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Editorial
September 20, 1861
The Athens Post
Athens, Mcminn County, Tennessee
What is this article about?
The editorial condemns Southern profiteers exploiting wartime shortages for exorbitant profits on soldiers' clothing and civilian necessities, comparing them to Yankee contractors and biblical Judas, urging legal punishment and moral outrage.
OCR Quality
95%
Excellent
Full Text
Scoundrels.
We are mortified beyond expression, says the Mobile Advertiser and Register, to remark that there are men in the South who in this war of independence find the dictates of selfish interest stronger than that of patriotism to a degree which is only not criminal in the popular understanding because there is no law that makes it amenable to criminal statute. The Richmond papers state that certain persons have secured in advance the product of a number of mills which the government chiefly relied on for furnishing the cloth for the manufacture of winter clothing for our soldiers at the Confederate factory in that city, and now hold their bargains, demanding an exorbitant profit on the prices of fabrics.
Ere long the law to punish such offenses will be enacted, if the State only contemplates that human nature would assume so degraded a phase. The act—whether committed by native Southerners, or merely men in the South, we know not—is worthy the Yankee contractors who are remorselessly sucking the lifeblood of the Lincoln administration, and to sympathetic fellowship with whom they should be despatched without delay.
Their offense of praying on the necessities of Government is only a more magnificent phase of that of less pretentious scoundrels at many points in the South, who pocket exultingly the vile profits accruing from preying on the necessities of the people.
These small-change plunderers and traitors to the spirit of patriotism which they affect, recreants to morality and standing disgracers of the country of which they are or must soon become citizens or leave, are everywhere practising their petty pillage upon soldiers, and absent soldiers' wives and children, and upon all; securing monopolies of necessaries in local markets that they may exact exorbitant profits: playing into each other's hands that they may force necessary articles up to a fictitious valuation which will enable them to make cent. per cent.; depreciating the credit of our patriot government by shaving its currency; and practising all the unhallowed tricks of trade and finance which will enable them to wring a few more cents from the ill provided purses of the needy.
We have no patience to discuss the turpitude of the creatures who coin the necessities of the people into profits for themselves; who give a dollar to a Volunteer Aid Society while they extort an hundred from the people; who, in these fearful times, guage their profit on merchandise not by the cost, but by the necessity which compels the people to have it: who unblushingly continue their practices simply because there is no law to inhibit; who dare to walk out before their fellow men, and in the blessed sunlight of heaven, without a trembling terror that a bolt will fall from the just arm of the Ruler of its azuro heights to punish their iniquity as it exists before Him, their country and their fellows. Judas sold the Lord of Heaven for a price, and is it strange that there should be other Judases to sell their own worthless selves to Satan for a price? Let them go to their purchaser.
We are mortified beyond expression, says the Mobile Advertiser and Register, to remark that there are men in the South who in this war of independence find the dictates of selfish interest stronger than that of patriotism to a degree which is only not criminal in the popular understanding because there is no law that makes it amenable to criminal statute. The Richmond papers state that certain persons have secured in advance the product of a number of mills which the government chiefly relied on for furnishing the cloth for the manufacture of winter clothing for our soldiers at the Confederate factory in that city, and now hold their bargains, demanding an exorbitant profit on the prices of fabrics.
Ere long the law to punish such offenses will be enacted, if the State only contemplates that human nature would assume so degraded a phase. The act—whether committed by native Southerners, or merely men in the South, we know not—is worthy the Yankee contractors who are remorselessly sucking the lifeblood of the Lincoln administration, and to sympathetic fellowship with whom they should be despatched without delay.
Their offense of praying on the necessities of Government is only a more magnificent phase of that of less pretentious scoundrels at many points in the South, who pocket exultingly the vile profits accruing from preying on the necessities of the people.
These small-change plunderers and traitors to the spirit of patriotism which they affect, recreants to morality and standing disgracers of the country of which they are or must soon become citizens or leave, are everywhere practising their petty pillage upon soldiers, and absent soldiers' wives and children, and upon all; securing monopolies of necessaries in local markets that they may exact exorbitant profits: playing into each other's hands that they may force necessary articles up to a fictitious valuation which will enable them to make cent. per cent.; depreciating the credit of our patriot government by shaving its currency; and practising all the unhallowed tricks of trade and finance which will enable them to wring a few more cents from the ill provided purses of the needy.
We have no patience to discuss the turpitude of the creatures who coin the necessities of the people into profits for themselves; who give a dollar to a Volunteer Aid Society while they extort an hundred from the people; who, in these fearful times, guage their profit on merchandise not by the cost, but by the necessity which compels the people to have it: who unblushingly continue their practices simply because there is no law to inhibit; who dare to walk out before their fellow men, and in the blessed sunlight of heaven, without a trembling terror that a bolt will fall from the just arm of the Ruler of its azuro heights to punish their iniquity as it exists before Him, their country and their fellows. Judas sold the Lord of Heaven for a price, and is it strange that there should be other Judases to sell their own worthless selves to Satan for a price? Let them go to their purchaser.
What sub-type of article is it?
Moral Or Religious
Economic Policy
War Or Peace
What keywords are associated?
Profiteering
Wartime Exploitation
Southern Scoundrels
Patriotism Betrayal
Moral Condemnation
Confederate Soldiers
Economic Tricks
What entities or persons were involved?
Mobile Advertiser And Register
Richmond Papers
Yankee Contractors
Lincoln Administration
Judas
Editorial Details
Primary Topic
Condemnation Of Wartime Profiteers In The South
Stance / Tone
Strongly Condemnatory And Moralistic
Key Figures
Mobile Advertiser And Register
Richmond Papers
Yankee Contractors
Lincoln Administration
Judas
Key Arguments
Selfish Interests Override Patriotism In Wartime
Profiteering On Soldiers' Clothing Supplies Is Nearly Criminal
Laws Should Be Enacted To Punish Such Offenses
Similar To Yankee Contractors Exploiting Their Government
Small Scale Scoundrels Prey On Civilians And Soldiers For Exorbitant Profits
They Depreciate Government Currency And Use Trade Tricks
They Extort Based On Necessity, Not Cost
Moral Turpitude Compared To Judas Selling Out For Profit