Why the South was wrong
From Justin Taylor:

I have been enjoying Allen Guelzo’s new book Fateful Lightning: A New History of the Civil War and Reconstruction (Oxford University Press, 2012).
The book’s description gives a nice overview of its distinctiveness: “In Fateful Lightning,
two-time Lincoln Prize-winning historian Allen C. Guelzo offers a
marvelous portrait of the Civil War and its era, covering not only the
major figures and epic battles, but also politics, religion, gender,
race, diplomacy, and technology. And unlike other surveys of the Civil
War era, it extends the reader’s vista to include the postwar
Reconstruction period and discusses the modern-day legacy of the Civil
War in American literature and popular culture. Guelzo also puts the
conflict in a global perspective, underscoring Americans’ acute sense of
the vulnerability of their republic in a world of monarchies. He
examines the strategy, the tactics, and especially the logistics of the
Civil War and brings the most recent historical thinking to bear on
emancipation, the presidency and the war powers, the blockade and
international law, and the role of intellectuals, North and South.”
On his Thinking in Public podcast, Albert Mohler had a good conversation with Guelzo. You can read the transcript or listen to the audio.
Here was an interesting exchange from their conversation on whether
or not the South or the North had better arguments (apart from slavery)
regarding the relationship between state rights and federalism.
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Mohler: Who had the better argument in that particular debate? Not in
terms of what the preferred outcome might have been in terms of the war
and its aftermath, but just in terms of the argument about the essence
of the American system of a republican government going back to the
early nineteenth century into the early constitutional era. Did the
Southerners have the better argument or did the North?
Guelzo: I don’t think the southerners did. I think that the American
union as a federation of states was intended to be equipoise between
entirely sovereign entities and an entirely centralized homogenous
government. The idea being that the states were one more example of a
system of checks and balances that were worked into the constitution. A
check and a balance is supposed to be existing in relationship with
another entity, which in this case was to be the federal government. It
was not supposed to be something that led to the very destruction and
break-up of the government, and I think that is illustrated in a number
of ways in the constitution itself.
One is that the constitution contains no reversion clause. There is
no description within the constitution about what to do in case of
disaster, catastrophe, or flood or something else. There is no little
glass to break marked, “Secession: This is how you terminate the
constitution.” It is just not there.
The other thing that is in the very warp and woof of the constitution
is the way that the powers of the states are described with
relationship to the federal government in Article 1, Section 10, in
which the states, the constitution makes very clear, do not have the
power to coin money, the power to keep permanent standing armies and
navies, to conduct diplomatic relations. By the time you get down to the
end of that list, we are not talking about the kind of sovereignty
residing in the states, that is the same kind of sovereignty that an
independent country has where a member of an existing state has, coming
into a federation with others. It was a very different kind of
federation than let’s say, the European Union today.
Now, beyond that, there are at least two other considerations that mitigate against the southerner’s argument.
One is the fact that the federal government itself, while it was
composed in 1787 of representatives of various states, most of the
states that were in existence at the time of the Civil War, had in fact
been creations of the federal government. In other words, they were the
states carved out of western territories that had been acquired by the
United States. Those states didn’t have a prior independent existence,
so to claim that they had in fact a level of sovereignty that permitted
them to become independent was really begging most of the question that
was involved in the secession.
Then the other thing was the practical sense that, suppose the
southerners did secede. Where would they go exactly? There would still
be southerners looking across the Ohio River at northerners or across
the Potomac River, and what would be the result of that? Well, they
would beggar each other through trade wars, and up and down the
Mississippi, there would be trade wars even more violent. If that was
the case, then why? Why secede at all? Because you would only be making
yourself poorer in the process. There was no practical way that
southerners could simply take their bat and ball and go someplace else.
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