|
|
|
|
|
by eesmith
1020 days ago
|
|
Are you really arguing that they didn't believe the position they presented in their declarations of succession? > immediate abolition without compensation Whoa there. Please do not shift your argument. Earlier you wrote "indeterminate point" not "immediate abolition" and you wrote "outright abolition", not a specific type of abolition. My reading of the declarations was they thought would be during the Lincoln administration, not "immediate" upon his inauguration, but also not "indeterminate". > So I certainly doubt most reasonable people in the South Do you have supporting evidence for your belief? I mean, these people elected the leaders of the state, so why do you think "most" people disagreed? |
|
Depends on how do you define 'believe'. Politicians back then (just like now) certainly often said things they didn't believe in when doing so was politically advantageous.
I certainly believe that they thought that the new administration was probably the biggest threat to slavery in the last 50 years or so and its actions were likely to lead to eventual abolition. Does not change the fact that immediate abolition was politically infeasible (which is something Lincoln himself reiterated during his inaugural address and I have to reiterate that while opposed to slavery Lincoln himself was not an abolitionist and did not run on abolitionist ticket).
> Whoa there. Please do not shift your argument.
Am I? Sorry, my comment might not have been clear, I certainly did not want to imply that abolition was likely at any point during the Lincoln administration (at least before the next election).
> Do you have supporting evidence for your belief? I mean, these people elected the leaders of the state, so why do you think "most" people disagreed?
I'll have to shift my argument in this case and say "most rational people".
Also if we look at all of the quotes you posted:
- slavery is in the course of ultimate extinction.
- that the South shall be excluded from the common territory
- war must be waged against slavery until it shall cease throughout the United States (unless you believe they mean a literal war)
- and their pledges to continue them to the final consummation of these schemes for the ruin of the slave-holding States.
none of these seem to imply that their authors believed that abolition was imminent (in the next 4 years or so):
> Do you have supporting evidence for your belief
Anyone who vaguely understood the political situation in 1860 would have know that (peaceful) abolition during the next 4 years was unfeasible.
> so why do you think "most" people disagreed?
Disagreed with what exactly?