
"I don't give a rat's nest what the underlying causes of the war were, the bottom line is the North was fighting to force the South back into the union and the South was fighting to prevent that from happening." Patricio Bridges
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Black neighbors to picket
woman's Confederate flag
Summerville, S.C. - Annie Chambers Caddell, whose ancestors fought in the Civil War, insists the Confederate flag flying over her home is an important reminder of her heritage. But for her neigbors in this tree-shrouded, historically black neighborhood, it's an unpleasant reminder of a by-gone era they'd rather not see every time they pass by her house....more
Students
lose Confederate-flag purse case in 5th Circuit
World Powers urged to organize referendum on Balochistan by Pakistan Christian Post Texas-sized Balochistan was annexed illegally by Pakistan in March 1948. At the time, the Baloch bicameral parliament Diwan-i-A'am and Diwan-i-Khas had both unanimously voted for an independent Balochistan....more
What Can We Do About
the American Empire?
Black Confederate Facts
Secession Myths The entire question of secession was settled during the Civil War....more
Scottish National
Party Sets Out Vision The first document outlining how an
independent Scotland would conduct its foreign affairs
has been unveiled by the SNP.
Why is the Left making
such an effort to discredit Texas Nationalists? You know, given the fact that so many liberals consider the Texas Nationalist Movement to be a tiny minority of Texans and its cause to be unbelievable, you have to wonder why the Radical Left in this country is trotting out all the big guns in an attempt to discredit them....more
Is Secession Treason? General Robert E. Lee said to Albert Bledsoe these important words: "You have a great work to do; we all look to you for our vindication"....more
The
Confederate Flag, Should We Get Rid Of It? A different perspective on the Confederate flag written by a courageous black man of honor and truth....more
The First To Act The doctrine of state's rights, the legality of secession, and the institution of black slavery had been issues of debate in the United States for decades before the election of Lincoln brought on the secession of the Southern states....more
Oklahoma Rebellion One of the unappreciated casualties of the War of 1861, erroneously called a Civil War, was its contribution to the erosion of constitutional guarantees of state sovereignty. It settled the issue of secession, making it possible for the federal government to increasingly run roughshod over Ninth and 10th Amendment guarantees....more
Parting
Company Texas Gov. Rick Perry rattled cages when he suggested that Texans might at some point become so disgusted with Washington's gross violation of the U.S. Constitution that they would want to secede from the union. Political hustlers, their media allies and others, who have little understanding, are calling his remarks treasonous. Let's look at it....more
How Is America Going To
End, who's most likely to secede?
Blacks Who Fought For
the South
War Crimes Against
Southern Civilians Book Review Book Description
The Return of States'
Rights?
President Obama is expanding federal powers left and right, eyeing yet other enlargements and still more billions in spending, and it shouldn't strike anyone as utterly senseless that Gov. Rick Perry of Texas should say enough, stop, quit it. He did so by means of giving his support to a resolution affirming states' rights and similar in spirit to resolutions that were written more than 200 years ago by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison and adopted by Kentucky and Virginia. Those two founders were upset by the Alien and Sedition Acts enacted during the administration of President John Adams with the pretense of protecting America from her enemies but actually aiming to stifle criticism at home. Those laws just won't wash, Jefferson and Madison said, explaining that they far exceeded the federal government's powers as enumerated in the Constitution. States, they said, had the right to void these laws, but most states themselves didn't want to bother with anything that might threaten the union, and, in truth, they had a point. The most extreme assertion of states' rights came with the secession of Southern states fearful of what might happen to the institution of slavery after the election of Abraham Lincoln, and what ensued, of course, was the Civil War. Even after that awful, bloody conflict, the South used -- the better word is "misused" -- the legal principles of dual sovereignty and limitations on federal power to oppress blacks, thereby giving states' rights a bad name. It does not follow, however, that we suddenly had a Constitution that told the federal government it was all powerful and could do anything it darned well wanted to do, no matter how inconsistent with liberty or the rule of law. Just as the idea of states' rights could be abused, it is an abuse of some of this nation's highest, most important ideals to treat certain fundamental portions of the Constitution as if they just weren't there. Something very close to that has happened to the limits the document places on federal authority. The chief instruments used to rationalize the abuse have been the Commerce Clause, established to facilitate trade between the states, and the Necessary and Proper Clause, which said Congress may make laws needed to execute its stated powers. Time and again the government has justified almost anything it does by saying, you know, this is somehow related to interstate commerce in some distant fashion or the other, especially since the New Deal. When the Supreme Court blocked a law that pretended to have something to do with commerce when it didn't, President Franklin Roosevelt threatened to pack the court with a bunch of new justices, and, right away, the sitting justices pretty much said OK to whatever adventure he came up with. So now we have a president who seems in some ways to be as ambitious as FDR was, and as constitutionally. And we have tea parties all over the union and states' rights resolutions being brought up in places such as New Hampshire and Texas, where Gov. Perry is quoted as having said, "I believe that our federal government has become oppressive in its size, its intrusion into the lives of our citizens and its interference with the affairs of our state." Citing the 10th Amendment, which says powers not delegated to the United States (federal government) by the Constitution are reserved to the states and the people, the governor is looking for repeal or prohibition of laws that have gone too far. His stance and the resolution are rhetorically useful, I think, but what I'd like to see is for the Supreme Court once more to start edging toward more states' rights in varied cases as it was doing under Chief Justice William Rehnquist for a period, an approach that seems to me both plausible and prudent as well as badly needed.
Secession fever Secession fever is apparently sweeping through the Conservative World, and its getting closer to the Carolinas. Boy, talk about your swine flu! First, a poll a couple of weeks ago, taken after Texas Gov. Rick Perry broached the subject at a Tea Party, revealed that the GOP in Texas is evenly divided over whether the Lone Star state should secede from the United States. Now, a new poll from Research 2000 shows that 43 percent of Republicans in Georgia say their state would be better off as an independent nation than as a part of the United States.
Secession talk
far from extreme
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