Originally posted by: KidViciou$
weren't they seceded though? and what does having a civil war have to do with the election?
Originally posted by: KidViciou$
weren't they seceded though? and what does having a civil war have to do with the election?
Originally posted by: EagleKeeper
Shows the impact that the large states have vs the small population states.
And poeple want to toss the EC.
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
Originally posted by: EagleKeeper
Shows the impact that the large states have vs the small population states.
And poeple want to toss the EC.
Those "large" states were in the right then, just like they are now.
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
Originally posted by: EagleKeeper
Shows the impact that the large states have vs the small population states.
And poeple want to toss the EC.
Those "large" states were in the right then, just like they are now.
Originally posted by: KidViciou$
oh okay, i knew sumter was the start of the war, but i didn't recall whether it was before or after lincoln's re-election. so then the original poster is wrong, we were not in a civil war during the re-election
Originally posted by: nick1985
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
Originally posted by: EagleKeeper
Shows the impact that the large states have vs the small population states.
And poeple want to toss the EC.
Those "large" states were in the right then, just like they are now.
yeah, those republicans were right then, and are right now. i couldnt have said it better myself, thanks!
I thought Lincoln was a Whig...Originally posted by: Jhhnn
Lincoln beat McClellan, his former general, by a margin of 55%-45% in the 1864 election, largely because of Union victories at Gettysburg, Vicksburg, and especially Atlanta...
Southern states, of course, had no voice, nor did they want one, having seceded from the Union.
Anbody who knows diddly about that era knows that the radical republicans, of which Lincoln was a member, were ousted from power ~10 years after the end of the war, and their heirs, the true progenitors of today's republicans, allowed the South to have their segregation, and helped themselves mightily to whatever the business interests of the time had to offer, culminating in the near total corruption of the McKinley era, reform efforts by Teddy Roosevelt, and a whole lot of other turmoil...
Nice synopsis of Civil War politics-
http://www.nps.gov/liho/1864/1864a.htm
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
I thought Lincoln was a Whig...Originally posted by: Jhhnn
Lincoln beat McClellan, his former general, by a margin of 55%-45% in the 1864 election, largely because of Union victories at Gettysburg, Vicksburg, and especially Atlanta...
Southern states, of course, had no voice, nor did they want one, having seceded from the Union.
Anbody who knows diddly about that era knows that the radical republicans, of which Lincoln was a member, were ousted from power ~10 years after the end of the war, and their heirs, the true progenitors of today's republicans, allowed the South to have their segregation, and helped themselves mightily to whatever the business interests of the time had to offer, culminating in the near total corruption of the McKinley era, reform efforts by Teddy Roosevelt, and a whole lot of other turmoil...
Nice synopsis of Civil War politics-
http://www.nps.gov/liho/1864/1864a.htm
Originally posted by: alchemize
So far we've had
"mumble mumble"
and
"blah blah".
Do we have any yes or nos?
Originally posted by: alchemize
/amdfanboy mode
Well?