another lost cause
In case you didn't already think of Tom Toles as an arrogant ignoramus, here's his politically offensive and historically ignorant piece of partisan propaganda for this morning:

I see, so we're supposed to associate the Lincolnite Republican war-hawk neocon centralizer with the Confederacy?
What then do we make of the victorious Democrat who had this to say at the Confederate Memorial:

I see, so we're supposed to associate the Lincolnite Republican war-hawk neocon centralizer with the Confederacy?
What then do we make of the victorious Democrat who had this to say at the Confederate Memorial:
I am not here to apologize for why they fought, although modern historians might contemplate that there truly were different perceptions in the North and South about those reasons, and that most Southern soldiers viewed the driving issue to be sovereignty rather than slavery. In 1860 fewer than five percent of the people in the South owned slaves, and fewer than twenty percent were involved with slavery in any capacity. Love of the Union was palpably stronger in the South than in the North before the war -- just as overt patriotism is today -- but it was tempered by a strong belief that state sovereignty existed prior to the Constitution, and that it had never been surrendered. Nor had Abraham Lincoln ended slavery in Kentucky and Missouri when those border states did not secede. Perhaps all of us might reread the writings of Alexander Stephens, a brilliant attorney who opposed secession but then became Vice President of the Confederacy, making a convincing legal argument that the constitutional compact was terminable. And who wryly commented at the outset of the war that "the North today presents the spectacle of a free people having gone to war to make freemen of slaves, while all they have as yet attained is to make slaves of themselves."














1 Comments:
What I make of it is that Webb is a sleazeball politician pandering to the antihistorical superstitions of his white Southern supporters. Certainly Alexander "Cornerstone" Stephens is not the best person to cite as evidence that the Confederacy did not stand for the perpetuation of race slavery.
My question is what you make of Webb's farrago of half-truths and red herrings.
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