Every defender of Dixie and the Confederacy should be well-armed with facts and knowledge about Lincoln's criminal war on the South. Here is a list of topics on which we should all be well-read. Facts, references and authors will be recommended over the coming weeks.
Defending Dixie, Topics for Study
1. The legality of secession (secession was not and is not "treason"). Our ancestors were not "traitors," but you can't say the same for Lincoln and the Union Army.
2. The Cause of Lincoln's War on the South (Hint: It wasn't to free the slaves).
3. Lincoln and Fort Sumter: Put aside all that "first shot" nonsense -- Lincoln conspired with his cabinet to start the war at Fort Sumter by provoking the first shot for propaganda purposes. Who says so? Well his authorized biographers, for starters.
4. Lincoln's "Reign of Terror" and his complete trashing of the Constitution and the rule of law.
5. Slavery -- its origins and the North's enormous culpability for its existence in America
6. The Emancipation Proclamation -- a fraud of historical proportions -- it freed no slaves at all.
7. Andersonville Prison -- The high death rate of Union POWs was the result of Northern war policies, and the fact that Lincoln and Grant considered the Union POWs as expendable (Related subject: the framing and legal lynching of Prison commander Henry Wirz, who was innocent of the absurd charges).
8. Nathan Bedford Forrest and Fort Pillow. Yankee lies and the truth. I have a Lochlainn Seabrook on order that deals with this topic.
9. Nathan Bedford Forrest and the Ku Klux Klan -- The first Ku Klux Klan was not the modern race-hate organization that we have today. In fact, there is no connection between the two. Ignorant and dishonest Yankees and Southern scalawags try to conflate the two for propaganda purposes, but it won't wash.
10. Northern war crimes and atrocities -- It's time for Yankees and their supporters to come face to face with the abject tyranny, evil and criminality of the Northern invasion of the South. We want an official apology from Washington and an admission of guilt -- after 150 years, it is way overdue.
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