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| lady era 100mg female via
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07-31-2009 03:53 AM ET (US)
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If you have to do it, you might as well do it right.
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07-23-2009 01:16 PM ET (US)
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Deleted by topic administrator 07-25-2009 02:14 AM
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07-14-2009 04:57 PM ET (US)
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Lloyd Benson
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05-23-2008 02:09 PM ET (US)
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Q. What was the difference in the civil rights bill that was passed in 1866 versus the bill passed by congress in 1875?A. The CRB of 1866 was a response to the state conventions and legislation of Fall 1865, esp. the so-called Black Codes. Its emphasis was on basic civil liberties (jury, marriage, movement, due process) The CRB of 1875 involved public accommodations, esp. parks, schools, cemeteries, and transportation. See esp. Age of Lincoln, pp 274 and surrounding, and pp. 307-315ish. For the full texts, see http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/history/...n/civrights1866.htmand http://chnm.gmu.edu/courses/122/recon/civilrightsact.htmlthe latter was declared unconstitutional in the civil rights cases of 1883: http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/hist...R_0109_0003_ZS.html
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| Adrienne E. Robertson
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05-22-2008 10:28 PM ET (US)
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This is a tough question to address. Certainly there is something to 'get' about the Civil War, and thousands of people even go so far as to dress up and pretend like it all still exists. But it is difficult to understand all of the factors that led up to a nation so divided that there was nothing left to do but shed blood. Scholars might argue about that last statement, but really looking at all of the compromises and conflicts that had arisen in years before, it seems inevitable that conflict would arise. The world has learned much about war since Appomattox, yet we still seem able to find things to shoot other people over. I question whether this might mean that we learned nothing from the Civil War. In truth, I think this class has raised more questions than answers for me, but I would be worried if I had found all the answers.
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| Jordan Sorrells
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05-22-2008 03:11 PM ET (US)
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The study of personal experience during the Civil War in this class has fascinated me. The Ayers' book was a great example of the way in which normal citizens were greatly affected by the War, as so many people were involved on so many levels. I think Horwitz really opened my eyes to the reality that the memory of the Civil War, and even the values it was fought to uphold, on both sides, is still alive and well today. However, it wasn't always that the common soldier knew, or even cared what he was fighting for. He simply fought because it was his duty. The Civil War may have very well been a war of the governments and educated fought by the lower classes.
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| Stephen Ramey
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05-21-2008 04:46 PM ET (US)
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The Civil War was not one fought between static, diametrically opposed groups and certainly not one of static individuals. Throughout the course, we read about how people changed their views about slavery and union. For example, through the Ayers book, we saw how many Virginians went from staunch Unionists to strong supporters of the Confederate cause. Similarly, we could see how Lincoln modified his views on what rights African Americans should be given in America. Overall, I learned that there is no single answer as to what caused the Civil War or as to what its ultimate impact was. To learn the answers to these answers, we have to look to the community level or perhaps even to the individual level.
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| Jason Thomas
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05-21-2008 09:09 AM ET (US)
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In this class, I have gotten a different view on the Civil War. Through critical study new turning points in the era arose. I have examined the different perspectives on the civil war and discovered new perspectives. The readings in this class have raised new questions about individuals during the Civil War.
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| Virginia Cain
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05-21-2008 09:07 AM ET (US)
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The individual, super specific information we discussed revealed the war's impact in a different way than wide, textbook strokes. The Civil War affected individuals in diverse ways - Ayers demonstrated that it was the onset of the War itself that polarized people. As Horwitz showed, the War continues to be discussed and used today. Before the War, Americans were citizens of different states, through the War, they became citizens of different regions, and after the War, they became citizens of one country, albeit with strong (at least in the South) regional ties. In an interesting way, the Civil War actually served to unite Americans perhaps . . .
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| Kim Ewing
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05-21-2008 09:04 AM ET (US)
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This class has broadened my perspective on the Civil War. Growing up in Connecticut, I got a very different view of the war than the view in this class. Being in this class for a term, I realized how narrow that view actually was. Reading the Ayers and Horowitz books were the most helpful for me, because they let me see the scope of the impact of the war, both back in the 1860's and in the present day. Now, I have realized the huge impact that this war really had, and continues to have even to this day.
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| Anna Dauer
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05-21-2008 08:59 AM ET (US)
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It was difficult for all sides and opinions to be expressed and evenly represented before the war, during the war, and even after the war. Because so much of the population was literate, writings about the Civil War spawned almost a cult following in the years to follow it. So much passion and pain was lost in the Civil War that people for generations after wanted to remember its memory more than that of the Alamo. The War greatly impacted the lives of millions of Americans at the time, and forever after.
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| Michael McPhee
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05-21-2008 08:58 AM ET (US)
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I really liked how we looked at how the war really transformed the country and moved it in a new direction especially with economic development. With concerns to the Horowitz book "Condfederates in the Attic" you see how the popular memory of the war is different for everyone, and has various conotations. I think that this is one of the lasting effects of the war.
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| Samantha Hicks
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05-21-2008 08:43 AM ET (US)
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I found it interesting to look at this class in terms of the continued interest in the Civil War even hundreds of years after the war. Especially with the HOrwitz book was interesting to see other people's view of the war who grew up with different as well as similar viewpoints to mine and learn about the similar preconceptions that people of the Civil War also brought to the table.
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| David Hottel
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05-21-2008 08:43 AM ET (US)
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The American Civil War Era was not only a complicated time for the United States, it was one of its most embarrassing yet defining moments. Despite the fact that an entire race was looked upon as inferior, many of the wars implications has gone on to affect the present. Now, with civil rights laws and the public sentiment become one of equality, we can look back at the war from an educational perspective and learn from our mistakes. One thing that I did not realize coming into this course was the complexity of the issues involved. Every aspect of the Civil War is tied in with at least two other aspects of it. Very confusing! But I can see why so many historians devote their lives to find new things that we can learn from our past.
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| Sarah Ferguson
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05-21-2008 03:55 AM ET (US)
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The Civil War was a defining period in the life of the United States. The whole idea of a United States held in the balance during the years before, during, and after the Civil War. One thing I gained from the course was that the war era was very complicated! The books we have read in class, the online sites, and the lectures have made me realize that to polarize regions, people, political parties as one way is incorrect and leads to false interpretations. It was interesting to see how politics, and not strictly moral conviction, during the Civil War had a huge impact on the emancipation of the slaves. Also, Lees determination to continue to fight in the war, ultimately led to the complete emancipation of every slave. The illusion that was shattered for me by this course was that the North was not staunchly abolitionist and that not all Southerners agreed with slavery. The implications of the Civil War are great, and this class and its entire devotion to a few years in the history of the United States speaks to the Civil Wars magnitude and importance.
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| Brooks Wilder
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05-21-2008 12:33 AM ET (US)
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Despite all that I've learned this term, I still struggle with the same question that I had before the course began: how does a country fall so far that its citizens, who had fought together for freedom less than a hundred years before, begin to fight against each other? While the question of slavery, regional differences, the issue of states' rights, millenial expectations, etc. all played a part in the path to war, it is still hard for me to comprehend that the civil war went on for so long and to such extremes. However, I do believe that the civil war had a lasting affect on the United States. While I recognize that freedom for African Americans was not truly found after nor due to the civil war, I do believe that it was a long process which began with the civil war. Also, America became a stronger entity following the war, a solid nation of united states. The consequences of war are seen so clearly in the history of the civil war. The price was paid not only by the soldiers but by every citizen. I just hope that the lesson of the civil war will continue to be learned by all americans, and that we will never again fall so far away from unity.
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