Influenza
Banned
- Joined
- May 6, 2013
- Messages
- 1,173
It is commonly taught in schools that the Civil War was fought over slavery. However, we know that it was not the initial driving factor of either the North or the South - the South fought defensively. Despite this, the eradication of institutionalized slavery was the direct result of the Civil War. I do not personally justify the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people on the basis of freed slaves.
Now this brings us to my primary question: Assume that after the South seceded from the Union, the Civil War never happened - that Lincoln just allowed them to secede. For how many more years would slavery endure in the South? I can't imagine a present day South with slaves working in the fields... Slavery would have had to end someway. How would it eventually end? Is there ever a viable reason to fight a war with the intention of freeing the inhabitants of another country?
Now this brings us to my primary question: Assume that after the South seceded from the Union, the Civil War never happened - that Lincoln just allowed them to secede. For how many more years would slavery endure in the South? I can't imagine a present day South with slaves working in the fields... Slavery would have had to end someway. How would it eventually end? Is there ever a viable reason to fight a war with the intention of freeing the inhabitants of another country?