Stop humouring the slavery apologist with asinine Turtledove delusions. Thanks.
The South, as I said before, were outnumbered, but Lee was still brilliant and if he had broken through Gettysburg the war would have ended very soon after.
Yes I do, but he wanted to take Maryland and isolate DC, which was much smarter than "Just attacking" like you suggest. And its a good thing Lee was their general and not one of us who are not half as smart as Lee.
I thought Lee's plan was just to move his forces out of Northern Virginia, as the whole area had been stripped of anything resembling supplies?
Furthermore, we've been going down the same road, saying the EXACT same things over and over again for the last 10 pages.
Dommy, stop making history threads/assertions unless you're willing to look at the facts, or listen to the people who have actually studied in the field.
That being said, this thread is done.
Looking forward to your next postcount factory, Dommy!![]()
Furthermore, we've been going down the same road, saying the EXACT same things over and over again for the last 10 pages.
Dommy, stop making history threads/assertions unless you're willing to look at the facts, or listen to the people who have actually studied in the field.
That being said, this thread is done.
Looking forward to your next postcount factory, Dommy!![]()
Which is essentially what replying to him always comes down to. Some people simply refuse to learn anything.
Oh I'm fully aware I'm not sure how the USA CSA thing would have happened if the South had won. I just don't buy we would have been invaded again in 10 years, hey, England didn't do that to us.
That's not true. I just don't always agree with you.
Oh I'm fully aware I'm not sure how the USA CSA thing would have happened if the South had won. I just don't buy we would have been invaded again in 10 years, hey, England didn't do that to us.
Because Britain - not England - had no reason to do so. The Americans were still militarily well-matched as long as the colonist were on home turf, while Britain had little to gain aside from prestige; American markets were still dependent on British manufactured goods, and far more lucrative India was starting to come under British control.
On the other hand, if you look at the USA/CSA 10 years after a 1863 peace treaty, you've now got an ever stronger North, and a stagnating Southern economy which would still be dependent on slave-based agriculture. Can you honestly think that the USA, now obviously more powerful, wouldn't go on a bit of a crusade to free the slaves and wipe out the traitorous rebels?
No for a couple of reasons.
1. We haven't went to war with the DPRK and no matter what you say they are worse than the South was back then, so a "Stupid regime" has not been enough of a reason in the past.
2. It would be HUGELY UNPOPULAR in the North to invade after recognition, the border states would see the Union as treacherous and secede, especially Maryland after Lincoln suspended Habeus Corpus illegally and started arresting people in Maryland.
3. "A crusade to free the slaves" would have been unpopular especially in the border states who liked slavery just as much as the rest of the south, with the possible exception of Deleware.
4. The "Traitor" card would only have worked once. England didn't go to war with 1812 "Because they were traitors" they gave that up when they signed the treaty. Same with the USA. They would have needed more reason to attack the second time or they would be seen as warmongering fools by both the rest of the world, the border states, and many of the non-border states.
Base assumption, no evidence.
And no one in Maryland was arrested. Many Delegates were placed under house-arrest, which is not the same thing.
Delaware wasn't a border state.
The rest of the border states weren't really southern-sympathetic. Parts of them were, but not all. Not that the southern states were homogeneously opinionated anyway.
No for a couple of reasons.
1. We haven't went to war with the DPRK and no matter what you say they are worse than the South was back then, so a "Stupid regime" has not been enough of a reason in the past.
2. It would be HUGELY UNPOPULAR in the North to invade after recognition, the border states would see the Union as treacherous and secede, especially Maryland after Lincoln suspended Habeus Corpus illegally and started arresting people in Maryland.
3. "A crusade to free the slaves" would have been unpopular especially in the border states who liked slavery just as much as the rest of the south, with the possible exception of Deleware.
4. The "Traitor" card would only have worked once. England didn't go to war with 1812 "Because they were traitors" they gave that up when they signed the treaty. Same with the USA. They would have needed more reason to attack the second time or they would be seen as warmongering fools by both the rest of the world, the border states, and many of the non-border states.
True but it was also because they were a danger too
and the USA and CSA were similar.
Also, the USA didn't like slavery but they sure weren't against it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Border_states_(American_Civil_War)
Lincoln felt without Kentucky the war would be over.
I consider it still illegal.
Most of them were, see my link above.
North Korea was a danger to the United States?
Except, you know, for one defending human bondage and the other not.
All Northern States abolished slavery before the Civil War.
I didn't say they weren't important, I said they wouldn't simply leave the Union because the Union went to war with a slave-owning country and they had slaves too, which is what you seem to think.
It doesn't matter, your statement was wrong.
No, actually, even the Deep South had huge divides in its populace on the issue of secession.
You know, not all Southerners were landed estatesmen with hundreds of slaves. Most people didn't have slaves, and most people who did own them only had one or two. The popular image of the Southern Gentleman was an incredibly rich, incredibly rare person. They were a severe minority.