Bomb#20
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You talk a lot about traitors, but who's a traitor to what country depends on point of view. If some poor white guy refused to fight to help his rich neighbor hold onto his slaves he'd have been considered a traitor to Virginia, and maybe hanged for it. If the South had won the war, afterwards Andrew Johnson would have been considered a traitor to Tennessee for not resigning from the Senate when his country seceded from the federation and for helping Lincoln make war on Tennessee, and maybe hanged for it, assuming the Confederacy were able to lay their hands on him.... Maybe if America used that same gumption to destroy all Confederate monuments and hang all the traitors back then we wouldn't have January 6, 2021, to talk about. ...The point is history shows it does not put things to rest.
It's legendary that before the war the customary phrase was "The United States are ..."; it was only after the war that people typically started saying "The United States is...". Your own quote says: "Whoever, owing allegiance to the United States, levies war against them...". "Them", not "it". So who owed allegiance to "them", and who was levying war against "them"? From the point of view of most southerners, a Virginian owed allegiance to Virginia and stopped owing allegiance to The United States the minute Virginia seceded from the federation. And what state was the south levying war against? From their point of view it was the north levying war against states; nearly all the fighting took place in the south; the southerners figured they were resisting a foreign invasion, not making war on any northern states. Some POW famously replied when his Union captors asked him why he was fighting so a rich man could keep his slaves, "Because you're down here." (And sure, Jefferson Davis, a member of the U.S. government who took an oath to uphold the Constitution, started the war by firing on United States troops. That makes Jefferson Davis a traitor. It doesn't make every Mississippian who shot back a traitor when a northern army showed up to take its revenge.)
There's precedent for all this. Once upon a time Scotland and England were two kingdoms with the same king -- the same Scottish king. (It only happened because Elizabeth died without having children and since royalty kept intermarrying the king of Scotland happened to be her cousin, so he inherited England.) From Scotland's point of view, no problem -- they had the same Scottish kings as ever, and what did they care if now their king owned some foreign country as well? Well, no problem until the English decided they were done with Scottish kings and hired some German king to become King of England. And, as an afterthought, Scotland. Then the Scots were all "Hang on. We agreed to have the same king as you because he was Scottish. No way did we agree to put Scotland under a German.", and the English were all "No backsies!" The squabble went on for decades and it all came to a head in 1746 on Culloden Moor, which is just about as far away from England as you can get and still be in Scotland. 7000 Scots under Bonnie Prince Charlie tried to put his father, who they saw as the rightful King of Scotland (and England), back on the Scottish throne.
Of course they lost -- rebelling against England and shooting so many redcoats you get your independence isn't something just anybody can pull off. Afterwards the 5000-odd survivors ran away, and then the redcoats hunted them down, because they weren't just defeated enemy troops going home after the war was over -- they were "traitors"(TM). A hundred-odd were executed; many more were sent to penal colonies and sold as slaves.
So was it right to hunt them down? Were those 7000 Scots really traitors to King George? Or were they patriots loyal to Scotland? It depends on point of view. Do you think they were traitors?