Welcome to Political Fever - The Political Debate Forums.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest with limited access. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. You can also take part in our Private Debates where you can test your skills against an opponent. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us. After you Register the advertisements will disappear on the site!

Go Back   Political Fever - The Political Debate Forums > Political Issues > History

History Discuss all history here!

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #91 (permalink)  
Old 03-17-2008, 03:00 AM
Banned
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Userid: 323
Posts: 1,195
Rep Power: 0
Grouch is on a distinguished road
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dumpy Dooby View Post
Why would you point out that the flag is being flown, if only to illustrate to me that the Confederates knew that they were firing upon Union soldiers?
Simply yes, if you want to claim that the land and fort no longer belong to the federal government so an attack on the property was not illegal, then you have to admit that the troops inside the fort were no members of the state, their loyalties didn’t change with proposed ownership. They were federal soldiers being fired on, an aggressive act of war.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dumpy Dooby View Post
Well I'm sorry you feel that way. I haven't lost any respect for you. I still love you and consider you my e-buddy. I can vow not to engage in any sort of heated debates with you if that will save our e-friendship, Grouch.
This is off topic to the issues, but insulting me, as someone who I thought was at least an e-buddy is rather disconcerting. It has nothing to do with the intensity of the topic.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dumpy Dooby View Post
I don't ignore everything that counters my position. I'm ignoring points that aren't all that relevant to me. I mean, you get hung up on whether or not militaries were being prepared, whether or not one side was being offensively or defensively aggressive, etcetera.
You were the one that brought up that issue, I have shown your statement to be factually incorrect. A concession is in order.

You make the claim that the firing on Sumter was a pre-emptive maneuver but can’t cite a single source to support that.

These issues are not issues that I’ve brought into the argument, they are issues that you did.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dumpy Dooby View Post
They relinquished title to the land. Yes, that's a transfer of property. Is that a transfer of jurisdiction? Is that a transfer of sovereignty?
And like I’ve said, the Federal government owned the property and the fort.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dumpy Dooby View Post
You can get a title for your property here in the United States. Does that make you exempt from recognizing its legal authority?
The state doesn’t have legal authority to steal land that I have the title to and not defaulted payment on.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dumpy Dooby View Post
South Carolina is within its legal right to take back what it gave up BECAUSE the fort was still within its jurisdiction.
Only if you think that the state has the right to steal land from its legal owner. Can you find one credible source that supports such an understanding? I believe I’ve ask you to support this claim with something other than your singular understanding. You have not done this.

Would you agree then that Maryland had jurisdiction over Washington DC? Maryland could have kicked out the federal government anytime it wanted had this idea of yours been true. Such a conjecture has never been true.

Why would SC offer to buy back the Fort form the US Government if SC had already left the Union? If SC retains full jurisdiction over it once it leave the union it is no obligated to pay for anything.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dumpy Dooby View Post
That's irrelevant. The contract being made is that the United States will own the fort and nothing else. The United States will not own any other buildings on the land. Ergo, the United States will not own any civilian homes or State offices that might reside on the land. The United States is purchasing the land, and it is only allowed to own the buildings enumerated in the contract (presumably only the fort). This also means that the United States is not at liberty to fill up all other empty land besides with homes that it can rent out as a source of revenue, because any other property on the land besides the fort cannot be owned by the United States. So..... The contract is, in effect, clarifying that only a fort can be owned by the United States within this land that is being purchased by the United States. Chronology is irrelevant.
This is what fort Sumter looked like c. 1860



There were no other buildings; there were no civilian homes or state offices. SC stole US property, violating the original sales agreement, as no “conditions” of sale have been shown to have been violated by the US.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dumpy Dooby View Post
I did. The links you showed me agree with me, as does the Constitution. Show me where sovereignty was ever transferred.
"Also resolved: That the State shall extinguish the claim, if any valid claim there be, of any individuals under the authority of this State, to the land hereby ceded.”

Right there. SC ended any future claim anyone could ever have to the land. The land was fully Federal property.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dumpy Dooby View Post
It is with that, but it's also with levying taxes in those States to pay for initiatives in the north. That is, the majority of the tariffs were paid for by the south, while the majority of the tax money was spent in the north. Had the southerners received more subsidies from the USA, I probably wouldn't side with them as much. But as it stands, I feel that they were getting a raw deal.
Again I will ask you why Lincoln, Davis, and Stephens all refer to the issue of slavery as the root cause. What you are citing is later reasoning used by past and present apologists.
Reply With Quote
  #92 (permalink)  
Old 03-17-2008, 10:37 AM
Technocratic_Utilitarian's Avatar
Elitist Pinko
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Userid: 91
Location: New Jersey
Age: 24
Posts: 2,341
Rep Power: 3
Technocratic_Utilitarian will become famous soon enough
Default

Quote:
The Northwest Ordinance, first of all, only applied to northwest States (I mean, seriously, did you even look it up? rofl). Secondly, the part that you're referring to says:
Actually, I have, and no, it also applies to any future United States territory inasmuch as the language of the agreement require it. They create logical implications. I will simplify it for you so you can understand, since you have difficulty with this:

1.The Northwest ordinance was important because it set the standard for admitting new states into the Union. This system was maintained all throughout the 19th and 20th centuries and never repealed. Given that the states agreed to it, it became binding law. According to the Northwest Ordinance, after a period of territoryship, a unit may organize and apply for statehood. The agreement explicitly asserts that no old state would have any right that a new state thus formed would not have. This means that new states would enter as equals in legal right.

2.Given that the Northwest Ordinance explicitly claims that states which enter the union do not have the right to leave it, because the union is permanent and forever, it logically follows that, to be consistent with the equality principle agreed upon, the old states could not therefore have the right to leave it either. If the old states had the right to leave, that would therefore imply they had a right that new territories did not. If it were true that the old states had the right to secede, it would therefore follow that old states had a right states formed from new territories would not have. Ergo, secession is illegal.

You're mistaken about the Northwest Ordinance and obviously need to study it more, much like the entire concept of “ownership.”

Quote:
It's not saying that the States may not secede. It says that they shall forever remain part of the Confederacy (the legislation was written before the Constitution, and it was ratified before the Congress of the United States entered its first session), and shall adhere to any legal alterations to the Confederacy, i.e., the Constitution of the United States. As I pointed out above, the Constitution of the United States did not forbid secession. In any event, you might be able to make the argument that the ordinance forbade secession in that territory, but frankly, that's an irrelevant argument.
The Northwest Ordinance was never repealed, and it didn't magically disappear because the Constitution became the new structure of government. You're under the mistaken belief that because the agreement was set under the Articles of Confederation, the agreement no longer applies. That's wrong. A change in government structure does not invalidate treaties and agreements. In fact, the Northwest Ordinance continued to be used, in effect legally, well into the 19th century. You're simply wrong, as usual. This is a pattern with you. As is not admitting when you're wrong. Instead, you continue to dig yourself deeper into the hole of denial, thinking endless repetition of "states are sovereign, therefore, they can attack the government!" will make it true.

And no, there is no concession from me, because you've already lost and have failed to support your argument. I have no reason to concede, given I am correct and have substantiated my argument. You continue to blather and bleat, but amazingly fail to provide anything but repetition of your personal opinion to back it up, son.
__________________

Last edited by Technocratic_Utilitarian : 03-17-2008 at 10:41 AM.
Reply With Quote
Reply



Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On






     Top Political Sites  
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:22 PM.
Political Fever 2007/2008
   Word Search   |   Family Friendly   |   AdSense Forum   |   Game Cheats   |   Coupon Codes   |   Spore Game   |   Xcode Forum   |   Political Forums   |   Internet Marketing   |   Social Networking    |   Sudoku   |   Mobile Marketing   |   Web Forms   |   Articles & News   |   Loans & Credit Repair   |   Online Coupon Codes   |   Loans   |   Sudoku Puzzles   |   Map Games   |   Spore Screenshots