Topic > The Breakup of the Union - 841

In the years leading up to the Civil War, both the North and the South were at odds with each other, creating the three "triggers" for the war: bigotry over the issue of slavery , the Kansas-Nebraska Act, and the separation of the Democratic Party. With the North being against the enslavement of individuals and the South being for it, there was no real way to avoid confrontation. For the South, slavery was a form of sustenance, without submission the economy could significantly collapse if not disappear. In the North there were important ethical questions related to the question of subjugation. Extraordinary measures were taken to maintain and eliminate the subjugation and there was never a proper center for business. Despite the fact that there were many seemingly insignificant issues, the fundamental thing that divided these two states was slavery and flexibility for or against. With these significant extremes, for example, John Brown and Uncle Tom's Cabin, the South felt contempt for the danger Northerners posed against their supposed flexibilities. The more hatred advanced in the South, the more combative they were towards anything the Northerners did. The Northerners were irritated and this divided the Democrats on the issue of slavery and formed another Republican group, which included: Whigs, Free Soilers, Know Nothings and ex-Democrats and caused a division of segments and shortened the road to common war. Southerners detested the North's insubordination and began to wonder how to stay in the Union. ..... middle of paper ... individuals who were plotting conspiracies and selling their promises for a considerable period of time before 1860, and who would not stop before achieving their goals. The main thing that could have avoided the war could have been the recognition of slavery by the United States or the surrender by the United States of all the states and regions that it owned and that called itself the Confederacy. Since this may not have ended the subjugation, the answer is that there was no possibility of having a confrontation, a war. Submission was the problem, it was the reason. This was an established agreement by individuals who decided to secure servitude by selling out their relatives and rebelling - to secure submission, and not some legendary thought about "state's rights" on the basis that the main right they thought about it was the right to subjugate an alternative race.