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Watching Gone With the Wind - the South

Posted on 8/23/20 at 8:18 pm
Posted by ForeverEllisHugh
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2016
14863 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 8:18 pm
Would probably have the technology to deflect those two storms if the yanks hadn’t ravaged us.

Set us back at least a hundred years

Also a reminder that Lincoln was mentally ill and an atheist who still somehow believed himself to be a puppet of some unseen hand of fate.
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
65147 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 8:23 pm to
Melt year 155.

Posted by kingbob
Sorrento, LA
Member since Nov 2010
67212 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 8:37 pm to
The place was ravaged economically and physically, but it wasn’t a technological society before the war. The North jammed industrialization down the South’s throat.
Posted by HeadSlash
TEAM LIVE BADASS - St. GEORGE
Member since Aug 2006
49856 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 8:41 pm to
Democrats would have abused their power and kept the South dependent on an agrarian economy.
Posted by TigerOnTheMountain
Higher Elevation
Member since Oct 2014
41773 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 8:42 pm to
Without question. What happened to the south at the hands of the federal government before and most importantly after the War of Northern Aggression can’t be understated.
Posted by soccerfüt
Location: A Series of Tubes
Member since May 2013
65893 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 8:46 pm to
quote:

Also a reminder that Lincoln was mentally ill and an atheist who still somehow believed himself to be a puppet of some unseen hand of fate.
Best goddam riding magic carpet I ever had—

Mark V Givenchy

Posted by Joshjrn
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2008
27165 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 8:49 pm to
While I firmly think the founding fathers believed in the freedom to secede from the union, your take is utterly unfounded. The south was hidebound in its tradition. The idea that we would have become a technological marvel is just silly.
Posted by Rouge
Floston Paradise
Member since Oct 2004
136846 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 9:19 pm to
quote:

Would probably have the technology to deflect those two storms if the yanks hadn’t ravaged us.

Set us back at least a hundred years

Also a reminder that Lincoln was mentally ill and an atheist who still somehow believed himself to be a puppet of some unseen hand of fate.


This is probably much more funny in your head.
Posted by Koach K
Member since Nov 2016
4117 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 10:21 pm to
Why there’s not a canon factory in the whole South.

Cannon mr funny nikon poster.
This post was edited on 8/24/20 at 9:45 am
Posted by red sox fan 13
Valley Park
Member since Aug 2018
15358 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 10:36 pm to

The South lost. Get over it. I hate to sound like a scallywag but we are better off as part of the USA
Posted by lsuwontonwrap
Member since Aug 2012
34147 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 10:47 pm to
quote:

Also a reminder that Lincoln was mentally ill and an atheist who still somehow believed himself to be a puppet of some unseen hand of fate.


Posted by DragginFly
Under the Mountain;By the Lake
Member since Oct 2014
3607 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 11:09 pm to
quote:

Watching Gone With the Wind - the South Would probably have the technology to deflect those two storms if the yanks hadn’t ravaged us.


We waz Kangs.
Posted by Salviati
Member since Apr 2006
5581 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 11:46 pm to
The first president of LSU warned the South against civil war with the North.

In December of 1860, future Union general William Tecumseh Sherman was an ex-U.S. Army Major who had lived in the South for just over a year. He had arrived in Louisiana in November of 1859 to become the founding superintendent of the state’s new military academy, a school that after the Civil War would become Louisiana State University.

From the beginning of Sherman’s time in the South, the atmosphere was filled with talk of secession and civil war. His good friend, David French Boyd, a professor at the school who later became a Confederate officer, noted in his post-war memoir General W.T. Sherman as a College President that such talk disturbed Sherman deeply. “He was constantly talking about it and deploring it, openly as well as privately,” Boyd recalled.

Boyd was visiting Sherman in his room on Christmas Eve of 1860 when the mail arrived. In it was a newspaper announcing that what Sherman had hoped against hope would never happen had come to pass — South Carolina had seceded from the Union.

Sherman was a very emotionally expressive man, and hearing the news he knew was a harbinger of civil war stirred him to his depths. Boyd recalled that “Sherman burst out crying and began, in his nervous way, pacing the floor and deprecating the step which he feared might bring destruction on the whole country.”

For more than an hour Sherman expressed his agitation about the evils secession would bring about, until finally, he exploded with an outburst (quoted by Shelby Foote in The Civil War: A Narrative. Fort Sumter to Perryville) that was prophetic in its accuracy:

You people of the South don’t know what you are doing. This country will be drenched in blood, and God only knows how it will end. It is all folly, madness, a crime against civilization!

You people speak so lightly of war; you don’t know what you’re talking about. War is a terrible thing! You mistake, too, the people of the North. They are a peaceable people but an earnest people, and they will fight, too. They are not going to let this country be destroyed without a mighty effort to save it…

Besides, where are your men and appliances of war to contend against them? The North can make a steam engine, locomotive, or railway car; hardly a yard of cloth or pair of shoes can you make. You are rushing into war with one of the most powerful, ingeniously mechanical, and determined people on Earth-right at your doors.

You are bound to fail. Only in your spirit and determination are you prepared for war. In all else you are totally unprepared, with a bad cause to start with. At first you will make headway, but as your limited resources begin to fail, shut out from the markets of Europe as you will be, your cause will begin to wane. If your people will but stop and think, they must see in the end that you will surely fail.

Or, as Rhett Butler famously said in Gone with the Wind: I mean, Mr. Hamilton, there's not a cannon factory in the whole South.
Posted by SEClint
New Orleans, LA/Portland, OR
Member since Nov 2006
48769 posts
Posted on 8/23/20 at 11:51 pm to
one day ill create a time machine, and set right what once went wrong..and maybe my next leap, will be the leap home.
This post was edited on 8/23/20 at 11:52 pm
Posted by Loup
Ferriday
Member since Apr 2019
11450 posts
Posted on 8/24/20 at 4:48 am to
wrong. If slavery had continued there would likely have been a lot less technological advancement.
Posted by ATLabama
Member since Jan 2013
1602 posts
Posted on 8/24/20 at 8:27 am to
quote:

Would probably have the technology to deflect those two storms if the yanks hadn’t ravaged us.


Atlanta quite literally burned to the ground.
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