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Quoted: I'd be a drunkard too if I had to kill the fuck out of non-combatants via starvation to break a nation's will to fight as well, but Sherman was a rote amateur at killing civilians compared to the average WW2 bomber wing commander. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Who the hell is Sherman Tecumseh Sherman? Legendary drunkard and murderer of noncombatants, no matter how you say his name. I'd be a drunkard too if I had to kill the fuck out of non-combatants via starvation to break a nation's will to fight as well, but Sherman was a rote amateur at killing civilians compared to the average WW2 bomber wing commander. ... Mao Zedong |
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Quoted: Some people need to reflect on the nature of fucking around and finding out. View Quote Conclusion: A Govt that will unleash total war on it's own citizens but never apply that practice in any war fought since. Apparently the lives of our foreign enemies are worth more than our own citizens. |
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Quoted: Fucking lol. Japan had an entire generation wiped out, with cities reduced to ash by napalm and nuclear fire, and they still whine less than Southerners. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Yeah, we still hurting from that sum-bitch. Japan had an entire generation wiped out, with cities reduced to ash by napalm and nuclear fire, and they still whine less than Southerners. The Carthaginians whine even less. I wonder why? Maybe people should evaluate Sherman by the historical standards of war for most of human history. We are now in the warm and fuzzy, politically-correct era. I welcome a lot of the modern humane standards. However, Sherman was living in the previous era. The world had different standards back then. |
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Quoted: Conclusion: A Govt that will unleash total war on it's own citizens but never apply that practice in any war fought since. Apparently the lives of our foreign enemies are worth more than our own citizens. View Quote |
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Quoted: I'd be keeping that in the family if it was something from a famous relative. Some people just see Dollar signs, I guess View Quote I'd like to think I'd donate the more historically important pieces to an important museum. I didn't add it all up, my SWAG is the auction raised close to $500,000. That's a lot to ask of someone to pass up for family or history. The various copies of books personally owned by the famous aren't necessarily important to preserve for history if they've been reproduced and available elsewhere. Some are still in print; Grant's, Sherman's, and Sheridan's memoirs can be had cheap from Dover publications. Any personal notations in them are unique, a historian would be interested in them of course. |
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What happened at the Andersonville POW camp is a big reason why Northerns hated the South for many years after the war. But no, let's just sweep that under the rug and pretend it didn't happen. Sure.
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Quoted: Corrected. Happy now? Oh look, a southerner that doesn't like General Sherman. Boo hoo. GEN. SHERMAN'S NYC ADDRESS, 1878 $4700 View Quote I'm not a southerner , but I don't like him because I don't like war criminals. He should have been tried and executed after the war . |
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Quoted: America rebuilt Japan. The north sent carpet baggers to fuck the South for multiple generations. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Yeah, we still hurting from that sum-bitch. Japan had an entire generation wiped out, with cities reduced to ash by napalm and nuclear fire, and they still whine less than Southerners. America rebuilt Japan. The north sent carpet baggers to fuck the South for multiple generations. Which hurt worse: -Reconstruction policies? or -an agrarian society that had a huge swath of its labor pool instantly removed by emancipation? |
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Quoted: Why don’t you come on down here…boy? Lee marched through Maryland and Southern PA. Several Confederate raids into the northern states. How many reports of raping, looting, and burning resulted? None View Quote Lol, wut? Jubal Early's men burned Chambersburg, PA to the ground when they failed to pay a ransom. Confederate agents tried to burn NYC to the ground but failed. In 1861 Stonewall Jackson had advocated for a southern March to Lake Erie, but he never got the chance. “Crossing the Upper Potomac, occupying Baltimore, and taking possession of Maryland, we could cut off the communications of Washington, force the Federal government to abandon the capital, beat McClellan’s army if it came out against us in the open country, destroy industrial establishments wherever we found them, break up the lines of interior commercial intercourse, close the coal mines, seize and, if necessary, destroy the manufactories and commerce of Philadelphia, and of other large cities within our reach; take and hold the narrow neck of country between Pittsburgh and Lake Erie; subsist mainly on the country we traverse, and making unrelenting war amidst their home, force the people of the North to understand what it will cost them to hold the South in the Union at the bayonet’s point." |
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Rock Master Scott & the Dynamic Three - The Roof Is On Fire |
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Quoted: It belongs in a museum. To honor the greatest American to have ever lived. /media/mediaFiles/sharedAlbum/toast_gif-994.gif View Quote |
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Quoted: It's a necessary evil. Shouldn't be celebrated nor demonized IMHO. View Quote This. Very much. That's what that man understood, and pleaded with the south to consider. If, God forbid there is another Civil War, and I participate, I would expect no quarter from the enemy. I would not expect monuments to be erected for my side if I lose. |
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Quoted: agreed, but there will be a ton of butthurt in this thread. View Quote There is. There always is. We rightfully insist that certain demographics get over slavery, it's been over for 160 years or so. But, the union finally pulling its head out of its ass and actually engaging in total war, a war the south started, brings on massive butthurt. |
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Quoted: That's real rich coming from someone in MA. I bet you've never even seen a black person let alone live around them View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Tell that to the slaves. That's real rich coming from someone in MA. I bet you've never even seen a black person let alone live around them You’ve never left rural GA have you? |
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Quoted: There is. There always is. We rightfully insist that certain demographics get over slavery, it's been over for 160 years or so. But, the union finally pulling its head out of its ass and actually engaging in total war, a war the south started, brings on massive butthurt. View Quote |
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Some interesting items in that auction.
Sherman was the "nuclear bomb" of the civil war. Everywhere he went he left a wake of destruction. He would not be denied. In retrospect, he shortened the war and probably saved some lives - on both sides. God bless my brothers on both sides of that horrible conflict. |
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Quoted: The Carthaginians whine even less. I wonder why? Maybe people should evaluate Sherman by the historical standards of war for most of human history. We are now in the warm and fuzzy, politically-correct era. I welcome a lot of the modern humane standards. However, Sherman was living in the previous era. The world had different standards back then. View Quote Rome was not trying to reunite Carthage with the empire and live with its people for the next however many centuries. Sherman's actions were strategically expeditious but they undermined the ultimate political aim of the war. |
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Quoted: What happened at the Andersonville POW camp is a big reason why Northerns hated the South for many years after the war. But no, let's just sweep that under the rug and pretend it didn't happen. Sure. View Quote Funny. Reminds me a lot of Camp Rathbun. Camp Rathbun at Elmira, N.Y., where thousands rebel soldiers died of disease and cold. Known among its 12,000 inmates as “Hellmira,” the camp posted a mortality rate of 25 percent. But of course it's not politically correct to make a feature film out of that one, is it. |
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I’m glad the Sherman House Museum was able to raise the funds to get the sword.
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Quoted: If I won the lottery, I would make this dream come true. Fuck him and Lincoln. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I wish the collector guy would buy that then burn it all on national television. If I won the lottery, I would make this dream come true. Fuck him and Lincoln. Same. |
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Quoted: Funny. Reminds me a lot of Camp Rathbun. Camp Rathbun at Elmira, N.Y., where thousands rebel soldiers died of disease and cold. Known among its 12,000 inmates as “Hellmira,” the camp posted a mortality rate of 25 percent. But of course it's not politically correct to make a feature film out of that one, is it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: What happened at the Andersonville POW camp is a big reason why Northerns hated the South for many years after the war. But no, let's just sweep that under the rug and pretend it didn't happen. Sure. Funny. Reminds me a lot of Camp Rathbun. Camp Rathbun at Elmira, N.Y., where thousands rebel soldiers died of disease and cold. Known among its 12,000 inmates as “Hellmira,” the camp posted a mortality rate of 25 percent. But of course it's not politically correct to make a feature film out of that one, is it. And that’s part of the reason the south hates the north. See, there’s plenty of hate to go around for everyone. No one is stopping that film from being made. Heck, I’d watch it if it was well done. |
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I don’t know the bid history, but the museum may have been in a bidding war with Lancaster native and former football player Bobby Carpenter.
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Quoted: Fucking lol. Japan had an entire generation wiped out, with cities reduced to ash by napalm and nuclear fire, and they still whine less than Southerners. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Yeah, we still hurting from that sum-bitch. Japan had an entire generation wiped out, with cities reduced to ash by napalm and nuclear fire, and they still whine less than Southerners. Well the Japanese were in the wrong. We don’t say much till Yankees start talking out their ass. |
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Quoted: Rome was not trying to reunite Carthage with the empire and live with its people for the next however many centuries. Sherman's actions were strategically expeditious but they undermined the ultimate political aim of the war. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: The Carthaginians whine even less. I wonder why? Maybe people should evaluate Sherman by the historical standards of war for most of human history. We are now in the warm and fuzzy, politically-correct era. I welcome a lot of the modern humane standards. However, Sherman was living in the previous era. The world had different standards back then. Rome was not trying to reunite Carthage with the empire and live with its people for the next however many centuries. Sherman's actions were strategically expeditious but they undermined the ultimate political aim of the war. As I understand it Sherman’s March was primarily directed towards destroying infrastructure as a means to end the war as quickly as possible. Pretty smart actually, if you can’t defeat the military defeat the country. Kinda what the USA is facing from today from China. Anyway, Sherman kept it up as long as the south kept fighting, and then some. The south could’ve surrendered at any time. Sherman told Lincoln he would take on the south as long as Lincoln didn’t interfere with his military decisions. Lincoln agreed and Sherman took full advantage of that. He wanted the war to end as fast as possible and his strategy followed that logic. He wasn’t looking to kill as many southerners as possible. The southern death toll would’ve been much higher if that was the goal. |
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Quoted: Well the Japanese were in the wrong. We don’t say much till Yankees start talking out their ass. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Yeah, we still hurting from that sum-bitch. Japan had an entire generation wiped out, with cities reduced to ash by napalm and nuclear fire, and they still whine less than Southerners. Well the Japanese were in the wrong. We don’t say much till Yankees start talking out their ass. “We don’t say much till….” If southerners on here could go two days without bringing up the civil war I’d probably die of shock. |
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Quoted: You too can own the matches that burned The South! https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/xkQAAOSwH21fR8rG/s-l400.jpg View Quote The "south" you're poking fun at doesn't exist anymore. Hasn't for a LONG time. "Gone With the Wind" was fiction. Atlanta, Memphis, Birmingham, etc are and have been shitholes for at least 3 generations. It SHOULD make everyone here sick just as much as Detroit, Chicago and NYC turning into shitholes. But by all means lets shit on each other about what happened over 150 years ago. ETA: This is what ya boy fought for. Attached File |
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An all powerful overreaching centralized government ran by nefarious powers. Enjoy your victory!
If one has the personal initiative and intellectual capacity, please read The Corwin Amendment and Lincoln’s statement about it, then get back with me about slavery. |
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Quoted: “We don’t say much till….” If southerners on here could go two days without bringing up the civil war I’d probably die of shock. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Yeah, we still hurting from that sum-bitch. Japan had an entire generation wiped out, with cities reduced to ash by napalm and nuclear fire, and they still whine less than Southerners. Well the Japanese were in the wrong. We don’t say much till Yankees start talking out their ass. “We don’t say much till….” If southerners on here could go two days without bringing up the civil war I’d probably die of shock. Attached File |
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Quoted: The "south" you're poking fun at doesn't exist anymore. Hasn't for a LONG time. "Gone With the Wind" was fiction. Atlanta, Memphis, Birmingham, etc are and have been shitholes for at least 3 generations. It SHOULD make everyone here sick just as much as Detroit, Chicago and NYC turning into shitholes. But by all means lets shit on each other about what happened over 150 years ago. ETA: This is what ya boy fought for.https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/439676/download__7__jpg-3215474.JPG View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: You too can own the matches that burned The South! https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/xkQAAOSwH21fR8rG/s-l400.jpg The "south" you're poking fun at doesn't exist anymore. Hasn't for a LONG time. "Gone With the Wind" was fiction. Atlanta, Memphis, Birmingham, etc are and have been shitholes for at least 3 generations. It SHOULD make everyone here sick just as much as Detroit, Chicago and NYC turning into shitholes. But by all means lets shit on each other about what happened over 150 years ago. ETA: This is what ya boy fought for.https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/439676/download__7__jpg-3215474.JPG JFC. Can't even make a tasteless joke without offending a snowflake. |
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Quoted: What happened at the Andersonville POW camp is a big reason why Northerns hated the South for many years after the war. But no, let's just sweep that under the rug and pretend it didn't happen. Sure. View Quote I drove past Andersonville going to the farm the other day. Andersonville was bad but one thing about Andersonville, is that Commander Henry Wirz was tried and hung for his actions. How many from the North were held accountable for atrocities? I am not excusing Wirz's actions or any others who committed atrocities. |
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Quoted: “We don’t say much till….” If southerners on here could go two days without bringing up the civil war I’d probably die of shock. View Quote Attached File |
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Quoted: Funny. Reminds me a lot of Camp Rathbun. Camp Rathbun at Elmira, N.Y., where thousands rebel soldiers died of disease and cold. Known among its 12,000 inmates as “Hellmira,” the camp posted a mortality rate of 25 percent. But of course it's not politically correct to make a feature film out of that one, is it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: What happened at the Andersonville POW camp is a big reason why Northerns hated the South for many years after the war. But no, let's just sweep that under the rug and pretend it didn't happen. Sure. Funny. Reminds me a lot of Camp Rathbun. Camp Rathbun at Elmira, N.Y., where thousands rebel soldiers died of disease and cold. Known among its 12,000 inmates as “Hellmira,” the camp posted a mortality rate of 25 percent. But of course it's not politically correct to make a feature film out of that one, is it. 13,000+ or 28% of the Union soldiers held at Andersonville died due to deplorable conditions and cruelty. This tit-for-tat, north vs south argument is poor form given none of us were alive during the war. For whatever reason people seem to want to preserve animosity more than the actual history. |
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Quoted: An all powerful overreaching centralized government ran by nefarious powers. Enjoy your victory! If one has the personal initiative and intellectual capacity, please read The Corwin Amendment and Lincoln's statement about it, then get back with me about slavery. View Quote It certainly would not be a bastion of liberty. |
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Quoted: There is no difference. Both are emotionally driven temper tantrums from immature people. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: There is a big difference between buying something to destroy it and destroying let’s say a Robert E Lee statue standing in a public square. One is principle putting your money where your mouth is and the other is terrorism. There is no difference. Both are emotionally driven temper tantrums from immature people. Well, that is just a low post count trolls' opinion. Paying for and destroying something is not a temper tantrum it is a calculated move putting one's money where their mouth is. |
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