I don’t think the North has anything to brag about when it comes to resettling blacks after the civil.war. The liberals of today don’t either for that matter. I’d call their track record far less than acceptable but they keep.on with the failed programs.
Hogwash. This idiot needs to learn his history before pontificating. The Confederate Battle Flag can symbolize anything people want it to, but in the end, it was just what its name implies: a battle flag.
The beliefs of the soldiers that fought under it probably varied as much as their clothes, their appearance, and their histories. Yes, some were racist. But some fought out of a sense of honor and duty, and the belief that their state's sovereignty was more important than a tyrannical federal Union.
The problem doesn't lie with the flag. It lies with those people who see only "racist" when they see that symbol.
No Cross ... No Heritage!!! Hear Me?!?!
Every symbol has been misused, not just the obvious ones.
The Ku Klux Klan had its own flag (not much seen anymore) but the flag they used was primarily not the Confederate battle flag but the U.S. flag.
In addition, linking the CBF to the Confederate government is tenuous at best. This was not an official flag until late in the war (when it was used as the Naval Jack). In fact, it was rejected as the official flag.
It was the battle standard of various military units as well as the command flag of the Army of Northern Virginia. Those soldiers were fighting for their homeland, not for slavery. See James McPherson's book, Why They Fought. He was or is a professor at Princeton, hardly a bastion of slavery.
So basically what you have left is a small group of segregationist yahoos in the 50s and 60s who hijacked the CBF for their own purposes. That's no reason to ban it - we'd have to ban every symbol (including the Cross - which was flown at Beziers during the massacre of the Albigensians ("kill them all - God will know his own.)")
No...we were not all slaves in Egypt....the Jews were slaves in Egypt.
We are not slaves in Mississippi either.
Then move to Cleveland. They'll love having you there. They hate the descendants of Confederate veterans; they're about ready to start sticking yellow stars on them. You'll be just in time to watch the fun.
Who flies the rebel flag because they hate Blacks? Anyone?
If a guy wears that symbol on his jacket, does that mean he hates blacks?
Do any of these people support owning Blacks as slaves?
It has become somewhat of a symbol of a rebellious nature. Moonshiners, non-conformists, a good ole’ (rowdy) southern boy... it’s just a flag or symbol some folks like.
There are a number of things I don’t like seeing in life. Shall I and others make a list so we can all go through our day with nothing that offends?
Get a freakin’ life folks.
The author either misses a very big point or is intentionally part of the problem. Pushing an agenda in a time of horrific violence is just wrong.
‘Americans’ tried their best but the majority ‘hates Us’ ... I understand why ... ‘why do you not’?
Washington, Jefferson, Madison openly stated that slavery was wrong and looked forward to its' abolition.
The Confederate battle flag was not widely displayed in the South until school desegregation became an issue in the 1950's and it became the flag of the segregationists.
Not true, and ahistorical. Also, counter-Scriptural. When the Roman centurion asked Jesus to heal the centurion's servant, Jesus did not rebuke the man for owning the slave. Slavery was common as grass in the Roman Empire, and slaves' bones (as from Herculaneum) bore the same heavy-labor marks as those of the slaves exhumed and examined from 18th-century New York City cemeteries.
The writer may be some kind of Baptist, but he is a) not a Southerner and b) misrepresenting history, just as if he were a Left-wing scold.
Ping
Sorry pal , it isn’t coming down
Deo Vindice
ps: thanks for reminding me to run one up every morning ,
right under Old Glory
Then move to Cleveland. You won't have to worry about it any more, and people there will love you.
Northerners truly bellyfeel Southern renegades and scalawags.
Funny how I made it through 60+ years of life without thinking of the CBF as THE symbol of slavery and oppression, only to find out recently how ignorant I’ve been for most of my existence.
I really detest the historical revisionism of the left.
The stoned killer in Charleston represented nothing traditional in the South; nothing cohesive or rational. Look into the eyes of any of the pictures posted on the Web, today. He looks like a B movie image of a possessed child. Why would anyone want to disparage their own heritage over the actions of such an obsession driven mental case? Do you really want to insult the Christian witness of relatives of the victims--something truly moving--by suggesting by implication, that this crazed miscreant actually represented any of the cultured people of South Carolina?
Yep and SUV’s kill people in the middle of the night when your asleep.
I am a great lover of American history and a Civil War buff. I am humbled by the patriotism and courage of the soldiers on both sides of the conflict during America’s “Second War of Independence”. Yet, I do believe that Bro. Moore has made a valid argument to a certain extent.
The most compelling point he made, at least to my thinking, was the passage from the Apostle Paul who said we should not use our Christian freedom to hurt or destroy the faith of others.
Rightly or wrongly, fairly or unfairly, logically or illogically, the Confederate Battle Flag has come to represent slavery and racism. Personally, I don’t see that flag that way, but I do understand why others may. And so, why should I, as a Christian, do something that hurts the spirit of some of my brothers or sisters in Christ?
However, having said all that, I believe it is none of my business what is on South Carolina’s flag or Mississippi’s flag - that is up to the people of those individual states. If they want to take it off or leave it - that’s up to them.
Also, I know that the United States flag is offensive to some - especially on college campus’s across the country. The Cross of Christ is also offensive to some, yet I would never deny it.
Again, I think it comes down to what the people of that state want to do.
The “War of Northern Aggression” is not yet over.
‘A favorite tune’ and ‘never’ can we tell where ‘we’ve’ gone