this post was submitted on 27 Feb 2026
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ShermanPosting
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Where we meme (joking in tone and detail, serious in sentiment) about General Sherman, the Civil War, and how the secesh traitors had it coming.
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No bigotry. The Union, or at least the part of the Union WE support, fought AGAINST that shite. We are anti-racist, anti-sexist, anti-homophobic, anti-transphobic, and in general anti-bigot here, even if not all the lads in Union blue uniforms were.
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No Confederate sympathizing. Anti-democratic racist slaver traitors don't deserve shit.
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Okay? How does that dispute the point?
... the South's, yes.
what.
"America is a political cesspool because the Confederacy wasn't punished properly."
This point simply doesn't make any sense. What is proper punishment? What punishment did the Union fail to enact that would have saved modern America?
Yes, the South's, who had the greatest incentive to continue slavery. But, the economy was truly transcontinental. One economy. The North benefitted immensely from slavery.
Do you think the North would opt for a punishment that would amount to falling on their own sword? Could such a punishment be politically tenable?
what.
Human beings "other". It's key to understanding our species. So long as hardship can befall a people, those people will find a scapegoat. To this day, Blacks are only 14% of the population.
Capitilism + Humans = Political Cesspool
Punishing the Confederacy, even by wiping them off the face of the planet, would not have changed what America was to become, except by delaying global American hegemony.
This comment reads like someone skimmed some tweets about the Civil War and thinks they're an expert on all of 18-19th century US history
The destruction of the pseudo-aristocracy of the South which perpetuated the plantation system; in slavery before the war, and in sharecropping after the war?
The suppression of Confederates and Lost Cause Mythology, which created an intense countercultural current against the post-war notion of racial reconciliation?
The entire anti-democratic system of the post-Reconstruction South which created deep divides in the proletariat at a time when labor radicalism was gained strength?
Would you like to remind me which economy struggled during the Civil War, and which economy continued largely as normal?
In what way would it be falling on their own sword? The South's cotton production was already castrated by Sherman's March and the fact that Britain had invested in growing cotton in Egypt and India in response to the US Civil War.
I've got some really bad news for you about non-capitalist systems.
And you believe all of those things were not just possible but could have been sustained? Do you think they could have accomplished all of that without turning the Reconstruction into a generational occupation of the South? And you think it would have been economically viable and that the necessary long-term voter commitment would be there?
Yes, absolutely.
... what the fuck do you think Reconstruction was?
Yes, absolutely. Sharecropping is not actually great for the economy, and the South would remain economically marginal to the USA for decades afterwards.
Yes. The only fucking reason Reconstruction ended in the first fucking place was a deal between the Democrats and Republicans over a disputed election.
"Hannibal Hamlin is VP when Lincoln is assassinated" is potentially all it would fucking take to extend Reconstruction another 5-10 years, and with greater results in the first 11 years too, for that matter.