The other two ostensible grievances were were that Britain was arming the Indians against settlers in the northwest and that it was interfering with American trade with France (this was during the Napoleonic Wars). But Americans shouldn't have been trying to take Indian lands in the first place--we know how that worked out--and, at the same time, France was trying to interfere in American trade with Britain. So why side with a brutal dictator like Napoleon over Britain, which was arguably the most liberal country at the time other then the USA? So there was no adequate cause that I can see, and it's not surprising it generated such widespread antiwar sentiment, perhaps even more so than Vietnam.
Going after the British was a no-brainer:
1) The French were not kidnapping our sailors
2) The French did not have forts on our borders (the British were supposed to vacate their forts after the Revolutionary war)
3) We had no way to attack the French as we hardly had a navy.
4) The British had a superior navy and were blocking our trade in more areas, especially the Great Lakes.
5) The British, not the French, were instigating the Indians.
The anti-war sentiment was mostly confined to New England. The real cause of the anti-war sentiment was the LACK OF WAR PROPAGANDA.
James Madison, unlike all the presidents in this poll, did not use war propaganda. He gave the plain facts in concise form, as his war massage shows. The sad fact is that war propaganda works. Madison hoped this would not be a nation of war propaganda. His precedent can still be followed if demanded by the public. But that will not ahppen until the demonization of the War of 1812 ends, and the public is educated.
It led to the deaths of thousands, conscription in certain states, a failed invasion of Canada, the expansion the navy and the standing army, and war debt, which further led to inflation, the formation of the Second Bank of the United States, and the Panic of 1819.
* The casualty rates in the War of 1812 were very low, only 7000 total. By contrast, the Battle of Leipzig of 1813, just one battle, had 82,000 casualties!
* The expansion of the navy? Well, we had no navy before 1812, that's why we had 1000 ships seized on the high seas and 7000 sailors kidnapped.
* The Second bank was formed, but it was a temporay measure that set no precedent. Jackson, working with Madison, got rid of the bank after the 1832 election. You probably don't know this, but Jackson's personal secretary from 1828-1834 was
Nicholas Trist, a man so devoted to James Madison that he spent his entire life promoting Madison's legacy. Madison and Jackson were in close contact during Jackson's first term. Then, in 1832, Jackson went to visit Madison before the election, and they agreed to get rid of the bank.
The war actually set a precedent on national banks. In January of 1815, Madison vetoed a bank bill that expanded the powers of the bank from the first bank. In other words, George Washington set a precedent that a bank was Constitutional, and Madison set a precedent on the limits of those powers. Taking this knowledge and this strategy to opposing the Fed is better than what I've seen here. If you argue the Fed is unconstitutional, you are never going to get a majority, as the bank was passed 2 to 1 by the 1st congress and signed by Washington. Better is to emphasize the limits on banking set by the Father of the Constitution, James Madison. Almost everything the Fed does is unconstitutional, per Madison's 1815 veto.
[John Tyler, citing his hero James Madison, vetoed additional bank bills in the 1840s. By that time, we had a great economy. The only reason the Founding Fathers voted for ANY bank bill was that the federal government was struggling to survive. After the debt was paid off by Jackson, that has never happend since.]
* The Panic of 1819 is a red herring and you know it. You know that our overall economy boomed after 1815, just look at the GNP numbers. It was one of the biggest booms in world history. The Panic of 1819 was short-lived, and mostly effected bankers and land specualtors, not ordinary people. The real cause of the panic was LOW LAND PRICES. That's bad for speculators, but GOOD for everyone else.
[if you need more evidence that the Panic of 1819 was not a big deal, remember that Monroe won EVERY STATE in the election of 1820, the only man to do so besides George Washington. By 1820, the free enterprise of the Industrial Revolution was starting to roar in America. Murray Rothbard's book on the Panic of 1819 is filled with interesting facts, but lots of bogus and cherry-picked conclusions.]
The more you study James Madison and the War of 1812, the more you can see the evil in Lincoln, Wilson, FDR, and LBJ. Just wars CAN BE DONE.
[The War of 1812 should be read as a continuation of the Revolutionary War, which it was, rather than an
ad hoc anachronism from later evil & unjust wars.]