Slavery was never seriously threatened.
Clearly, the elected officials of Mississippi thought that it was.
And why are the reasons that North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee and Arkansas seceded never mentioned, 3 of which provided almost all of the Confederate fighting force?
I believe that Virginia was included in my link. I can't find North Carolina, Tennessee, or Arkansas.
Are you kidding me? The Morrill Tariffs were spoken about heavily in conjunction with secession in both Georgia and South Carolina, and a clear reading of Georgia's declaration on the link you've provided shows that manufacturing industrialists and Republican politicians were in full collusion on undermining what Georgia saw as its economic security through legislation. The Morrill Tariff itself was not mentioned by name, but the general demeanor of the declaration cites economic concerns well beyond slavery, though it also includes content dealing with slavery. Again, why are only 4 states considered as valid opinions when there are 7 other states involved? Probably because it suits a particularly historical bias me thinks.
What Georgia saw was it's economic security was slavery. That's what most of document is about.
I'm not disagreeing with you that South Carolina bears some level of responsibility for the Civil War as they were so agitated that they took Lincoln's bait and shelled Fort Sumter rather than waiting for a sizable plurality of northern journalists who were anti-war (rightly so) to undermine Lincoln's tyrannical designs and power consolidation. By the way, arguing that Virginia should have omitted the word slavery from their declaration with regard to the other states is ludicrous, as it would be a historical falsehood and would like draw even more ire from self-righteous historical revisionists like yourself. The fact that Virginia didn't list slavery itself as its reason for getting involved disqualifies them as being part of the Big 4 that you are so obsessed over.
I would be inclined to believe you if Virginia had said something like "Tyrannical designs of President Lincoln to subjugate free Americans." But no, Virginia didn't like that Lincoln was going after fellow slave states. I highly doubt that Virginia would have lifted cared if some Southern fire-eater was elected President and fought a war to keep seceding Northern states in the union.
"self-righteous historical revisionists". I love history and want to become a history teacher in the near future. So I approached this issue as I would any other, I did my research, read primary documents, and came to a conclusion based on the evidence. And the evidence points to the argument that the driving force behind secession was the preservation of slavery.
Nice to meet you, I'm a 6th generation Pennsylvanian who has no roots south of here and my ancestors were northern anti-war Copperhead Democrats, mostly Irish, who died in great numbers because they couldn't buy their way out of Lincoln's draft, my great (x3) grandfather supported McClellan in 1864 and witnessed what the Union army did to people who either tried to avoid the draft or desert the army they were forced into. While many of the people who died that came fresh off the boat from the old country could barely tell a Democrat from a Whig/Republican, my family knew full well what the newly born GOP was about, and also how the corrupt banking interests and rail companies that bought much of the coal they mined helped put Lincoln in power.
I'm sorry for what your family went through. I don't see what this has to do with why the southern states seceded.
Also, how do you know what your ancestors thought about banking interests and railroad companies? My pro-union ancestors, to my knowledge, didn't write about their experiences.
PC is not unique to sodomites and hippies, it's actually pervasive in most of modern conservatism, which has been heavily infiltrated by Trotskyites and remnants of the fanatical transcendental movement that came out of New England Unitarianism. You may not think you're views on Civil War history are tied in with cultural Marxism, but the people who printed the textbooks you built them off of are a different matter altogether. And for the record, absent of your views having anything to do with PC, they are still wrong.
I didn't build my ideas of the civil war off of any textbook. For the record, I was home-schooled during elementary schooled and was exposed to a lot of neo-Confederate propaganda in middle school by at least one teacher and several students.
Never been to a segregated state for more than a week's time, though my parents knew a few who moved up to Philadelphia in the 1970s. They were generally upright and decent folks who had jobs. However, most of the people who were bused into my schools growing up were products of the post-Civil Rights period, and were largely self-entitled at best, and gang-banger types looking to stick it to whitey the rest of the time, which was a major catalyst in forming my views on the "so called" Civil Rights movement insofar as what it accomplished, though I'm not fully sold on Martin Luther King Jr. being some commie plant the way segregationists suggest, I'd wager he was probably just a heretical Baptist minister with an idealistic streak that got in bed with the wrong people.
I've known black people who went to segregated schools, including one pastor who hates Obama. He wouldn't share your views on civil rights though.
I wish the Confederacy had won, we would be inconceivably freer had we lived under it's constitution. I would bet that slavery would have come to a much more peaceful end.
You mean the one that interfered on states' rights to not have slavery.
There is overwhelming evidence on this thread debunking all the Unionsuckers, I haven't seen the Unionsuckers post one single solitary shred of evidence in this entire thread supporting their position, the only thing they use is emotion and their personal opinion. I see pages and pages and thousands of documents supporting the neo-Confederates here. Am I missing something?
And the declarations of secession from several of the seceding states.