Originally posted by Holden McGroin
Why didn't SC enumerate nullification in it's declaration? the words 'Tariff' and 'nullification' do not appear in the document, yet over a dozen times references to slavery occur.
Because THAT Constitutional issue arose in 1832, 28 years before secession. It was a close run thing, as I mentioned, with Jackson positioning a small fleet off Charleston and threatening to use force to enforce the tariff.
From Wiki but you can find the same info just about anywhere:
The crisis ended when Henry Clay and Calhoun worked to devise a compromise tariff. Both sides later claimed victory.
Calhoun and his supporters in South Carolinia claimed a victory for nullification, insisting that it, a single state, had forced the revision of the tariff.
Jackson's followers, however, saw the episode as a demonstration that no single state could assert its rights by independent action.
Calhoun, in turn, devoted his efforts to building up a sense of Southern solidarity so that when another standoff should come, the whole section might be prepared to act as a bloc in resisting the federal government.
Clearly, this Constitutional episode 28 years earlier prepared the ground for what was to follow. The South managed the tariff issue in Congress in the intervening years; they didn't abolish tariffs but they kept them at levels that allowed their economy to function. Note again that the Panic of 1857 generated Northern calls for higher tariffs that went essentially unanswered.
I have fervent belief that your average illiterate* southern citizen spent a lot of his time discussing constitution behavior, but probably did discuss cotton prices and how he was going to get the crops in without slaves.
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Less than a third of Confederate soldiers were slaveholders or from slaveholding families.
You also seem to ignore the fact that the Southern states were
invaded by the North, not the other way around. After the secession of the state of Virginia, Benjamin W. Jones wrote that 'the determination to resist invasion-the first and most sacred duty of a free people-became general, if not universal".
A.P. Hill, chose to fight for the defense of his state, Virginia, even thought he was deeply opposed to slavery.
It's extremely simplistic to say that the other 70+ percent of the Confederate troops fought for slavery when the diaries and letters of so many indicate they owed duty to their State before duty to the Union.
You just have the cart before the horse. The Civil War was a Constitutional conflict that eventually came to a head over the slavery issue.
It had been building for quite some time as evidenced by the trade and tariff issues in 1828 and 1832. Then there was the Panic of 1857, which again brought the tariff issue to the forefront. The South was heavily dependent on imports while the North viewed imports as competition for their industry.
You never answered this question:
Assume the current Feds unilaterally declared all firearms held in the hands of private citizens were to be turned in or confiscated. The western Red states tell the Feds to stuff it. Open conflict results, with the aforesaid red state citizens declaring they will not be stripped of 2nd Amendment rights without due process.
Is the cause gun confiscation or the failure of the Feds to execute their Constitutional obligations?