When in the Course of Human Events

When in the Course of Human Events

by Charles Adams
Hardcover, 257 pages
Used Price: $8.00 (1 in stock) Condition Policy
"When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with one another, and to assume among the Powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laves of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect of the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation."

With these words, thirteen of the British colonies in North America declared independence from British rule. Eighty-five years later, adhering to principles articulated by their revolutionary forebears, the eleven Confederate States of America seceded from the United States, plunging the country into the bloodiest war of its history. Until the publication of this highly original book, most attempts to explain the origins of the American Civil War relied heavily on regional sympathies and mythology that the South abandoned the Union to maintain slavery while President Lincoln's primary goal was to preserve the nation. Prominent scholar Charles Adams challenges this traditional wisdom.

Using primary documents from both foreign and domestic observers, Adams makes a powerful and convincing case that the Southern states were legitimately exercising their political rights as expressed in the Declaration of Independence. Although conventional histories have taught generations of Americans that this was a war fought for lofty moral principles, Adams' eloquent history transcends simple Southern partisanship to show how the Civil War was primarily a battle over competing commercial interests, opposing interpretations of constitutional rights, and what English novelist Charles Dickens described as "a fiscal quarrel."

Working from the premise that "wars have seldom been justified," Adams argues that the Civil War was an avoidable humanitarian disaster that nearly destroyed American democracy. This bold and controversial book not only will change how historians think about the causes and prosecution of the Civil War but will place its powerful legacy into proper perspective.

Charles Adams, the world's leading scholar on the history of taxation, is the author of the best-selling books For Good and Evil, Those Dirty Rotten Taxes, and Fight, Flight, and Fraud.

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