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Confederate Sympathy: Immoral and Un-American

On this day one hundred and fifty years ago, Confederate secessionists fired on Union troops at Fort Sumter, South Carolina, beginning the Civil War. All in all, a pretty momentous day in American history. This would lead you to believe that we’d have a pretty good handle on why it happened. We have documents galore from that time period, telling us about debates in Congress and in public, letters sent between political leaders on both sides, and the stated positions of all the states involved. It’s always seemed pretty clear to me, and I’m sure to most people who’ve gone through the American public school system, that the Civil War was fought largely because of slavery. There were other reasons, of course, but I just don’t see the South seceding from the Union if slavery had already been abolished. As it turns out, though, there are plenty of people who disagree vehemently with that idea.

CNN recently surveyed Americans to gauge our feelings on the Civil War. The results might surprise you. The poll shows that while a majority of Americans agree that slavery was the main cause for the Civil War, 54% of Tea Partiers and 52% of Republicans disagree. Unfortunately, the poll doesn’t ask them what they think the main reason actually was. I’d be very interested to hear some of those responses. Perhaps they would say that the main reason was that the dirty feds just couldn’t stop meddling in state business. Or maybe that Lincoln was too divisive a president on important issues. Of course, the fact that the business the federal government was meddling in was slavery, and the most divisive issue of the 1860 campaign was (wait for it) slavery, is entirely irrelevant to these people.

Surprisingly, this wasn’t even the worst part of the poll. 28% of Republicans sympathize more with the Confederacy than with the Union. And that rises to almost 40% of Southern males! It simply astounds me that over a quarter of our country feels very strongly that the people to be pitied most in the whole situation were slave-owners and people who supported slave-owners. It’s an unconscionable position to take. There’s simply no positive way to look at it. If they support the Confederacy, either they’re hypocrites who slept through American history or they’re racists who support the right of white people to own people of color.

“But wait!” someone might say. “The Confederacy is an important part of our past. How dare you denigrate the history of the South!” Well, I dare because South Carolina, the first state to secede and the leader of the Confederacy, wrote in its declaration of secession that the state had no other option because the federal government was not enforcing the fourth article of the Constitution. This article states “No person held to service or labor in one State, under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered up, on claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be due.” Let’s be clear: the only stated reason for secession is the unwillingness of the federal government to let southern states keep slaves. There is simply no mention of taxes or any other issue.

It’s becoming a popular thing to say that we live in a post-racial society. People love to go on about how we don’t need affirmative action or programs focused on minorities because we have moved on from the turmoil of the past. But polls like this show how absolutely false that is. We still very much live in a society that divides itself on racial lines. How else am I to understand the fact that 28% of Republicans support the Confederacy? Support for the Confederacy is entirely equivalent with support for slavery, but I hate to think that anyone in America still believes in such a terrifying and horrific abuse of human rights. With statistics like these it’s obvious that society as a whole is still fractured in ways we’d rather not admit. Historically, there is simply no way to reconcile anti-slavery positions and support for the Confederacy. Elected officials and civic leaders from all over the country and from all different backgrounds must unequivocally state that the Confederacy was wrong, and that the Union’s victory and subsequent abolition of slavery has led directly to our country becoming the beacon of freedom it is today. To do any less is to dishonor the brave men and women who fought tirelessly to keep this country whole and free for all people.

 

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