The Election of 1860

If you wished, you could devote the rest of your life writing about Abraham Lincoln.  His election was the most significant of all time.  Many believed that his election would plunge the country into an inevitable civil war, yet they voted for him anyway.  The furor on both side was enormous and the chances of compromise was gone.  In 1860 the dominant party of the time was the Democratic Party, they met in Charleston, South Carolina to select a presidential candidate. The Southern delegates insisted that the party endorse a platform that guaranteed the rights of slaveholders in the territories. When the convention rejected the proposal, delegates from the deep South walked out. The remaining delegates reassembled six weeks later and selected Stephen Douglas as their candidate. Southern Democrats formed their own party and proceeded to choose John C. Breckinridge as their presidential nominee.

In May of 1860, the Constitutional Union Party, which consisted of conservative former Whigs, Know Nothings, and pro-Union Democrats nominated John Bell of Tennessee for President. This party platform denounced sectionalism and attempted to rally support for the Constitution and the Union. Meanwhile, the new Republican Party met in Chicago that May and recognized that the Democrat’s turmoil actually gave them a chance to take the election. They needed to select a candidate who could carry the North and win a majority of the Electoral College. To do that, the Republicans needed someone who could carry New Jersey, Illinois, Indiana and Pennsylvania — four important states that remained uncertain. There were plenty of potential candidates, but in the end Abraham Lincoln had emerged as the best choice. Lincoln had become the symbol of the frontier, hard work, the self-made man. His debates with Douglas had made him a national figure and the publication of those debates in early 1860 made him even better known. After the third ballot, he had the nomination for President.

Continue reading The Election of 1860

Rich TAkes! July 30, 2011

Rich TAkes!

~ a collection of links I found interesting lately ~

Dirty Spending Secrets

it is worse than you thought

Debt-Ceiling Chicken – Thomas Sowell

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New NASA Data Blow Gaping Hole In Global Warming Alarmism 

Mississippi NAACP | Voter Fraud : Prison

funny how it’s only the Dems who commit vote fraud

Rep. Paul Ryan Destroys Reid Bill in Blistering Speech;

‘Let’s Cover the Moon with Yogurt!’

I don’t even like yogurt

‪No Ties, No Draws and No Compromise: Republicans Can’t Cave on the Debt Ceiling‬‏ 

Zonation at it’s finest 

Continue reading Rich TAkes! July 30, 2011

RichTAkes! 071611

Rich TAkes!

~ a collection of links I found interesting lately ~

Dirty Spending Secrets

it is worse than you thought

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Ten  Planks of Communism

a link from 1999

‪Washington Could Learn a Lot from a Drug Addict‬‏

theyr’e on crack, aren’t they?

Continue reading RichTAkes! 071611

Rich TAkes! Firecracker Edition

Rich TAkes!

July 4, 1776

~ a collection of links I found interesting lately ~

Firecracker Edition, 2011 

Dirty Spending Secrets

it is worse than you thought

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THE DAILY PEN: CONGRESS KNEW OBAMA WAS INELIGIBLE…SIX YEARS BEFORE HE WAS ELECTED!

American Citizens’ Demand for Justice Against the Overthrow of the U.S. Constitution

Review & Outlook: A Stealth Tax Hike – WSJ.com

Adobe book editor positive: Obama certificate is phony

Harvard: July 4th Parades Are Right-Wing

 huh?

Continue reading Rich TAkes! Firecracker Edition

Compromises and Acts that led to The Civil War

This installment will cover the events and compromises that led to armed conflict and the secession of the southern states.

This country was founded upon the Articles of Confederation which were  designed to bring the states together and repel any threat of invasion by foreign powers.  If your state was threatened then all would join in the effort to repel the invaders.  The Revolutionary War was fought under this authority.  When our Founding Fathers gathered in 1787 to write the Constitution the most divisive issue was slavery.  The first compromise came when the Northwest Ordinance was adopted.  The future states of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Michigan were the northwest territory at that time.  The agreement was that this area would be slave free, and in the southern states, slavery would remain legal.  The Mission Statement of the Constitution was to “form a more perfect Union” however, the Constitution failed to address the 17% of the population who were slaves and would remain less than equal by law.

Continue reading Compromises and Acts that led to The Civil War

RichTAkes! June 28, 2011

Rich TAkes!

(You are entitled to your own opinions, you are not entitled to your own facts)

~ a collection of links I found interesting lately ~

June 28, 2011

Apple’s Final Cut Is Dead. Long Live Final Cut.

Professional Video Editors Weigh In on Final Cut Pro X

Apple’s complete re-write of Final Cut Pro. Easier to use, new much lower price point

Drawings show big changes for iPhone 5 | Crave – CNET

with a back to school late August or September release date?

Did White House approve Project Gunrunner?

Dirty Spending Secrets

it is worse than you thought

U.S. National Debt Clock : Real Time

U.S. funding for future promises lags by trillions

Friend Me on Facebook

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YouTube – B&R Remastered: September 2008

A look back at how government meddling in the real estate market got us into the mess that we are still faced with today

this is a must see

Senator Jim DeMint Warns Republicans on Debt Ceiling Vote: They Will Be ‘Gone’

Mexican troops cross into the United States at Bridge Two

Enforce our borders

Bill would freeze Obama’s power to grant illegals amnesty 

Enforce our laws

Obama’s ineligibility: Our Lexington and Concord moment is coming

YouTube – Ronald Reagan – Liberty State Park [Pt. 1]

YouTube – Ronald Reagan – Liberty State Park [Pt. 2]

Reagan’s hard-hitting speech on Labor Day, 1980 given with the Statue of Liberty in the background.

Just substitute Obama for every instance of Carter and it is still relevant today 

Continue reading RichTAkes! June 28, 2011