How We
Know The So-Called “Civil War” Was Not Over
Slavery
By Paul
Craig Roberts
When
I read
Professor Thomas DiLorenzo’s article
the question that lept to mind was, “How come
the South is said to have fought for slavery
when the North wasn’t fighting against slavery?”
Two
days before Lincoln’s inauguration as the 16th
President, Congress, consisting only of the
Northern states, passed overwhelmingly on March
2, 1861, the Corwin Amendment that gave
constitutional protection to slavery. Lincoln
endorsed the amendment in his inaugural address,
saying “I have no objection to its being made
express and irrevocable.”
Quite
clearly, the North was not prepared to go to war
in order to end slavery when on the very eve of
war the US Congress and incoming president were
in the process of making it unconstitutional to
abolish slavery.
Here we
have absolute total proof that the North wanted
the South kept in the Union far more than the
North wanted to abolish slavery.
If the
South’s real concern was maintaining slavery,
the South would not have turned down the
constitutional protection of slavery offered
them on a silver platter by Congress and the
President. Clearly, for the South also the issue
was not slavery.
The
real issue between North and South could not be
reconciled on the basis of accommodating
slavery. The real issue was economic as
DiLorenzo, Charles Beard and other historians
have documented. The North offered to preserve
slavery irrevocably, but the North did not offer
to give up the high tariffs and economic
policies that the South saw as inimical to its
interests.
Blaming
the war on slavery was the way the northern
court historians used morality to cover up
Lincoln’s naked aggression and the war crimes of
his generals. Demonizing the enemy with moral
language works for the victor. And it is still
ongoing. We see in the destruction of statues
the determination to shove remaining symbols of
the Confederacy down the Memory Hole.
Today
the ignorant morons, thoroughly brainwashed by
Identity Politics, are demanding removal of
memorials to Robert E. Lee, an alleged racist
toward whom they express violent hatred. This
presents a massive paradox. Robert E. Lee was
the first person offered command of the Union
armies. How can it be that a “Southern racist”
was offered command of the Union Army if the
Union was going to war to free black slaves?
Virginia did not secede until April 17, 1861,
two days after Lincoln called up troops
for the invasion of the South.
Surely
there must be some hook somewhere that the
dishonest court historians can use on which to
hang an explanation that the war was about
slavery. It is not an easy task. Only a small
minority of southerners owned slaves. Slaves
were brought to the New World by Europeans as a
labor force long prior to the existence of the
US and the Southern states in order that the
abundant land could be exploited. For the South
slavery was an inherited institution that
pre-dated the South. Diaries and letters of
soldiers fighting for the Confederacy and those
fighting for the Union provide no evidence that
the soldiers were fighting for or against
slavery. Princeton historian, Pulitzer Prize
winner, Lincoln Prize winner, president of the
American Historical Association, and member of
the editorial board of Encyclopedia Britannica,
James M. McPherson, in his book based on the
correspondence of one thousand soldiers from
both sides, What They Fought For, 1861-1865,
reports that they fought for two different
understandings of the Constitution.
As for
the Emancipation Proclamation, on the Union
side, military officers were concerned that the
Union troops would desert if the Emancipation
Proclamation gave them the impression that they
were being killed and maimed for the sake of
blacks. That is why Lincoln stressed that the
proclamation was a “war measure” to provoke an
internal slave rebellion that would draw
Southern troops off the front lines.
If we
look carefully we can find a phony hook in the
South Carolina Declaration of Causes of
Secession (December 20, 1860) as long as we
ignore the reasoning of the document. Lincoln’s
election caused South Carolina to secede. During
his campaign for president Lincoln used rhetoric
aimed at the abolitionist vote. (Abolitionists
did want slavery abolished for moral reasons,
though it is sometimes hard to see their
morality through their hate, but they never
controlled the government.)
South
Carolina saw in Lincoln’s election rhetoric
intent to violate the US Constitution, which was
a voluntary agreement, and which recognized each
state as a free and independent state. After
providing a history that supported South
Carolina’s position, the document says that to
remove all doubt about the sovereignty of states
“an amendment was added, which declared that the
powers not delegated to the United States by the
Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the
States, are reserved to the States,
respectively, or to the people.”
South
Carolina saw slavery as the issue being used by
the North to violate the sovereignty of states
and to further centralize power in Washington.
The secession document makes the case that the
North, which controlled the US government, had
broken the compact on which the Union rested
and, therefore, had made the Union null and
void. For example, South Carolina pointed to
Article 4 of the US Constitution, which reads:
“No person held to service or labor in one
State, under the laws thereof, escaping into
another, shall, in consequence of any law or
regulation therein, be discharged from such
service or labor, but shall be delivered up, on
claim of the party to whom such service or labor
may be due.” Northern states had passed laws
that nullified federal laws that upheld this
article of the compact. Thus, the northern
states had deliberately broken the compact on
which the union was formed.
The
obvious implication was that every aspect of
states’ rights protected by the 10th Amendment
could now be violated. And as time passed they
were, so South Carolina’s reading of the
situation was correct.
The
secession
document readsas
a defense of the powers of states and not as a
defense of slavery. Here is the document.
Read it
and see what you decide.
A court
historian, who is determined to focus attention
away from the North’s destruction of the US
Constitution and the war crimes that accompanied
the Constitution’s destruction, will seize on
South Carolina’s use of slavery as the example
of the issue the North used to subvert the
Constitution. The court historian’s reasoning is
that as South Carolina makes a to-do about
slavery, slavery must have been the cause of the
war.
As
South Carolina was the first to secede, its
secession document probably was the model for
other states. If so, this is the avenue by which
court historians, that is, those who replace
real history with fake history, turn the war
into a war over slavery.
Once
people become brainwashed, especially if it is
by propaganda that serves power, they are more
or less lost forever. It is extremely difficult
to bring them to truth. Just look at the pain
and suffering inflicted on historian David
Irving for documenting the truth about the war
crimes committed by the allies against the
Germans. There is no doubt that he is correct,
but the truth is unacceptable.
The
same is the case with the War of Northern
Aggression. Lies masquerading as history have
been institutionalized for 150 years. An
institutionalized lie is highly resistant to
truth.
Education has so deteriorated in the US that
many people can no longer tell the difference
between an explanation and an excuse or
justification. In the US denunciation of an
orchestrated hate object is a safer path for a
writer than explanation. Truth is the casualty.
That
truth is so rare everywhere in the Western World
is why the West is doomed. The United States,
for example, has an entire population that is
completely ignorant of its own history.
As
George Orwell said, the best way to destroy a
people is to destroy their history.
Apparently Even Asians Can Be White Supremacists
If They Are Named Robert Lee
ESPN
has pulled an Asian-American named Robert Lee
(Lee is a common name among Asians, for example,
Bruce Lee) from announcing the University of
Virginia/Wiliam & Mary footbal game in
Charlottesville this Saturday because of his
name.
What
We Learned From Charlottesville
By
Paul Craig Roberts
We
learned, although we already knew it, that the
US media has no integrity.
We
learned that the liberal/progressive/left holds
fast to myths that justify hate.
We
learned that misrepresentation is the hallmark
of American history.
We
learned that some websites that we thought were
brave are not.
We
learned that Identity Politics has a firm hold
and that the demonization of white people is now
an ideology that rivals in strength the
neoconservative ideology that Americans are the
exceptional and indispensable people. Obviously,
we cannot simultaneously be both deplorables and
the best people on earth.
We
learned that the liberal/progressive/left will
cooperate with the military/security complex to
bring down a president whose intent was to
normalize relations with Russia and reduce the
dangerously high tensions between the two major
nuclear powers.
In
brief, we learned that the US is on a firm
course of both internal and external conflict.
=====
Dr.
Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of
the Treasury for Economic Policy and associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal. He was
columnist for Business Week, Scripps Howard News
Service, and Creators Syndicate. He has had many
university appointments. His internet columns
have attracted a worldwide following. Roberts'
latest books are
The Failure of Laissez Faire
Capitalism and Economic Dissolution of the West,
How America Was Lost,
and
The Neoconservative Threat to
World Order.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.