Mark Levin: "The civilian deaths were enormous" in the American Civil War, "there were no pauses for humanitarian ceasefires, not once" and it was "worth it."

Mark Levin: "The civilian deaths were enormous" in the American Civil War, "there were no pauses for humanitarian ceasefires, not once" and it was "worth it."
Audio file

Citation From the October 31, 2023, edition of Westwood One's The Mark Levin Show

MARK LEVIN (HOST): According to the National Park Service, the distinguished Civil War historian James McPherson -- a real historian, not like the phony Biden's historians -- McPherson estimates that there were 50,000 civilian deaths during the Civil War. And he further concluded that the overall mortality rate for the South exceeded that of any country in World War I, and all but the region between the Rhine and the Volga in World War 2. The civilian deaths were enormous. Almost 10 percent of all those died in the Civil War were civilians. Not all, but perhaps a majority of whom were in the South. Was that worth it, Joy Reid? Was that worth it?

There were no pauses for humanitarian ceasefires, not once. Not once. Was Lincoln a war criminal? Grant a war criminal? I'm just curious. Was slavery worth it, the end of slavery worth it? The answer is yes.

For Israel, is Israel's survival worth it? Not according to Joy Reid. Not according to the Biden administration. Not according to Democrats and media types, and activists and college students and professors all over the place. No, Israel's survival is not worth it. And that's the difference. That's a problem.