Posted on 10/13/2003 7:07:18 AM PDT by stainlessbanner
When George Ewert , director of the Museum of Mobile, wrote a stinging movie review of the Civil War film "Gods and Generals," he likely did not expect an equally harsh critique from Mayor Mike Dow .
Ewert's review, "Whitewashing the Confederacy (SPLC link)," was not kind to the Ted Turner film.
"'Gods and Generals' is part of a growing movement that seeks to rewrite the history of the American South, downplaying slavery and the economic system that it sustained. In museums, schools and city council chambers, white neo-Confederates are hard at work in an effort to have popular memory trump historical accuracy," the city employee wrote.
And this: "It is cloying and melo dramatic, and its still characters give an endless series of ponderous, stilted speeches about God, man and war."
In turn, Dow was not kind to Ewert, reprimanding the city employee in a Friday letter. The mayor called Ewert's review unnecessarily strongly worded, inflammatory and counterproductive.
"Why, in your very public position with all the local 'Southern Heritage' controversy that city leaders have had to manage and after several years of a hard-fought political calming of this issue, would you inject yourself so strongly and carelessly into this topic in this manner?" the mayor wrote.
"I need for you to use your better judgment and please cease and desist publishing potentially inflammatory articles of this nature without your board chairman's or my awareness and approval. Leave that to others who have less to do."
The city, particularly Dow, has come under fire in the past from Southern heritage groups claiming unfair treatment.
Ewert's review was printed in the Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Report. The Montgomery-based organization's Intelligence Project monitors hate groups and extremist activities.
At the end of the movie review, there is a line that notes Ewert's position with the city.
Mobile City Council President Reggie Copeland also scolded Ewert, saying at last week's council meeting that he "would accept nothing less than a public apology. ... I am very displeased with that gentleman, and I want some action taken."
Copeland made the comments after hearing about the review but before reading it. He later told the Mobile Register that the review was "not as strong as I thought it would have been. ... I just wish he would have kept his mouth shut."
Ewert, contacted last week, declined comment except to say that he would be preparing a statement for Dow. In a letter to Dow dated Oct. 9 -- one day before Dow's letter -- Ewert said the review was written in his capacity as a historian and private individual.
"I regret that anyone may have taken my comments in a 'personal' matter," Ewert wrote. "My intent was not to offend but to offer a legitimate criticism and context for the movie in question, a privilege that should by rights be open to anyone. If, again, there were those who were offended by the movie review, I offer my apologies."
Don't shoot ...:
Area veterinarian Ben George , a Confederate Battle Flag and Confederate-heritage advocate, praised Dow for his response to the review. But George said Ewert did not apologize and should resign or be fired.
"He (Ewert) shot somebody; he said he's going to shoot somebody again," George said.
George in the past has made himself something of a thorn in Dow's side, organizing demonstrations in front of Dow's house, plastering posters criticizing the mayor during the last city election and using other tactics to push his Confederate heritage agenda.
George complained to Dow after reading Ewert's article. "My staff and I have had to deal with an unnecessary and increased fallout as a result of your article," Dow stated in his letter to Ewert.
George compared the situation to the firing of a Mobile police officer, accused of using the n-word and expressing a lack of interest in helping evacuate public housing residents in case of flooding.
Ewert, like the police officer, George said, has proven himself intolerant toward part of Mobile's population, namely Confederate heritage proponents like himself.
George said he and several others planned to speak at Tuesday's City Council meeting about Ewert's comments, along with concerns that Dow has not kept his word on settling previous disputes. But, he said, the speakers may reconsider.
It was a "preliminary" in 1862, with a promise to leave slavery untouched in states that came over to the North -- so if some states had come over, the listing of areas where it applied would have been different--.
Mentioned and referenced in post 75.
Yes they would, because the war was not about slavery....as illustrated by the Union having slaves before, and keeping them after those in the Confederacy were freed.
How many licks does it take to get to the center of a tootsie-pop?
Not only that but they had only one Postmaster General througout their existence - one of only two cabinet offices that did not go through secretary after secretary.
But lets look at the mercantilist agenda of the American system - internal improvements, railroad subsidies, centralized banking, the greenback dollar, corporate welfare, protectionism, special interest groups.
Stainless, read the confederate constitution. It existed to protect the most influential special interest group in the south - the plantation agriculture industry. Nothing was allowed to interfere with their markets or promote industry or impose a cost on them that was not required to maintain their business and lifestyle.
Someone should have told the southern leadership of the time then.
Are we talking about the same confederacy? The Davis regime centralized power into the hands of the president to an extent never dreamed of by Abraham Lincoln.
1. It explicitly outlawed protection tariffsIndicative of the differences during the long battle philosophical battle of Jeffersonian soveriegn rule and states' rights vs. Hamiltonian centralized power.
2. It explicitly outlawed internal improvements
3. It accounts for uniform taxation
4. 2/3 majority vote on all congressional approriations
5. Allowed impeachment of federal officials by state legistlatures + House of Representatives
Here are some more:
"...a gigantic stride in the paths of Christian and civilized progress - the turning point in the history of the American commonwealth - an act only second in courage and probable results to the Declaration of Independence" -- London Morning Star, October 6, 1862
"The Emancipation Proclamation has done more for us here than all our former victories and all our diplomacy. It is creating an almost convulsive reaction in our favor all over this country." -- Henry Adams, January 23, 1863
The Emancipation Proclamation "...has had a powerful effect on our newspapers and politicians. It has closed the mouths of those who have been advocating the side of the South. Recognition of the South, by England, whilst it bases itself on Negro slavery, is an impossibility." - Richard Cobden, MP,
The 13th Amendment had nothing to do with it, huh?
That's what they said. I believed them. So did everyone else.
Give us some quote from the times that claims that. What centralized power was the North fighting for?
I have read the Democrat propaganda from the 1860 election. Did ya know that Black Lincoln was going to give every black man a white woman to ravish? Really. Those anti-Lincoln democrats wouldn't lie, would they?
The 1860 census showed a total of sixty-four (64) slaves in all the free states.
All slaves were freed in this country by the 13th amendment. The Emancipation Proclamation only applied to the insurgent areas, and only had force under the war powers of the president.
It was a clever thing -- certainly the slave power never dreamed it would be invoked against them, the dolts.
Walt
I'm glad you liked it, but the structure was very lame.
Look at "Gone with the Wind". It has a typical American movie structure. Thirty minutes of intro, and a change (the inciting incident in some books, entering "the special world" according to Joseph Campbell in "The Hero with a Thousand Faces").
What is this special world in GWTW? It's when Scarlett leaves Tara for Atlanta. What was it in "Apollo 13"? When they blast off for the Moon. Both these events occur about 30 minutes into the movie. G&G ignores this pacing. Typical American film structure has the second main plot point about 30 minutes from the -end- of the film. In GWTW, this was the death of Bonnie. In "Apollo 13" it's when they prepare for splashdown. They are -definitely- leaving the special world. You can apply this paradigm to movie after movie after movie. In the very first "Star Wars" Luke leaves his home, flying out on the millinium Falcon, in the 1978 "Superman" it's when Clark leaves home for Metropolis. G&G blew all that off. It's a poor movie by any objective standard, if the standard is to tell a good story.
Walt
Chief Justice Roger Taney said in the dissenting opinion in the 1863 Prize Cases that the president had the power under law to put down the rebellion.
The majority opinion supported the president completely.
There is no right to unilateral state secession in U.S. law.
Walt
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