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150th Anniversary
Tomorrow, April 12th, is the 150th anniversary of the start of the Civil War when Confederate soldiers opened fired on Fort Sumter.
It was the first war to involve trench warfare; observation balloons; iron-clad ships; and the use of repeating and breech-loading rifles, mines, and hand grenades. More Americans were killed in that war than were killed in World Wars One and Two, Korea, and Vietnam combined. |
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Theoretically, most of the Union soldiers were not Native Born Americans; quiet a few of them were foreign immigrants just arriving through Elise Island. Oh and "God Bless the Republicans who fought for Emancipation". |
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Even today, you can lose your U.S. citizenship if you "take up arms" in a foreign army. Those dead Irish boys laying on the field at Gettysburg were as much Americans as the commanders who ordered them into battle. Even while the Southerners were "in rebellion" against the U.S., they were still considered American citizens by the Federals. The Federals were fighting in fact, with the aim of imposing U.S. Federal citizenship upon the Southerners. That was the purpose of the North's fight. "Emancipation" was the underlying and unavoidable theme, but the sovereignty of Washington over the South was the direct aim. ... Just the observations of an Ancient & Classical History major. Everything that has happened since about 500 A.D. is "new stuff" to me. http://www.apostolicfriendsforum.com...ons/icon11.gif |
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... another thing to consider is that prior to the 20th Century, almost every army to ever take the field suffered more casualties from disease than they did from actual battle field deaths.
If the armies of WW I and WW II had taken the field during the 19th Century, at the time of the U.S. Civil War, the death totals would have been much, much higher. More Yanks and Rebs died from disease than from bullets or cannon fire. We have to take disease into account when comparing the casualty totals from war prior to the 20th Century with those during and after that century. |
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My point was not to diminish he efforts of recent immigrants. My point was to diminish the "more Americans Died" statistic. That's like saying in WWII, more people died in the world. Duh, because Both Allies and Axis were fighting.
At the time, the Confederates were not considered a Part of the USA, thus saying more Citizens of the USA died in the Civil War then in any other war combined is not a true statistic. In all actuality they were 2 nations at war. |
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As a side note. The Confederate States of America has been under occupation by the UNITED STATES Inc for the past 150 years. There was never a surrender of the Governments nor a peace treaty signed. |
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Save your Confederate money, boy, the South's gonna rise again.
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It is interesting however that the slogan "The South Will Rise Again" is founded in the fact that the Confederate States of America was never actually dissolved but rather exiled. |
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