“No act of the Government of the United States prior to the secession of Georgia struck a blow at her constitutional liberty so fatal as the conscription act. . . . The conscription act not only disorganizes the State's military system, but it strips the State of her power of self-defense, and leaves her at the mercy of the centralized power. . . . I can find no power in the Confederate Constitution which authorizes the Congress of the Confederate States to drag the citizens of the States from their homes by force, and place them in the army.”
—Georgia Governor Joseph E. Brown, letter to Confederate President Jefferson Davis, 1862
Which of the following central conflicts of the Civil War era is most directly reflected in Governor Brown’s letter?
- The tension between the Confederate government’s need for centralized military mobilization and the Southern ideology of states' rightsCevap
- BThe debate over whether popular sovereignty should determine the legality of military drafts in newly organized western territories
- CThe disagreement over whether the Confederate conscription act violated the separation of powers defined in the United States Constitution
- DThe argument that the outbreak of the war was caused by immediate tariff disputes rather than deep-seated sectional divisions over slavery