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How Did The Civil War Preventable

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How Did The Civil War Preventable
If you take a look at America’s history, you will see that the deadliest war was the Civil War. Spanning over 4 years and 600,000 deaths, you may think that what was fought over was silly and that they could’ve simply prevented the war. The supposed “silly” thing that was fought over was slavery. Sure, maybe it could’ve been prevented if slavery wasn’t a big part of America, but it certainly was not preventable when it was an economic, political, and social issue. When slavery is the backbone for half of the country's economy and the villain for the other half, there really isn’t a solution to it.

One of the reasons why the civil war was unpreventable was due to economic differences. The south relied heavily on agricultural goods whilst the North relied on manufactured goods. The North’s biggest fear was having international goods become more popular than domestic goods. Due to that, the North had the United States place tariffs of 38% (45% for raw materials) on imported goods (Adams, 1828). Those tariffs only benefited the North as the South was never reliant
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3/8 Classwork states, “They believed that Lincoln was an anti-slavery proponent and in favor of Northern interests.” The South seceded from the USA (which started the war) because they believed Lincoln would’ve abolished slavery, therefore ending basically their whole economy; if Lincoln announced he wouldn’t abolish slavery the states most likely would’ve stayed. While that could’ve happened, it honestly would’ve led to the Civil War either way, as he would be known as a hypocrite. Lincoln famously stated, “I am naturally anti-slavery. If slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong. I can not remember when I did not so think, and feel.” If Lincoln ended up saying he wouldn’t abolish slavery it would out him as a sanctimonious person, consequently having both the North and South distrust

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