over economics and
control of territory – “the right to tax and rule” -- basically what almost
all wars are fought over. After the war, Northern politicians and
historians attempted to put a noble face on their conquest by claiming that
freeing the slaves for reasons of morality and brotherhood were their true
motivations all along. Don’t believe them. Abraham Lincoln stated
clearly on several occasions that “preserving the |
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8. Why was it
so important to the North to keep the South in the |
It wasn’t that
important to all Northerners, many of whom wished to let the South go in
peace. But it was important to Abraham Lincoln, whose major goal was to
raise tax revenues by increasing the tariff on imported goods to record
heights. |
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9. Well then,
what was the Emancipation Proclamation all about? Didn’t that free all
the slaves? |
The Emancipation
Proclamation freed no slaves at all. It theoretically freed only slaves
in states and territories “in rebellion,” and did not apply to any states or
territories under Union control. Lincoln himself stated that the
proclamation was a war measure only. He hoped it would pressure the Southern
states to return to the |
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10. What is a
“Neo-Confederate” |
The word “neo” means new, or the same thing in a different time period. The liberal media and leftist politicians use it to show contempt for the Southern heritage movement, so to help them find this website, we have adopted it. Besides, we enjoy irritating them. To us the term describes anyone who believes the South was right in its war for independence and that the Northern version of history is seriously flawed, deficient and biased. |
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11. Why do
Neo-Confederates work so hard to save Confederate monuments, flags, songs and
other icons? Isn’t it because you have a secret racist agenda? |
We have no racist agenda, secret or otherwise. We work hard to preserve our heritage because the Confederacy was our nation that was taken away from us illegally and immorally in war, and our ancestors slandered by Northern sympathizers for the past 140 years. We see the Southern defeat as an unrighted wrong that still aches in Southern memory. The implication that we are closet-segregationists or “white supremacists” is merely the disingenuous attempt by liberal politicians and media pundits to create a bogeyman with which to frighten and motivate their electoral constituencies. |
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12. If you
have no racist agenda, why do the liberals continually insinuate that you do? |
The liberals have become increasingly Machiavellian in their approach to politics, and wish to smear traditional Southern conservatives, and the Party who receives their votes (the GOP), as “racist.” They refuse to accept that Confederate heritage is valued for any other reason than race hatred. It is politically expedient for liberals and leftist Democrats to use Confederate symbols as motivational props to convince racial minorities that their civil rights will be imperiled if they do not vote for Democrats. They repeat these falsehoods over and over to create a Pavlovian response in their constituencies. We believe these liberal/leftists are ruthless and unprincipled, and will manufacture racial divisions in order to get elected. Racial healing and trust are absolutely NOT their real agendas. |
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13. The South
practiced slavery. No matter how you cut it,
slavery is wrong, immoral and evil, isn’t it? |
First off, slavery
was not solely a Southern institution. It was still being practiced in
some Union states, though at a reduced level, and some Union generals owned
slaves. To modern eyes
(including ours), slavery is wrong, immoral and evil. However, the
Southerners of 1860 didn’t live in modern times. All historical events
must be viewed in context and cannot fairly be judged by modern
standards. We have 145 years of hindsight; the Southerners of 1860 did
not. They were merely the heirs of a system that existed
several generations before them and on which the South’s economy had grown
dependent. For the most part, slaves were well treated, well fed and
well clothed, and much love and trust often existed between master and
slave. With the growth of democracy, slavery was falling into disrepute among the nations of the world and was being ended in many. For the South, however, immediate emancipation without compensation (as insisted upon by the Abolitionists) would have meant financial devastation for black and white alike. There was no easy out for the South. If the South had been left alone, Southern slavery would have died a natural death with the coming of mechanization, just as it died out, peacefully, in many other countries. |
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