El Justo
Deity
and 20-some years after that and then 5 years after that and then even just 15 or so years after that
it's a vicious cycle, i'd reckon.

I think he was awesome.I'd just like to know what CFC'ers think of General William T. Sherman.
I know how Godwynn and Skadistic feel about him, but I'd like to hear everyones thoughts about him.
He didn't advocate the wholesale slaughter of the natives. He applied the same rules of war to the natives that he did to the Confederacy - hard, fast warfare. He was a soldier. He had buffalo and horses killed and homes and other resources destroyed when fighting the natives, that's true. He didn't kill unnecessarily, however. (And his treatment of Indian civilians was probably at least as gentle as their treatment of American settlers....food for thought.) He was brutal in warfare, but very generous in peace towards everyone he fought against.Wasn't he the one who opted for scorched earth tactics in the South and who advocated wholesale slaughter of Indigenous Americans?
All is fair in war, they say.
tank guy said:I remember watching something on the History Channel about how he did restrain his troops slightly more in Georgia.
But he basically allowed them to do whatever they wanted in South Carolina, as it was the "Cradle of Secession" (as I believe it was termed).
He fought a Total War, perhaps not to the last consequence. Thus he was a villain. Nothing can justify the destruction of so many civilian houses. In that days war was still considered as a gentlemen's game. The rights of civilians were violated in a way not known after 1648. Thus as there is no justification for that he is a villain.
Adler