You didn't acknowledge you were also wrong on Lincoln's view of slavery. Read the Cooper Union speech. Or any of the 1860 R platform. Or any number of his other speeches. His view was obvious. It wasn't like he was hem-hawing about allowing slavery in the territories or calling a so-so institution.
Of course, viewed myopically threw the early Civil War one could point to one tree and sayhe would have agreed to terms with the Treasonists w/o abolishing slavery and that his view of the War was "union over all". And even THAT view changed as the war progressed. With the emancipation proclamation, that view died completely. But, regardless, his views on slavery itself -- the forest -- are not ambiguous or lukewarm. Razorfist analysis to the contrary.
As I said to the "Lincoln is shit" arguments -- knock yourself out. No one on the internet has ever been convinced in an argument, and certainly not when the gulf is that wide (there's zero point if your view is Lincoln was a tinpot dictator worse than Nixon). You could be right. I don't remotely think so and strongly disagree, but the process would certainly be an utter waste of time.
As for the War to Suppress Southern Treason, the United States, from that experience, grew into the World's greatest power. And there is zero doubt in my mind that it was transformative in that the country went from a union to country. It was the 2nd revolution and fundamentally altered the US to adapt itself to compete globally (the 3rd revolution was FDR and that wasn't so great--IMO). I'm not sure in what Harry Turtledove alternative universe fictional world the US looks like if they just split, but I'm dubious that it's a full-on "country" in time to meet the challenges of the 20th C. And in meeting those challenges the US became the global superpower. So, IMO, the war was, unquestionably, best for the United States.
And I don't care one way or the other if it was a "moral good" or not. Someone could argue that war is never a moral good. IMO, a world-leading US in the 20th C was definitely a moral good, but that makes me a colonialist, white supremacist, cultural appropriator and all that. But that much I believe and I believe, without hesitation, that the post-bellum transformation was necessary to get there.
That's all. I have nothing else to say on a topic spurred on by some YT jackwagon and, as AA noted, discussed probably thousands of times over the course of my message board experience on CNNSI and Worldcrossing.
As I said, if you want to piss on Lincoln, knock yourself out. And avoid the Lincoln Memorial if you're ever in DC.
Of course, viewed myopically threw the early Civil War one could point to one tree and sayhe would have agreed to terms with the Treasonists w/o abolishing slavery and that his view of the War was "union over all". And even THAT view changed as the war progressed. With the emancipation proclamation, that view died completely. But, regardless, his views on slavery itself -- the forest -- are not ambiguous or lukewarm. Razorfist analysis to the contrary.
As I said to the "Lincoln is shit" arguments -- knock yourself out. No one on the internet has ever been convinced in an argument, and certainly not when the gulf is that wide (there's zero point if your view is Lincoln was a tinpot dictator worse than Nixon). You could be right. I don't remotely think so and strongly disagree, but the process would certainly be an utter waste of time.
As for the War to Suppress Southern Treason, the United States, from that experience, grew into the World's greatest power. And there is zero doubt in my mind that it was transformative in that the country went from a union to country. It was the 2nd revolution and fundamentally altered the US to adapt itself to compete globally (the 3rd revolution was FDR and that wasn't so great--IMO). I'm not sure in what Harry Turtledove alternative universe fictional world the US looks like if they just split, but I'm dubious that it's a full-on "country" in time to meet the challenges of the 20th C. And in meeting those challenges the US became the global superpower. So, IMO, the war was, unquestionably, best for the United States.
And I don't care one way or the other if it was a "moral good" or not. Someone could argue that war is never a moral good. IMO, a world-leading US in the 20th C was definitely a moral good, but that makes me a colonialist, white supremacist, cultural appropriator and all that. But that much I believe and I believe, without hesitation, that the post-bellum transformation was necessary to get there.
That's all. I have nothing else to say on a topic spurred on by some YT jackwagon and, as AA noted, discussed probably thousands of times over the course of my message board experience on CNNSI and Worldcrossing.
As I said, if you want to piss on Lincoln, knock yourself out. And avoid the Lincoln Memorial if you're ever in DC.
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