Thomas F. Harney
|
11-20-2014, 08:16 AM
Post: #107
|
|||
|
|||
RE: Thomas F. Harney
(11-19-2014 01:52 PM)Rick Smith Wrote:(11-17-2014 07:51 PM)John Fazio Wrote:(11-17-2014 03:56 PM)Rick Smith Wrote: If Edwin Stanton was not a target, he sure should have been. Rick: Murder is a draconian remedy for someone who was merely discharging the duties of his office under the law and the Constitution. That goes for Confederate officeholders too, who, though they were operating under a different Constitution, were entitled to immunity from assassination inasmuch as I know of 15 arguments favoring the legitimacy of secession. Accordingly, Wistar's and Dahlgren's orders, assuming they were bona fide, are an excrescence. I believe that Lincoln saw the matter so, as evidenced by his announcement at the Cabinet meeting of 4-14 that he wanted "no bloody work" and that the leaders of the Rebellion should be permitted to exit the country unmolested. Further evidence is the fact that paroles, pardons and conciliation were the order of the day after the war, except for Wirz, who presided over the deaths of some 16,000 at Andersonville (Sweetwater Creek, with all the clean water in the world, was 0.6 of a mile from the camp) and Champ Ferguson, who was nothing but a cold-blooded serial killer of even disarmed and wounded men (other cold-blooded killers (e.g. "Bloody Bill" Anderson) having met their end without the aid of a hangman). Everything considered, then, decapitation, even if had resulted in greater success, would not have produced a different result, and was, for that reason, excessive and foolhardy. Churchill said the outcome of the war was "almost inevitable". There was no way the ruling class in the South (about 350,000 out of a population of about 9 million) could stop the locomotive of history. It was time for slavery to go. All the major powers in the world and some 17 other countries had already abolished it. John |
|||
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »
|
User(s) browsing this thread: 15 Guest(s)