Posted on 02/10/2004 6:16:00 AM PST by stainlessbanner
IS THE Confederate battle flag a symbol of hate? Although there are certain connotations that have been improperly associated with the Confederate flag, there are still many people within the American population who display it to show pride in their heritage.
Heritage, not hate.
The Confederate States of America was a compilation of southern states that seceded from the United States of America. Following the formation of this new government, the grievances between the North and South produced hostility and warfare.
Our differences divided us as a nation. Yet during that period, there arose a certain Southern solidarity that people cannot forget.
A liberal federal judge has banned the display of Confederate flags in cemeteries near our area. Could he, not the Southerners who revere the flag, be the prejudiced one?
Only two days out of 365 in a year are people allowed to fly the Confederate battle flag in Point Lookout in Maryland. There have been many appeals, but the judge concluded that it "could" cause hateful uprisings and counter-actions to prevent the flag from flying.
So much for those who died during the Civil War bravely fighting for the South. 3,300 Confederate soldiers died at Point Lookout Cemetery, and the flag would commemorate their lives and their deaths.
Although many people do not understand or agree with what the Confederate States of America stood for, these men gave their lives and had the courage to stand up for what they believed in.
In fact, Confederates fought for the ideals expressed in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution--states' rights, no taxation without fair representation and freedom from oppressive government.
They weren't fighting for hate. They weren't fighting to destroy a race.
They were fighting to preserve the government that they had chosen--the Confederate States of America--the government that allowed them to preserve their own way of life.
Fact: The overwhelming majority of Southerners never owned slaves. Slavery as an institution was fading, and making way for more pragmatic agricultural practices, including the use of immigrant labor.
Too many people today do not agree with what Southern soldiers stood for, often basing their opinion on faulty history or willful ignorance. That doesn't mean that we should respect the soldiers from Dixie any less.
Ignorance has turned the South's past into a history of hate. I have grown up in the South. I am not racist. I consider myself to be an open-minded person.
I do have Dixie Pride, though.
I grew up in a Civil War town that has a Confederate Cemetery in the middle of it. There's even a store called "Lee's Outpost."
Yes, there are people who live in Fredericksburg who consider the Confederate flag as a symbol of hatred and racism. However, they do not know what it is truly about.
The war between the states was a time when brother fought against brother. It was a time when people didn't have the choice to be passive.
Ultimately, regardless of one's feelings about the flag, banning the Confederate flag is unconstitutional under the Bill of Rights. Flying the flag is considered a form of speech--and if it is legal to burn an American flag, it should be legal without question to fly the Confederate one.
I do own a Confederate flag. I'm a Southerner, proud of my heritage, and I take pride in the fact that my ancestors rose to the occasion and fought for their form of government.
They did not give their lives to protect slavery in the South. They did not die to keep African-Americans from sharing the same liberties and freedoms that they were blessed with. They believed they were fighting for their families, homes and states against an oppressive government in the North.
The book "The South Was Right" provides many facts to support this.
In the end, it almost doesn't matter why they fought. We claim to be a nation that believes in freedom of speech, where everyone can have their own beliefs and not be looked down on for it.
Are we or aren't we?
What makes this country great is that we have the right to make up our own minds about things. People are asked if they believe in freedom of speech. They reply, "Yes, of course I believe in freedom of speech."
Yet when they don't agree with the speech, sometimes they contradict themselves.
As a nation with millions of citizens, we will never agree on any principles or ideas as a whole--except for the fact that freedom cannot be replaced, and rights cannot be sacrificed.
So why should the Confederate flag be an exception? Free speech applies to everyone, and Southerners have great reasons to be proud of their past.
BUFFY RIPLEY is a sophomore at Virginia Commonwealth University.
I neglected to mention it. Thanks. I've posted about it before. The Texas Declation of Causes says: "They have impoverished the slave-holding States by unequal and partial legislation, thereby enriching themselves by draining our substance."
Protectionist tariffs were basically a transfer of money from the South to the North, all done in the name of motherhood and apple pie. Without the South, the North didn't have goods to export that even came close to what they were importing. Eventually they would have to devalue their currency or cut way back on imports.
sorry, but the link you gave doesn't work for me.
I'm not black but if I were I might feel justified in feeling anger at the display of any emblem of a group who codified my ancestors enslavement.
Was there a first Navy Jack or did they just use the stars and bars like the army?
I blame 80 percent of the defeat of the Confederacy on the incompetence of the AoT. Except for a few cavalry raids by the brilliant N.B. Forrest and a few others, it was a bumbling drag on the CSA's military power. Lee could not adequately fight off the North's aggression with fools running the army to his rear, sapping his food stores, rolling stock, armaments and equipment. Much of the fault lies at Davis's feet who promoted generals such as Braxton Bragg and Leonidas Polk (by trade an Episcopal bishop) to do the fighting. Then there was John Bell Hood, who was fair under Lee's watchful leadership but abysmal in command on his own. It ended up costing the people of Georgia, S.C., and N.C. their homes and property to war criminal Sherman and his terrorists!
The Confederate Navy Ensigns were the 1st National (pre 83) and the 2nd National after it was adopted in 1883 at which time the Official Navy Jack (the Rectangular CBF) was adopted as the jack.
European heritage equals owning slaves? Or are you trying to say something else?
This was already illegal under US law, so this provision did nothing but maintain the status quo. Rather, the Virginia slave-breeders were big supporters of outlawing the importation of slaves from outside the US- they didn't want the competition.
I dissagree, the South had a difficult time recuiting troops outside of the states near the Mason Dixon line. Many people were not that intrested in the politics and would not join till the Yankees were near. Even then they often deserted the battlefield. The plantation owners who got he South into that mess could not recruit enough soldiers, nor did they have enough guns and cannons.
Of course you meant '63'. Don't you wish you could go back and edit out your typo's
I take it your argument is with the "separate nation" part of these statements. What does it take for a country to be recognized as a nation? Treaties with other nations?
Its navy, though small, fought brilliantly, and introduced with the VirginiaMerrimac) a new type of warship, the ironclad.
Strictly speaking, they are incorrect. Iron-plated ships had been used by the British and French against Russian forts in the Crimea in 1855. And the first use of an ironclad against wooden ships was not the CSS Virginia/Merrimac in 1862, but it was another Confederate ironclad out of New Orleans against Federal picket ships in October 1861. At least, as far as I know that was the first.
Of course, the Confederacy might lay claim to the "cotton-clad" ships that defeated bigger US ships (like the USS Harriet Lane), but I don't know the origin of the cotton-clads. For all I know, they could be a Yankee invention, though I've seen reference to their use by Confederates in April 1861.
The Confederate Flag, "The Stars and Bars" was recognized all over the world as belonging to a nation other than the United States of America.
It would probably be more correct if they said ships flying the flag were recognized as ships of a belligerent and allowed into port on that basis. That was the situation, I think. However, a European consul did apply for and receive an exequatur from the Confederate government in Richmond in July 1861. By such, he was officially recognized as the consul of his government.
The "War Between the States" does not imply a war between individual states. The noun, "States," is used in its collective sense. the official titles of the contending parties during the conflict were the "United States" and the "Confederate States.";
Therefore, since the war was between two groups of states, the United States and the Confederate States -- two separate nations -- the most exact name for that great conflict of the 1860's is "War Between the States."
I certainly don't feel it was a civil war by the common definitions of the term. The South didn't want to take over the government of the United States. They just wanted to leave the Union with the same rights they had when they entered.
Are these the whole of your objections to the UDC?
Two items: the Arizona Territory had been available for slave expansion for a decade, yet only 21 slaves were enumerated in the 1860 census out of 2,421 inhabitants. New Mexico enumerated 64 out of 87,034, Nevada 45 of 6,812, and Utah 89 of 40,273. A total of 219 slaves out of 136,540 inhabitants, only 0.16% were slaves. Slavery was not expanding into the territories.
Secondly, the southern states wanted the public lands SOLD instead of given away, for obvious economic reasons.
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