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Can you cite a few? There were some complaints about tariffs and such (the agricultural South had different financial interests than the industrial North), but for over fifty years leading up to the Civil War, almost all political conflict between the North and the South was very explicitly about slavery. Every presidential candidate (whatever his personal feelings) had to primarily calibrate his position on slavery in order to win enough votes from the South. Every new acquisition by the US became an (often violent) battle over whether it would allow slavery. The Missouri Compromise, the Compromise of 1850, these were bitter attempts to reconcile states over slavery. You sort of brush past the fact that "slavery is right up and down all of the documents" - yes, it was, because that was the issue. The "agreements that they felt their supposed countrymen were not following" were all about slavery.
All other disputes between the North and South - economic, cultural, whatever else you're thinking of - were comparatively minor and would never have led to a secession. The Civil War was about slavery.
All emphasis mine.
The very first paragraph from South Carolina.
Further reading, though I'm tempted to just copy the whole thing
It's not slavery, it's about reneging on the deal you previously made. None of the slave states would have joined the union in the first place without the concessions they received, concessions intended to prevent the North from controlling the South. Those concessions were systematically undermined and ignored for decades until finally it was obvious that the North never intended to perform on the duties it committed to, and never intended to respect the limits of the federal government.
South Carolina did not agree to be ruled by New York, South Carolina agreed to form a Union with New York under the condition that New York is obligated to return slaves to South Carolina. If New York doesn't want to do that, it's up to them to dissolve the Union, but instead they simply ignored the constitution and the agreement they had made with the free and independent states of the South in order to impose their rule.
I'm tired of people lying about it. The South was right to secede, and they have every justification to do so. They stuck a deal which was ignored and undermined for 80 years, until finally they had had enough and left.
And then Lincoln conquered them and forged the American Empire, and now we don't hear about the Free and Independent State of South Carolina, or These United States.
The Civil War was about federal conquest of the continent.
From Texas:
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By other states - not the federal government. As recently as 1859 the year before Lincoln's election, the supreme court ruled in Ableman v Booth that state "personal liberty" laws didn't supercede the Fugitive Slave Act.
The irony is that framing the civil war as a matter of states rights isn't wrong...but it was over northern states asserting their rights to reject constitutional but morally unjust laws.
For an extra dose of irony, South Carolina nearly seceded during the 1830's...because they felt that states should have the right to nullify federal laws they found unconstitutional. And when the federal government capitulated, but reasserted that they could use military force to make states comply, South Carolina symbolically nullified that!
The secessionist states wanted a federal government that would force states to follow laws they found morally abhorrent - yet only for specific laws that would benefit the South.
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