Posted on 06/14/2006 5:58:12 PM PDT by Oshkalaboomboom
Confederate flags flown aboard the international space station and seemingly signed by a NASA astronaut showed up last week on the online auction site eBay.
The original eBay listing indicated that the 4-by-6-inch flags were brought aboard the space station by Russian cosmonaut Salizhan Sharipov in 2004, and an accompanying photo showed a sample flag that seemed to bear Sharipovs signature as well as that of Leroy Chiao, his NASA colleague on the station. Yet another photo showed several of the rebel flags floating in a space station module.
The item was pulled from the auction on Monday by the seller, Alex Panchenko of USSR-Russian Air-Space Collectibles Inc. in Los Angeles and on Tuesday, Panchenko told MSNBC.com that he removed the items from sale because he had concluded the flag and the authentication documents were forgeries.
However, Robert Pearlman, editor and founder of CollectSpace, said he believes the flags are authentic.
The picture taken of the flags aboard the station says a lot, he said. It would be difficult to fake, given the style and I couldn't see the motivation to do so. The onboard-the-ISS stamp, added Pearlman, is not known to have been counterfeited anywhere."
The disappearance of the flags followed a round of criticism over the weekend from former space scientist Keith Cowing, publisher of NASA Watch, an independent Web log. He cited the Confederate flags as an example of bad judgment on the ISS.
You'd think that someone on the U.S. side of the ISS program would have expressed some concern about flying a symbol on the ISS that many Americans associate with slavery, Cowing wrote.
(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.msn.com ...
Now THAT I find offensive!
That, sir, and nothing more, is precisely the point I made to Mr. Silverback when I said that in 1861 the Union "cause" consisted solely of preventing secession, or, as you put it, "trying to hold together the union.."
No offense, but I live within walking distance of the Freeport Lincoln-Douglas debate site, so I don't need a Lincoln lecture. I find it bizarre that people act like it's a new fact that he wasn't an abolitionist at the beginning of his presidency. Every time somebody "alerts" me to that fact, I wonder if the next thing I'm going to "discover" is that Jefferson owned slaves.
Well, no. In March of 1861, approximately six weeks before Ft. Sumter, both houses of Congress passed the Corwin Amendment, which would have become the 13th Amendment to the Constitution. Please note the date. In March of 1861 all of the Southern congressional delegations had already departed Washington, leaving nothing but Northern congressmen and senators in D.C.
The Corwin amendment would have permanently prevented Congress from interfering with the institution of slavery. Herewith the Corwin Amendment, which passed both the House and the Senate - with only Northerners voting - by the requisite majorities for a Constitutional amendment:
Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the following article be proposed to the Legislatures of the several States as an amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which, when ratified by three-fourths of said Legislatures, shall be valid, to all intents and purposes, as part of the said Constitution, namely:
ART. 13. No amendment shall be made to the Constitution which will authorize or give to Congress the power to abolish or interfere, within any State, with the domestic institutions thereof, including that of persons held to labor or service by the laws of said State.
Having passed both houses of Congress, Mr. Lincoln signed the amendment (not a constitutional requirement, but as a show of support for it, which was customary in those days). The amendment was never submitted to the states for ratification, as the firing on Ft. Sumter rendered it moot. Many historians, however, including Foote, believe the amendment would have easily been ratified by the states that remained in the Union.
Righteous causes are never as cut and dried as they seem.
No offense taken, and I trust you'll feel the same way when I say that someone as familiar with Mr. Lincoln as you are should know better than to promote a "righteous cause" of 1861 that didn't exist.
Lincoln's second inaugural did. How are Stand Watie and the other neoconfederates measuring up to it?
Aw, now you did it...we get to hear how the war wasn't about slavery, even though every article of secession mentions it explicitly.
2. Recall that my term was "the righteousness of the Union cause." Stand Watie was maintaining that the Southerners were just innocent victims raped and pillaged by we blue bellied devils from up North. I used the phrase I did because I was pointing out that his silly crap about Boston schools had nothing to do with whether Massachusetts boys were doing the right thing in 1861.
You and I need to stop talking, because I keep misreading you. just too dumb to keep up, I guess.
SW, I call on you to explain this descrepancy.
First, I can also find no evidence of such a unit. I searched on every permutation I could think of, and the only references to it I can find on the entire bleedin' internet is in posts BY YOU on FR.
Second, the only Will Freeman listed on the roster of partisan rangers is a man who fought under Quantrill. The closest Quantrill's unit comes to being called the 4th MO Partisan Rangers is when Quantrill identified himself under a false name to Union troops and claimed to be an officer in the 4th Confederate Cav.
It seems either you are not being truthful, or those family traditions handed down to you are completely unreliable and your citation of them as the sole evidence to back up your view of history becomes even more silly. Got an alternate explanation? And are you still going to claim to be a Civil War expert if you can't get a unit citation right?
He has loosed the fearful lightning of his terrible swift sword
Glory, glory hallelujah
For Joshua Chamberlain and the Schofields,
Mr. Silverback
You're wrong. The Corwin Amemndment was never ratified by the states, it was however put to them to ratify. Two State legislatures ratified it, beginning with Ohio on May 13, 1861, and followed by Maryland on January 10, 1862.
The South choose not to vote on it. They had already made up their minds to rebel.
Perhaps one could take Mr. Lincoln's arguments against secession more seriously if his principles had a longer shelf life than milk . Representative Abraham Lincoln, on the floor of Congress, January 12, 1848:
Any people anywhere, being inclined and having the power, have the right to rise up, and shake off the existing government, and form a new one that suits them better. This is a most valuable,-- most sacred right--a right, which we hope and believe, is to liberate the world. Nor is this right confined to cases in which the whole people of an existing government, may choose to exercise it. Any portion of such people that can, may revolutionize, and make their own, of so much of the teritory as they inhabit.
I agree. His second inaugural address was very good, and very thoughtful, already grasping with the thorny problems of Reconstruction.
BTW, if the comment regarding slavery was referring to me, you'll note that I have never said that secession, or the war itself, was not the result of slavery. It most certainly was, a fact of which we Southerners should own up to, and be ashamed of. But I suppose I have a low tolerance for self-righteousness on the part of certain Northerners who will not admit that, as a whole, in the 19th century the Northern population was only slightly less racist than Southerners, if at all, and that if had cotton thrived in cold climes, like, say, turnip greens, slavery wouldn't have been an issue.
You are absolutely right, sir. I stand corrected on the minor point of ratification. Going by memory, I guess I was giving those Union states the benefit of the doubt.
Give me the whole speech, and then let's decide on the context.
If not then suggest that Lincoln was wrong and let's give Texas back to the Mexicans.
I live here. It looks like the federal government has already decided to do so.
We've covered this on these threads a few times. Lincoln's not talking about any constitutional process. He's specifically talking about Texas' right to rebel against Mexico and control as much land as they can and tying it to the natural right of rebellion. The south had every natural right to rebel, just as the north had every natural right to suppress the rebellion. Natural rights are fairly dog-eat-dog. The "social contract" is our surrender of some of those natural rights in order to enjoy the benefits of civilization. Note the clauses in the Constitution that speak of suppressing rebellion. What the south didn't have was a legal or constitutional right to secede.
What I always find interesting in researching this stuff is the extent to which people assumed that a break up of the union would cause civil war. Time and again you find people warning that the sectional differences would lead to war.
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