This has been a historical issue with, say, Quebec and Canada, the non-English previous countries and Great Britain, the non-Russian countries and the Soviet Union. It will probably continue to be an issue with the potential partition of Iraq and probably a lot of other Mid-east and African states that I don't know about.
Slavery was a serious enough moral issue to rally the North and a serious enough economic issue for Southern elites to rally the South, and continues to provide adequate justification for the Civil War. However, is there a general moral principle that distinguishes when a nation is working towards a national solution and when one region of a nation is imposing internal imperialism on another? Or to get back to the original question, is there such a thing as internal imperialism?
________________________________ Doug Henwood on Thu, April 8, 2010 1:32:04 PM:
On Apr 8, 2010, at 1:10 PM, SA wrote:
> But the point is that for the majority of the South's population, it wasn't one country. It was one group of states attacking another group of states. It was only called a Civil War in the North.
Well of course the South would say that. But I still don't see how one can call a central government's response to secession by a region that joined the nation by choice, not conquest, imperialism in the same sense as bombing a foreign country and/or changing its government. ___________________________________ http://mailman.lbo-talk.org/mailman/listinfo/lbo-talk