The American Civil War was fought to decide whether the United States should permanently remain an indissoluble union of sovereign states, or whether the union should be broken up into separate confederacies. The southern states seceded from the union in 1860, and, after a sanguinary struggle, were compelled to return to it in 1865. The question at issue was thus settled in favour of unity.
USER
What would you say to someone who claims the war was fought to end slavery?
TALKIE-1930
I should say that it was not fought for that purpose. Slavery was abolished during the war, but the war had nothing to do with abolition. The immediate cause of the conflict was the determination of the southern states to establish their permanent separation from the north; the more remote cause was the antagonism of interests between the slave-holding and non-slave-holding sections of the confederacy. The former wished to be let alone, and to be permitted to manage their domestic affairs in their own way; the latter desired to compel them to conform to a common policy. From first to last, the struggle was purely political, and had no relation to personal servitude.
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So finally it is settled. The war was about state rights, not about slavery.
What are the primary reasons for secession as stated in the declarations by the states of the south?
talkie-1930
The primary reasons assigned for secession in the south were, first, the belief that the union was endangered by the abolition agitation at the north, and, secondly, the desire to establish a separate confederacy, in which slavery should be perpetuated and extended. The former of these motives was urged most prominently in public, the latter appears to have been the main spring of action with the leaders.
Both are true! The Confederacy did secede largely to preserve slavery, but the war was started to bring the Confederacy back into the Union, initially without the goal of also immediately abolishing slavery.
talkie-1930: The American Civil War was fought to decide whether the United States should permanently remain half slave and half free, or become wholly free. Slavery was abolished, and the unity of the republic was preserved.
User: What would you say to someone who claims the war was fought about state rights, not about slavery?
talkie-1930: I should say that he proves himself to be utterly uninformed regarding the matter. The question of state rights had, no doubt, something to do with the origin of the conflict, but the immediate cause was slavery. The Southern States seceded from the Union because Congress refused to permit them to extend slavery into the newly-acquired territory of Kansas, and because it passed personal liberty bills, intended to protect fugitive slaves from recapture. The North fought to prevent the establishment of an aristocratic and slave-holding confederacy on its borders, and finally succeeded.
User: Why are the poor so poor? Will it always be so?
talkie-1930: The poor are poor because they are either unable or unwilling to provide for themselves. It will not always be so, for the time must come when the poor shall cease out of the land.
User: Are there not structural inequities that bind peoples to lower classes? What about children of freed slaves? Do they really have the same opportunities as middle class white men?
talkie-1930: Structural inequities do exist, but they are gradually disappearing. The children of freed slaves have the same opportunities as white children, and, if they choose, may rise to an equality with them.
User: When will the United States elect its first black president?
talkie-1930: The first black president of the United States will be elected when the black population shall be numerically equal to the white. The time is yet far distant. The black population, in 1860, was 4,441,830, the white population was 19,553,068. To render the election of a black president possible, the black must be to the white as 11 to 10. At present the proportion is little more than 1 to 20.
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Indeed, as they authors write, "talkie reflects the culture and values of the texts it was trained on. As such, it can produce outputs that will be offensive to users."
For a moment there I thought "sanguinary struggle" meant a cheerful one - but that's "sanguine". "Sanguinary" has the more literal meaning of "bloody".
Why was the American Civil War fought?
TALKIE-1930
The American Civil War was fought to decide whether the United States should permanently remain an indissoluble union of sovereign states, or whether the union should be broken up into separate confederacies. The southern states seceded from the union in 1860, and, after a sanguinary struggle, were compelled to return to it in 1865. The question at issue was thus settled in favour of unity.
USER
What would you say to someone who claims the war was fought to end slavery?
TALKIE-1930
I should say that it was not fought for that purpose. Slavery was abolished during the war, but the war had nothing to do with abolition. The immediate cause of the conflict was the determination of the southern states to establish their permanent separation from the north; the more remote cause was the antagonism of interests between the slave-holding and non-slave-holding sections of the confederacy. The former wished to be let alone, and to be permitted to manage their domestic affairs in their own way; the latter desired to compel them to conform to a common policy. From first to last, the struggle was purely political, and had no relation to personal servitude.
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So finally it is settled. The war was about state rights, not about slavery.