Unlike the Nazis, the Old South embraced individualists, like Thomas Jefferson; other Faiths, like the Jews it elected to the U.S. Senate; Officers, who designed their own uniforms; even, despite the vicious lies of today, a level of goodwill between the races, which really did not exist in the rest of the Union.
How many of the South haters, today, are even aware that Stonewall Jackson taught a Sunday School class for young Negroes in his neighborhood; that the song "Carry Me Back To Old Virginny," was actually written by a Negro song writer, from New Jersey, celebrating his love for a Virginia girl. (Unfortunately those Virginians who took it down as a State song, in response to an earlier hate driven attack on heritage, didn't know that either.
And hopefully the southern states will never vote for another Democrat president again. How can they say they love America while calling half of it racist fly-over land?
They hate and attack us because we are the foundation of social conservatism in America today
Always have been actually
Despite the myths propagated by so many here
Free Republic is so far behind the curve now it’s a distant mirage in the mirror of current realities
I think the abolitionists (who's modern ideological descendents are today regarded as liberal kooks) hated the South, but I think most of the normal people in the North did not hate them until animosity was ginned up against them.
I think once your side declares war on someone, it becomes natural to view them as horrible monsters, because that is one of the ways people cope with doing terrible things to them. We've done it in pretty much every war.
I think much of the subsequent hatred of the South is a consequence of the need to feel vindicated and reassured for what was done to them. This is why in these debates, the people arguing on behalf of the Northern side invariably try to force the discussion into one about slavery, because this is the area in which they can feel both justified and morally superior; A powerful combination of emotions which many people cannot resist.
When the discussion is forced back to the idea of "consent of the governed" and framed in what was the normal social standards for the day, they are not so comfortable with it, because it does not clearly support what they would prefer was the truth.
Unlike the Nazis, the Old South embraced individualists, like Thomas Jefferson; other Faiths, like the Jews it elected to the U.S. Senate; Officers, who designed their own uniforms; even, despite the vicious lies of today, a level of goodwill between the races, which really did not exist in the rest of the Union.
It occurs to me that this "individualism" might be quite objectionable to the sort of people who want everyone to obey a controlling authority, especially if that controlling authority furthers the interests of people behind the scenes for which the controlling authority insures their prosperity and continuing power.
I have come to think this is the dynamic at play regarding the masters of the Media.
How many of the South haters, today, are even aware that Stonewall Jackson taught a Sunday School class for young Negroes in his neighborhood; that the song "Carry Me Back To Old Virginny," was actually written by a Negro song writer, from New Jersey, celebrating his love for a Virginia girl. (Unfortunately those Virginians who took it down as a State song, in response to an earlier hate driven attack on heritage, didn't know that either.
None of that is useful to them because it does not further their narrative. Therefore they don't want to hear about it or contemplate it.