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United States News Title: Four Blessed Years without Dixie: The US benefited just from having four years when those Southern jerks weren’t part of American politics and Republicans were free to be Progressives April 3, 2011 War Nerd Blog Day 14: Four Blessed Years without Dixie By Gary Brecher Today I want to do a little of both by quoting something amazing I found rereading a classic one-volume history of the Civil War, James McPhersons Battle Cry of Freedom. If you dont know anything about the Civil War, McPhersons book is a good place to start
although that raises kind of a more urgent type question, i.e.: If you dont know anything about the Civil War, what the Hells wrong with you? Hes especially good about the buildup, the incredible concessions the North made, all but grovelling to the plantation-massa lunatics who ruled the South and had been intimidating the North for decades, basically threatening to jump off a cliff and take the rest of the country with them if anybody even dared to maybe suggest that the whole slave economy thing was a bad idea and wasnt doing our image any good. I guess my own attitude is probably clear by now, but in case theres any doubt Ill tell you plain: Im a Union man and a serious militarist about it. Sherman was just getting warmed up as far as Im concerned. In fact when I read about how shocked the people of Columbia, SC, were that he burned half their town I have to laugh. Americans need to get out more, especially Southerners. If they had any notion of what the province that talked all the others into a dimwitted, doomed rebellion wouldve had in store for it anywhere else in the world, they wouldve thanked Shermans bummers on their knees for being so lenient. Shermans way of making war was so mild by world standards that if a panel of military CEOs from all of history had watched him march through Georgia and the Carolinas, thered have been some serious tsk-ing about what a wuss he was. The consensus by all those Roman, British and Mongol ghosts would have been that the North should have expelled the whole white population of the South like the Brits did the Acadiansa way more harmless bunchor sold them into slavery in West Africa, a nice bit of poetic justice. How much am I bid for this fine specimen of Tideland gentry, ladies and paramount chiefs? The US benefited just from having four years when those jerks werent part of American politics. Thats what most surprised me when I went over McPhersons book: how damn generous Northern law got as soon as the damn Planters were taken out of the political system. When you hear all these neocons talking about Lincolns administration as evil and totalitarian, what they mean is that without having to cave to the slave-owning loonies down south, Northern law started showing this incredible respect for the working people. Seriously, the laws they were enacting then would get Rush, Sean and Glenn screaming about Communism today. Take the Internal Revenue Act of 1862; it wouldnt have a chance of passing today, because its way too sympathetic to the working people and doesnt suck up to the super rich the way we do today. It was one of those laws made by the radical Republicans, back when radical Republican meant you wanted ex-slaves to have land to work and the right to vote, crazy socialistic stuff like that. Heres McPhersons summary of the new law: The Internal Revenue Act
expanded the progressive aspects
by exempting the first $600, levying three percent on incomes between $600 and $10,000, and five percent on incomes over $10,000. The first $1000 of any legacy was exempt from the inheritance tax. Businesses worth less than $600 were exempt from the value-added and receipts taxes. Excise taxes fell most heavily on products purchased by the affluent. In explanation of these progressive features, Chairman Thaddeus Stevens of the House Ways and Means Committee said, While the rich and the thrifty will be obliged to contribute largely from the abundance of their means
no burdens have been imposed on the industrious laborer and mechanic
The food of the poor is untaxed; and
no one will be affected by the provisions of this bill whose living depends solely on his manual labor. Incredible, isnt it? Thats a congressman from 1862 talking. He couldnt be elected now; theyd call him a commie and hed be lucky to stay out of jail. Why, he doesnt even suck up to the super-rich, the freak. Thats what America was like for a little while when the crazy white South went off on its big tantrum. Just imagine what the place could have been like if theyd stayed gone. Actually, you dont have to imagine, because Grant laid out what would have happened to the two parts of the Union with his standard cold hard sense: The South was more to be benefited by its defeat than the North. [The North] had the people, the institutions, and the territory to make a great and prosperous nation. [The South] was burdened with an institution abhorrent to all civilized people not brought up under it, and one which degraded labor, kept it in ignorance, and enervated the governing class. With the outside world at war with this institution, they could not have extended their territory. The labor of the country was not skilled, nor allowed to become so. The whites could not toil without becoming degraded, and those who did were denominated poor white trash. The system of labor would have soon exhausted the soil and left the people poor. The non-slaveholders would have left the country, and the small slaveholder must have sold out to his more fortunate neighbor. Soon the slaves would have outnumbered the masters, and, not being in sympathy with them, would have risen in their might and exterminated them. The war was expensive to the South as well as to the North, both in blood and treasure, but it was worth all it cost. Sounds like a happy ending to me. Too bad we spent all that blood and treasure dragging them back into the family. Might as well lose an arm or a leg dragging your crazy bipolar brother-in-law back. In fact, I agree with every word Grant says there, up to the but in the last sentence. Good policy, probably: believe everything up to the but.
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Big Eight? Big Ten? got a degree from anything in the University of California system? Cal Tech, University of Illinois, Cornell? All land grant colleges. All created thanks to the Morrill Act. Morrill was a Republican from Vermont whod been pushing for federal support of higher education since 1850. The southern planters stood firmly in his way they could afford to send their sons to Yale, and they didnt care about anyone else. God forbid the federal government should spend resources on educating the sons of greasy mechanics. Then the planters left the building. Boom, 1862, the Morrill Act gets signed into law. It committed the US government to hand immense tracts of federal land over to state university systems. If the state didnt want the lands, fine it didnt compel anyone. But it was this great, once in a century deal that made setting up a world-class university system incredibly easy and cheap. The explosion of American science and technology after 1870 or so? That lifted us from being a backwards appendage of western civilization, sort of like Russia, to being the worlds engine of innovation? Thank Senator Morrill and Abraham Lincoln. Doug M. The above was in the comments section.
"Keep Your Goddamn Government Hands Off My Medicare!" - Various Tea Party signs.
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