I thank the delegate from Sequoyah and once again commend them on being one of the few amicable voices outside of the South as of late.
Judging on the words that we continue to see from several Northern States, they remain completely oblivious to why we are in the situation we are today.
Point #1: The slavery issue is virtually irrelevant. Once, the abolition of slavery, and twice the repeal of the fugitive slave laws went before the Congress and every time they were voted down in favor of preserving the status quo. South Carolina feels we have won this battle and viewed the Sequoyah proposal to be very agreeable and are even open to more progressive slave laws as instituted by Louisiana. Despite certain Northern States continuing, both before and after, to completely disregard enforcing these laws, we said little. In fact, the most said of these was when the Governor of Pennsylvania claimed that we were somehow trying to impose our laws on him and threatened to use force to defend from that. We never even asked him to do anything of the sort, let alone threaten invasion, although we would have appreciated his compliance with federal law.
Point #2: Our primary grievance, above all else, was the unconstitutional military build up in the North and the aggressive rhetoric targeted towards the South. As these States armed themselves, they accused Southern States of being bitter about an election that they did not protest and recognized as lawful. As with the slavery issue, the Northern states were far more concerned with the election than we are. During the election, they accused us of seceding when our chosen candidate said nothing nor had any intentions of the sort. In the same vein, several Norterners threatened secession if Watkiss had won. The North's blatant ignorance of their own hypocrisy or unilateral agenda infuriates Southerners to no end. All of us, with states outside of the South, petitioned to end the military build up and we were completely ignored. In fact, the build up was escalated. While the North was offering some compromises on Slavery and Tariffs, they cared nothing about the South's primary concerns about the threat of their own well being against the hatred of certain Northern States.
Point #3: Texas was unforgiveable. The federal government attacked and killed innocent Americans for practicing their right to assemble and voice their opinion. Regardless of whether they were discussing secession, there is always some segment of the population somewhere calling for secession and/or the murder of the President but he doesn't send the U.S. Army into kill them. That goes against every facet of our values. Many Southern people now view the President as little more than a terrorist. Despite releasing some of the prisoners and pulling some troops out, the deed had already been done and every Southerner who had already been afraid of the antagonizing propaganda and militarism spewing forth from the North were scared for their lives, which brings me to Point #4.
Point #4: Tariffs. In addition to crippling the Southern economy, the consensus of many Southern States is that using the tariff money to invest in internal improvements, primarily in the North I may add, was unconstitutional. This was merely a disagreement that could've been rectified in Congress. Some states took it upon themselves to nullify the tariffs. I am here to represent South Carolina and I cannot speak for the others although I sympathize with their concerns. South Carolina nullified them after the proliferation of military expansion and aggressive rhetoric fired at South Carolina particularly. We sent our letter expressing our concern to the President which went not only completely ignored by him but was answered by the Northern States by escalating their military even more. South Carolina refused to allow tariffs in their ports go to fund States or a federal government that were threatening to attack us. Sure, the tariff initiative was signed by the Congress reducing tariffs but that no longer mattered at that point. Federal enforcement of the tariff law was passed in the same stroke while nothing had been even whispered about enforcing Northern State's noncompliance with the Fugitive Slave Laws. If the federal government had invaded Texas because its Legislature merely talked of secession, than we had no doubt in our mind that the federal government was invading South Carolina any day to institute martial law over the tariff issue. If anyone in the federal government had even acknowledged our primary concern at all, maybe we wouldn't have been so afraid of the militarism of the North. Since they did everything accept anything to do with our primary concerns, and in nearly every case merely stoked the fire, we were forced to leave the Union before they marched into town and turned us into federally run police state.
South Carolina does not wish to exist on its own nor a Conferation of Sovereing States outside of the Union but we simply cannot be part of a Union, whose primary goal is to defend each State and person of this nation, that not only displays little concern for the security of its States but even seems quite comfortable in threatening them itself. Regretably, until these issues are resolved, there can be no can be no compromise.