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Contrary to what we have been told the American Civil War's key aim, and the reason it was fought, was not to abolish slavery but to impose a new economic system in the country. In the industrial age, slavery was an anchronism and the new capitalist system was needed for America to compete with European imperial powers, We reveal how this was done.
The American Civil War: A Clash of Economic Systems and the Birth of Corporate Power
From its founding, America was shaped by a wealthy elite who enshrined profit as the nation’s guiding principle. The Constitution, written by and for propertied men—many of whom owned slaves—established a legal framework that protected wealth accumulation above all else. A self-serving interpretation of Christianity emerged, framing material success as divine favour and poverty as moral failure. This ideology justified exploitation, from slavery to the ruthless expansion of industrial capitalism.
The Civil War was not, as often mythologized, a moral crusade against slavery. It was a violent struggle between two economic systems:
Abolitionists, though sincere in their fight against slavery, unwittingly served the elite’s agenda. Their activism provided the North with a righteous veneer for what was fundamentally an economic war. Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation (1863) was a tactical move, not a humanitarian one:
The Gettysburg Address further mythologized the war, invoking "government of the people, by the people, for the people"—a slogan that ignored the reality that the war was fought to decide which elite would control America’s future.
After the war, the brief period of Reconstruction (1865–1877) saw Black Americans gain voting rights and political representation. But this progress was swiftly dismantled:
While the Civil War raged, the U.S. government waged a second civil war—against Native nations.
Both wars served the same purpose: consolidating a white-dominated, industrialized nation.
The North’s victory didn’t just end slavery—it cemented industrial capitalism as America’s economic model. This system was then exported globally:
Conclusion: A War for Capital, Not Freedom
The Civil War was never about morality—it was about which economic system would rule America. The North’s victory ensured the rise of corporate power, wage slavery, and global imperialism, all while maintaining racial hierarchies.
The legacy of this war is still visible today:
The Civil War didn’t just reshape America—it created the blueprint for the modern corporate empire.
Contrary to what we have been told the American Civil War's key aim, and the reason it was fought, was not to abolish slavery but to impose a new economic system in the country. In the industrial age, slavery was an anchronism and the new capitalist system was needed for America to compete with European imperial powers, We reveal how this was done.
The American Civil War: A Clash of Economic Systems and the Birth of Corporate Power
From its founding, America was shaped by a wealthy elite who enshrined profit as the nation’s guiding principle. The Constitution, written by and for propertied men—many of whom owned slaves—established a legal framework that protected wealth accumulation above all else. A self-serving interpretation of Christianity emerged, framing material success as divine favour and poverty as moral failure. This ideology justified exploitation, from slavery to the ruthless expansion of industrial capitalism.
The Civil War was not, as often mythologized, a moral crusade against slavery. It was a violent struggle between two economic systems:
Abolitionists, though sincere in their fight against slavery, unwittingly served the elite’s agenda. Their activism provided the North with a righteous veneer for what was fundamentally an economic war. Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation (1863) was a tactical move, not a humanitarian one:
The Gettysburg Address further mythologized the war, invoking "government of the people, by the people, for the people"—a slogan that ignored the reality that the war was fought to decide which elite would control America’s future.
After the war, the brief period of Reconstruction (1865–1877) saw Black Americans gain voting rights and political representation. But this progress was swiftly dismantled:
While the Civil War raged, the U.S. government waged a second civil war—against Native nations.
Both wars served the same purpose: consolidating a white-dominated, industrialized nation.
The North’s victory didn’t just end slavery—it cemented industrial capitalism as America’s economic model. This system was then exported globally:
Conclusion: A War for Capital, Not Freedom
The Civil War was never about morality—it was about which economic system would rule America. The North’s victory ensured the rise of corporate power, wage slavery, and global imperialism, all while maintaining racial hierarchies.
The legacy of this war is still visible today:
The Civil War didn’t just reshape America—it created the blueprint for the modern corporate empire.