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Strategies & Market Trends : Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

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To: Steve Dietrich who wrote (91908)12/22/2008 7:37:54 PM
From: Broken_Clock1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) of 116555
 
then again...

"The subject of slavery then came up and Mr. Stephens asked President Lincoln what would be the status of the slave population in the Confederate states, and especially what effect the Emancipation Proclamation would have if the Confederates rejoined the Union. President Lincoln responded that the Proclamation was only a war measure and as soon as the war ceased, it would have no operation for the future. It was his opinion that the Courts would decide that the slaves who were emancipated under the Proclamation would remain free but those who were not emancipated during the war would remain in slavery. Mr. Seward pointed out that only about two hundred thousand (200,000) slaves had come under the operation of the Proclamation and this would be a small number out of the total. Mr. Seward then brought up the point that several days before the meeting, there had been a proposed 13th constitutional amendment to cause the immediate abolition of slavery throughout the United States, but if the war were to cease and the Confederates rejoined the Union, they would have enough votes to kill the amendment. He stated that there would be thirty-six (36) states and ten (10) could defeat the amendment. The reader should be reminded at this point that President Lincoln, in his Inaugural Address before the war, gave his support to the first 13th amendment pending at that time which would have explicitly protected slavery where it already existed. "
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The war may have been provoked over slavery but that is no more the cause than stating the Iraqi invasion was about WMD. In the end, the cause is always greed, not high ideals, however right they may be. Lincoln didn't fight to free slaves. He fought for power and greed.
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