Confederate Memorial at Arlington will be removed despite GOP opposition

The South had no intention of ending slavery, peacefully or otherwise.
They may have followed Lincoln's plan by him of buying slaves then shipping them to Africa and Central America and some islands. Abe sincerely saw blacks as inferior and believed with them gone, problems were over.
 
So you're too cold to fuck too, I thought it was just me. I'm in Florida now. Lots of fucking!
It is 40 outside and one imagines the females are inside staying warm.
 
They may have followed Lincoln's plan by him of buying slaves then shipping them to Africa and Central America and some islands. Abe sincerely saw blacks as inferior and believed with them gone, problems were over.
"may have"? You are one of those sick people up near Couer D'Alene, yeah.
 
I don’t. I embarrass you fuckwit clueless libturds. 👍

Go eat a bag of ducks, you pathetic faggot.
Do you realize that being a gullible cult member is not something to brag about?
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"may have"? You are one of those sick people up near Couer D'Alene, yeah.
Lincoln desired to return former slaves to Africa or other tropical regions, with their consent and the accord of the authorities of the country where they were to be settled. He repeated his support for colonization numerous times, including during the American Civil War.

Linconia - Wikipedia​

 
Lincoln desired to return former slaves to Africa or other tropical regions, with their consent and the accord of the authorities of the country where they were to be settled. He repeated his support for colonization numerous times, including during the American Civil War.

Linconia - Wikipedia

Earlier, yes, he explored the option, which he realized was not feasible. He changed his mind. Wikipedia is unacceptable.

Bing AI "Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of the United States, believed in colonization as a remedy for the gradual emancipation of the nation’s enslaved. While he strongly opposed the institution of slavery, he didn’t believe in racial equality, or that people of different races could successfully integrate. And unleashing nearly 4 million Black people into white American society—North or South—was a political nonstarter. So despite the fact that most Black Americans in the 1850s had been born on U.S. soil, Lincoln advocated shipping them to Central America, the Caribbean or “back” to Africa 1. In 1862, Lincoln signed a contract with Bernard Kock, an entrepreneur and Florida cotton planter, to use federal funds to relocate 5,000 formerly enslaved people from the United States to Île à Vache (“Cow Island”), a small, 20-square-mile island off the southwestern coast of Haiti. However, the plan proved disastrous 1.

So the South went to War, and Lincoln murdered the South.
 
Earlier, yes, he explored the option, which he realized was not feasible. He changed his mind. Wikipedia is unacceptable.

Bing AI "Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of the United States, believed in colonization as a remedy for the gradual emancipation of the nation’s enslaved. While he strongly opposed the institution of slavery, he didn’t believe in racial equality, or that people of different races could successfully integrate. And unleashing nearly 4 million Black people into white American society—North or South—was a political nonstarter. So despite the fact that most Black Americans in the 1850s had been born on U.S. soil, Lincoln advocated shipping them to Central America, the Caribbean or “back” to Africa 1. In 1862, Lincoln signed a contract with Bernard Kock, an entrepreneur and Florida cotton planter, to use federal funds to relocate 5,000 formerly enslaved people from the United States to Île à Vache (“Cow Island”), a small, 20-square-mile island off the southwestern coast of Haiti. However, the plan proved disastrous 1.

So the South went to War, and Lincoln murdered the South.
Well, in the first place, I learned of his plans in the book titled Lincoln, by Donald.

Destined to become a classic in American history and biography, David Herbert Donald’s Lincoln is a masterly account of how one man’s extraordinary political acumen steered the Union to victory in the Civil War, and of how his soaring rhetoric gave meaning to that agonizing struggle for nationhood and equality. This fully rounded biography of America’s sixteenth President is the product of Donald’s half-century of study of Lincoln and his times. In preparing it, Donald has drawn more extensively than any previous writer on Lincoln’s personal papers and those of his contemporaries, and he has taken full advantage of the voluminous newly discovered records of Lincoln’s legal practice. He presents his findings with the same literary skill and psychological understanding exhibited in his previous biographies, which have received two Pulitzer Prizes. Donald brilliantly traces Lincoln’s rise from humble origins in Kentucky to prominent positions in legal and political circles in Illinois, and then to the pinnacle of the presidency. He shows how, in all these roles, Lincoln repeatedly demonstrated his enormous capacity for growth, which enabled one of the least experienced and most poorly prepared men ever elected to high office to become a giant in the annals of American politics. Much more than a political biography, Donald’s Lincoln reveals the development of the future President’s character and shows how his private life helped to shape his public career. Donald’s biography is written from Lincoln’s point of view. Donald seats us behind the President’s desk, where we read the papers and reports he received and wrote, meet the politicians and generals and ordinary citizens who visited his office, and observe him evaluating the evidence before him and making the decisions that shaped modern America.


Amazon.com
 
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