historical question
Apr. 28th, 2009 07:13 pmI've been reading about the Civil War lately, and yesterday was Confederate Memorial Day, on which the Confederate Constitution, the only copy of which my employer owns, is displayed.
One thing I haven't yet read about or figured out is why Lincoln was so intent on preserving the Union. Why not let the South secede? Was there debate about it at the time? So far all I have seen is that Lincoln considered secession to be rebellion, and the Confederacy started hostilites. Did Lincoln just not expect things to go on s long and so damagingly?
(Be gentle; remember, my historical period starts in 5000 BCE.)
One thing I haven't yet read about or figured out is why Lincoln was so intent on preserving the Union. Why not let the South secede? Was there debate about it at the time? So far all I have seen is that Lincoln considered secession to be rebellion, and the Confederacy started hostilites. Did Lincoln just not expect things to go on s long and so damagingly?
(Be gentle; remember, my historical period starts in 5000 BCE.)
no subject
Date: 2009-04-29 11:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-29 04:42 pm (UTC)Actually, I just finished a book about the US/Mexican war of 1848, and it has a lot in common with the Civil War in terms of the characterizations by the losing side. Looking at it in people and materiel terms, it is obvious who was going to win from before the first shot was fired. And yet the going-to-lose side persistently chose a belligerent path, for reasons totally unrelated to chances-of-winning. (Mostly: pride, desperation, force of compromise among warring factions, etc.) In both cases, the losing side might have shot the moon -- basically, acquired foreign recognition and allies, providing materiel and trained military assistance -- but it was totally a moonshot and they basically knew it going in, and then over the course of the war and its immediate aftermath you can see an amnestic radicalization, where they literally forget that the bellicose stance was never realistic (although they'd known it previously), and argue that it could have been viable if-only.
Amnesia in politics as in most matters of consistent goal-seeking is a very big and frustrating problem. The moreso, when the amnesia appears to be magical thinking to rescue oneself (where "self" may be as large as nation) from understanding one's role in one's own misfortunes.