Hello,
JOAN, you made a very astute comment in Post #81 about southern congressmen and also about states rights. Would you agree that as far as senators go we see the same old system, the same senators from the same states? Obviously they are bringing in money for their constituents, loads of earmarks. I watch the news and see some faces that I’m sure have been there for 30 some years or more. One recent example is Ted Kennedy even if he is well regarded. I remember him as a very young man on that bridge.
The states believed that the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution gave them the right to secede, the right to go to war, the right to be independent. See:
http://thomaslegion.net/secessionofsouthernstatesandtheamericancivilwar.htmlSo, their state House of Representative and their Senate vote on it? I wonder if there were many dissenting votes, anyone know?
That article says that even today the subject of Secession is a very heated one. I would love to hear that debate.
As is states rights on other subjects that
LUCKY AND PAT both remarked about.
But as I want about my work today, I thought about the many “ifs” connected to this war and as I was on the Web I looked up Robert E. Lee. Perhaps if he taken command of the Union Army as Lincoln requested, things might have been different?
So many interesting comments all of you have made. Come more often,
JONATHAN, don’t get distracted, spend a pleasant hour with the book and us. We appreciate your comments, so well thought out.
How interesting,
JEAN, I have never heard of Women’s Way, but we can use all the help we get. I’m not sure that this book is a good example of Lincoln’s attitude toward women, what do the rest of you think? He was such a political animal (as Obama seems to be), but he loved his children dearly and spent time with them. Mary seemed to me to be a “plague” (for lack of a better word) as far as Lincoln was concerned, but perhaps I am wrong.
We read (pgs.124-5) from letters he wrote to Mary. He mentions her headaches, her hindrance of his business, her problems with other folks, but Goodwin states that the letters were also full of expressions of longing, both for her company and perhaps, intimacy.
Michelle Obama, living in a period of history where women of her education and prominence, can just about choose what she wishes to do. She could probably have a great impact on anything she wishes to engage in; I think she has mentioned working with people in the District to better their lives.
I am thinking -- thinking -- of other presidents' wives; one stands out, Ladybird Johnson, and her beautification program for the country. It was a great improvement I thought and it was successful. Do you know that our downtown Columbus, Ohio does not allow billboards anywhere, in fact we see very few billboards anywhere. Do you?
What do you think?