Posted on 06/06/2005 2:04:19 PM PDT by Irontank
The NAACP expressed outrage Saturday over Missouri Gov. Matt Blunts order to fly the Confederate flag over a state historic site, and asked the public to rally against it.
Blunt ordered the flag flown today, for one day only, at the Confederate Memorial State Historic Site near Higginsville in honor of Confederate Memorial Day.
The order came after Rep. Mike McGhee, an Odessa Republican, made the request on behalf of local residents.
Mary Ratliff, the president of the Missouri State Conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said she had already written the governor to ask him to reconsider.
We were very much surprised and hurt and appalled, Ratliff said during a break from the groups regularly scheduled meeting Saturday in Columbia.
Blunt could not be reached Saturday for comment.
Ratliff said the Missouri State Conference was asking for approval from NAACP officials in Washington to hold a small informational rally at 1:30 p.m. today at the governors mansion in Jefferson City.
I hope that he will see our resilience and use legal means to make sure the flag is not raised, Ratliff said.
Ratliff and other NAACP members are asking the public to voice their objections to the order, urging them to contact Blunt or their state representatives.
They also asked Missouri residents to fly the American flag Sunday.
We are one country, one nation, Ratliff said. We should have one flag expressing that nation.
Ratliff said the group was planning a protest at the governors mansion instead of the Confederate memorial because the group did not oppose the ceremony, only the raising of the Confederate flag.
The Rev. Gill Ford, NAACP Region IV director, acknowledged that individuals have the right to free speech, but spoke against Blunts action.
The reality is that when government becomes involved, then you get an endorsement, Ford said.
He called the Confederate flag a symbol of hatred and terror.
McGhee said Saturday that he asked the governor to lift a two-year-old ban on flying the flag after receiving a request from residents in Higginsville.
Its not a racist thing, McGhee said. Those soldiers died for that flag. They earned it, whether you agree with their cause or you dont agree with their cause.
The site was founded several years after the Civil War as a home for Confederate veterans. The property eventually came under state control.
The Confederate flag flew at the Confederate memorial and Fort Davidson State Historic Site at Pilot Knob until 2003, when Gov. Bob Holden ordered it taken down.
McGhee compared flying the Confederate flag over the memorial to the Mexican flag flying over a Texas memorial for Mexican soldiers killed in the Mexican War, the British flag flying over a Revolutionary War memorial on the East Coast, and the American flag flying in France over the graves of U.S. soldiers who were killed there.
I did what I thought was the right thing to do, said McGhee, who added that he believed the memorial was the only place the flag should be displayed. Anybody who thinks we can change history is mistaken.
During the 2005 legislative session, McGhee sponsored a bill that would have created a special parks board with the power to decide whether Confederate flags could be placed on headstones or flown over state historic sites. The measure met stiff resistance from Democrats, and legislators did not act on it.
McGhee said any decision on whether the flag should be allowed to fly at the memorial for more than a single day should be made by others.
I probably would have been a Northerner, he said
Umm, because that enemy doesn't exist. Or maybe because the people who died under that flag were United States citizens, no matter how misguided they were?
We are one country, one nation, Ratliff said. We should have one flag expressing that nation.
Like African-American?
I take offense at their having taken offense.
?.....
Order to Fly 'Koran' Flag Rankles NAACP?
Me too.
This headline makes it sound as if the NAACP was ordered to fly the Confederate flag over its headquarters.
So what? There is no right to remain unoffended.
Secession was not misguided
It was constitutionally permitted, and perfectly justifiable.
1 friggin day.... geeze....
Exactly.
The "boycott" of South Carolina because of the Confederate flag deal about 4 years ago has been a stellar failure.
Tourism industry is doing quite well.
I was referring to slavery, and yes I do know that slavery was only a part of the issue.
The NAACP and other racist organizations "rankle" me.
Bingo! I'm fed up with the hy-phen-ated-American BS. I'm a mutt with four traceable heritages from Western Europe... Do I prance around spouting this crap. No.
As for the Confederate Flag issue, I really don't care. I fly the Stars and Stripes, and others fly the Star and Bars. BTW, I now live in the South (was born a Yankee).
People need to lighten up. And talk to the current immigrants flaunting their heritage from Mex-i-co and the rest of Central and South America. IMOHO
See tagline...
(Denny Crane: "Sometimes you can only look for answers from God and failing that... and Fox News".)
The stated goal of the NAACP is the complete removal of ANYTHING that honors and or memorializes the soldiers of the Confederate army anywhere in the US. I believe it was 1996 when this was "officially" stated. In other words they want history to be told the way they want it and if anyone objects they are a "racist".
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