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1856 Election -- An Explanatory Correction January 24, 2021 By Anna Von Reitz

Ed Movius
Ed Movius - 277 Views
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Published on 26 Jan 2021 / In News and Politics

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1856 Election -- An Explanatory Correction January 24, 2021 By Anna Von Reitz

Franklin Pierce was the seated President of the United States Federal Republic in 1856. This is the American Federal Republic we are talking about, not "the United States" Municipal Government run by the Pope and Friends.
Pierce was not re-nominated for a second term by his own (Democratic) Political Party, and so Pierce was replaced by another Democrat candidate, James Buchanan, in the November Election of 1856.
I was incorrect in the earlier article, "Situation Report: 24 January 2021", when I called Pierce the last lawfully elected President of our country, and said he was elected in 1856. Pierce was actually elected in 1852 and shut out of the election in 1856.
Franklin Pierce didn't actually support slavery as an institution, but he recognized the sovereignty of the Southern States--- and their right to conduct their business (and slavery was part of their business and economy) as they saw fit. Thus, he was the last President to uphold and enforce the constitutional limits on federal power. And that is what I am trying to get at.
Every other President from Buchanan onward has in fact trespassed on the sovereignty of the States and the people of this country, and to a greater or lesser extent, has committed treason against us.
This issue of individual State sovereignty within their borders is the separate, underlying, and far more important issue that underlies the Civil War. It still hasn't been resolved to this day.
The States had long agreed to act together in international and global politics, but they never agreed to sacrifice their individual economic interests to any federal authority -- and that is what sparked the conflict.
No doubt that some of what followed was motivated by anti-slavery sentiments, but perhaps a great deal more of it was prompted by the British Parliament's investments in Egyptian cotton and the ability of American cotton producers to still undercut them in the European markets.
Slavery gave the Americans a competitive edge that the Brits and their American Tory supporters objected to for economic reasons.
Pierce stood in their way and stood up for State's rights; Buchanan was a King's Man and used the divisive moral issue of slavery as a smoke screen to evade both the constitutional limitations and the economic motivations involved.
Everything since Buchanan has served to enrich foreign interests and erode the limits on Federal power that our Forefathers clearly mandated and intended.

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