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  • I'm not too knowledgeable of Buchanan's role specifically in the events leading up to the war, and I'm not asking this as some attempt to defend him, but so many times I've read something along the lines of "Buchanan consistently ranks at/near the bottom because of his failure to find a compromise to prevent the Civil War".

    Was there really a compromise to be had in regard to slavery? What would that have been? Let some states peacefully secede because the whole country couldn't agree on slavery? Set up some legal guidelines/restrictions on slavery if they stay in the Union?

    I can't see how anyone in office at that time, Buchanan or not, would've avoided a war without allowing slavery to continue. I'm sure there are Constitutional experts out there that could explain how secession could work when there are significant differences amongst major segments of the population. But the conversation is different when you're talking about inbred rednecks that are willing to die for their "right" to own other people.

    So seriously, what compromise was this poor douche supposed to pull out of his ass?

    • The thing is that compromise had worked for the past few decades simply by both pro-and-anti-slavery advocates trying not to upset the delicate balance of power. Buchanan was a staunch pro-slavery ideologue, and spent his entire administration doing his best to strengthen the South, which meant that when Lincoln was elected, the South felt like they had lost more than ever (especially since Buchanan was instrumental in the Dredd Scott decision which effectively legalized slavery nationwide). Wiki has a good overview on his presidency.

      • Compromise only "worked" to avoid war, though. It didn't work too well for the slaves. I guess my question really should've been...was slavery so firmly established as a "right" by this point that war was inevitable if slavery in the US was to end? If Buchanan had worked out some new compromise, it wouldn't have been a permanent solution. My guess is that it would've meant a delayed, but bloodier war because of an even stronger sense of entitlement from the South.

        • Compromise only “worked” to avoid war, though. It didn’t work too well for the slaves.

          Oh, yeah, no argument there.

          was slavery so firmly established as a “right” by this point that war was inevitable if slavery in the US was to end?

          Ha. That's the million-dollar question. Generally, in the modern day we think "Yes", but at the time, it was still expected by some corners of society, both pro-and-anti-slavery, that slavery could be allowed to die a slow death of economic uncompetitiveness. And it was certainly economically uncompetitive in the long run. The industrial revolution was in full swing, and innovations in agriculture were increasingly creating demand for skilled (or semi-skilled) motivated free labor on farms for intensive agriculture practices.

          If Buchanan had worked out some new compromise, it wouldn’t have been a permanent solution. My guess is that it would’ve meant a delayed, but bloodier war because of an even stronger sense of entitlement from the South.

          Well, a big part was that slavery, before Buchanan, had effectively been 'hemmed in' to the South, with the new Western states being largely free soil. Combined with the rapidly industrializing North growing in population and economic capacity relative to the South, the South was in a losing position. Delays suited the average slaveowners who didn't want to force the issue and just wanted to gorge themselves on the benefits of brutal oppression while they could, but threatened the viability of slavery in the long-run.

          Even many anti-slavery types like Lincoln, at the time, hewed to the idea that it would be less bloody and more agreeable to all parties (except the slaves, who cared about them? It was a horrifically racist time) to 'wait out' slavery, which seemed destined to die by the rapid improvement of industrial capital and the need for an educated and motivated workforce (which American slavery, of course, could not produce, as it rested wholly on the creation of not just an unfree class of peoples, but an unfree, underskilled, and brutalized class of peoples)

          That may have been realistic (if a grim decision considering the state of slavery in the South), or it may have been fancy, but either way, delays were generally more a win for anti-slavery forces, rather than pro-slavery forces, who were trapped in a weakening position absent government intervention. Every year that passed meant that free states became more populous, richer, and more ardently anti-slavery, while in the South, exploitation of the system of slave labor was near-max-capacity. It needed land to expand its economy by any significant degree - or a change in their 'peculiar way of life', which they were not willing to do.

    • You're right. People asking for a comprimise 160 years too late forget the missouri compromise, bleeding kansas, the Lecompton crisis and John Brown's raids. Slavery and slave states had to continually expand in order to remain economically viable, there was no compromise that slave states could accept, which is why war was necessary. James Buchanon was a Democrat who represented Southern interests, he could not find a compromise because the South could not accept any compromise and remain competitive with the North.

      The reason Buchanon is the worst President is because he sees the Civil War coming and tries to set up a Southern victory during his administration.

    • I feel like I’d act like him if I were president. I don’t want this job, so I’m not gonna do this job. You all are fucked and I want to go home.

      Which is why I will never run for office, though I’m sure that I’ll be forced to do it like he was.

      Fuck.

      • Hello Emperor Tiberius.

        spoiler

        doesn't want the job of Emperor-heir

        Emperor Augustus says fine, fuck you, I won't give you the job

        happy for a few years

        Augustus comes back, says "Everyone else died, I need you to take the job"

        plead not to get the job

        Augustus forces you to divorce your wife who you love and take the job anyway

        become Emperor when Augustus dies

        immediately plead for the Senate to take up its ancient prerogatives and rule

        Senate refuses because they've all been replaced with lazy bootlicking bastards by Augustus before you came into power

        spend a few years being a miserable and sad bastard but doing your job competently

        finally get sick of it and retire to an island with near-zero communication with the outside world, because fuck everyone else

        word gets to you that the guy you left in charge is just slaughtering people in preparation for a coup

        go back to Rome reluctantly

        execute a bunch of the stupid bastards who let it happen

        die miserable, just as you lived

        • execute a bunch of the stupid bastards who let it happen

          die miserable, just as you lived

          Yeah that sounds like the end of my term of office.

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