GabonX wrote:Counting slaves as three fifths of a person gave the states additional voting power. How exactly did giving slave states increased legislative power act to bring about the end of slavery?
My view is that it didn't.
It decreased the amount of power that the southern states would have had in the House of Reps had slaves been counted as a full person. I won't harass you about this because I see you're set in your view. Perhaps it's just something you can ponder over time and change your mind on. I know I've had views about history that I've changed, but it never happened overnight. If not, that's no biggie either. I respect your right to disagree
DangerBoy wrote:They had to invent other laws to protect it with latitude lines as the country expanded westward.
GabonX wrote:This has nothing to do with the 3/5ths compromise.
What I was talking about was the fact that the Congress had to pass things like the Missouri Compromise. They did this because they (the southern states) couldn't get their agenda through the House.
DangerBoy wrote:Obviously, it took presidential leadership to end it once and for all, but you see how the founders were limiting slaveholders' power in the House of Representatives, right?
GabonX wrote:I don't see that at all..
I see the exact opposite.
Well, if that's not the case then the Civil War should've happened before Lincoln. But like I said, I must respect your right to disagree on something like that. It's fun to argue the wouldas, shouldas, and couldas.
keyborn wrote:As far as the secession of the Southern states goes, the issue wasn't about representation in the House of Representatives at all. At the beginning of the Civil War, there were about 22 million people in the North and about 9 million people in the South. Of the 9 million in the South, about 4 million were slaves. Count 100% of those slaves, and you still have an overwhelming majority of northern representation in the House. The issue was the balance of power in the Senate. The South was outvoted in the Senate on every bill concerning slavery or states' rights, and when Lincoln was elected, the South felt that the country had elected an abolitionist, and that they no longer had a voice in the national government.
I'll have to think this over. Everything I've read on our system of government says that the Senate was where all states had equal power, and this was where the slaveholding states would be on equal ground with the free states. It would be the House of Representatives where the south would've benefitted from counting slaves as a full person.