Posted on 06/26/2015 6:14:39 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
In the wake of nine racially motivated murders in South Carolina, attention has focused on displays of the Confederate battle flag. Many retailers have pulled Confederate flags from their inventory. A bipartisan group of politicians and public figures have called for the removal of the flag from South Carolinas capitol grounds.
To some, the flag represents a noble Southern heritage. To others, it evokes a vile history of racial violence. As a black libertarian, I see in the Confederate flag interwoven tragedies which echo through history.
The first tragedy is the most obvious, the one most cited, the one fueling the current debate. The Confederate flag reminds us of a time when human beings were bought and sold as chattel, when the rights of individuals were denied based on the color of their skin. The institution of slavery cannot be washed from Confederate symbolism. For that reason, it remains reasonable to question why anyone would want to associate themselves with that symbol.
The second tragedy is amplified by its obscurity, the fact that few seem to recognize or appreciate it. The original constitutional vision of the American republic took form in a compact between the several states, where they granted enumerated powers to a federal government and established a first of its kind dual-sovereignty. The ultimate check on federal authority was the capacity of the states to withdraw from the compact. Among the many causalities of the Civil War was this original vision of dual-sovereignty. Today, we pledge allegiance to a union indivisible, affirming the supreme authority of the federal government to dictate law among the states. We can argue whether the states retain certain powers in theory. But in practice, the feds call the shots in far more ways than the Founding Fathers ever envisioned. Thats largely a product of the Civil War.
Therefore, when I look at the Confederate battle flag as a black libertarian, I see tragedy for all parties concerned. I see the history of racism and human indignity which motivates the current debate. But I also see the loss of state sovereignty which compromised the Founding Fathers vision for republican government. To the extent people choose to fly the Confederate flag in honor of that latter heritage, I cant fault them.
That said, lets be clear why state sovereignty was lost. It was lost because the southern states delegitimized it.
Next: The moral right to invade
CLICK ABOVE LINK FOR THE VIDEO ON THE WAR OF NORTHERN AGGRESSION
Sovereignty is a loosely defined concept in our political discourse which tends to reference any claim to govern. However, the moral right to sovereignty emerges from a recognition of individual rights.
Nazi Germany held no moral claim to sovereignty, because that state rejected the moral basis upon which sovereignty stands. The Allied powers were within their rights to invade, remove the rights-violating Nazi state, and establish new means of security. Likewise in the Civil War, the southern states yielded any legitimate claim to sovereignty by engaging in institutional slavery, leaving the North with the moral right to invade.
There exists an undercurrent in libertarian circles which stands sympathetic to the South. It regards Lincoln as a tyrant and refers to the Civil War as the War of Northern Aggression. This misguided view places the cart of sovereignty before the horse of human rights. If we regard Lincoln as a tyrant for invading the South, we must likewise regard the Allies as tyrants for invading Germany. Sovereignty emerges from rights, not as an arena for their violation. There exists no sovereign right to violate another human being.
This is why we didnt flinch from raiding Bilal Town in Pakistan, killing Osama bin Laden. The Pakistani claim to sovereignty held no legitimacy in a context where they harbored an enemy committed to violating the rights of American citizens. In this way, sovereignty between states is like fences between neighbors. You can only be a victim of trespass if you did not trespass first.
Its with this view of both history and morality that I regard the Confederate battle flag as a complicated and tragic symbol. It represents our failings as a republic. We aspired to a grand vision of self-governance, and profoundly failed on multiple fronts. That said, the vision remains, and we continue to imperfectly pursue it. To the extent the Confederate flag inspires some toward a spirit of independence, it retains value. However, we should remember that such independence must be daily purchased with universal respect for the rights of others. The moment we trespass against a neighbor, we lose our sovereign claim. Thats the warning which the flag should herald today.
Interesting take.....
I would have to say that this post is the most in-depth and reasoned examination of the causes and results of the civil war that I have read in years.
It is for opinions like this that I pull up Freerepublic on a regular basis.
Kudos to the author.
It was an unmitigated disaster for all sides, especially for the future of the Republic.
And our next Civil War is going to make that one pale in comparison! Since we never learn from History and currently have a POS CIC who is teeing one up, we will be destined to repeat it...
Well written and thought out.
How many states would secede if it was allowed? That would reign in Fedzilla.
That fact that this sort of reasoned analysis is so rare is depressing, and dangerous.
Lee surrendered his army but the Southern people never intellectually surrendered. We knew we always had the right to secede. We were just unable to physically fight off the invading force of the North.
CWII is on the way and for varying and different reasons but the end result will be different this time. I blame the Fedzilla that the Left has promoted and the right has allowed to morph into a tyrannical ungovernable monster. It has to come down one way or the other.
The cultural war that is going on in this country today is at level of vitriol not seen even before the Civil War. It cannot continue and I see no way to reunite everyone.
It’s in depth, and perhaps reasoned - but I think he is guilty of some fundamental flaws.
His “right to invade” analogy has a lot of problems. The Nazi analogy on right to invade is simply flawed.
He also assumes it was 100% pro slave versus 100% non slave. It was not. There were slaves who fought for the South and 3 states who fought for the union were slave owning states.
It’s outside the box, and I’ll give him credit. But he’s wrong on about half of what he said.
How can the north have a right to invade when they were guilty in part for the same act of slavery? (rhetorical)
Good stuff.
Well thought-out and well-presented.
Because the north didn’t go to war over the issue of slavery. The north went to war because the south went to war against them.
Slavery is not dead - just waiting for the tyrannical nazis of the left to demolish the rule of law.
One way to win an argument is to ignore inconvenient facts. That’s what this writer has done (and some readers fell for).
Had secession been averted (and, thus, no Confederate flag ever existed), slavery would have continued under the U.S. Constitution. Using the writer’s “logic” then, the U.S. would have had no moral authority to govern and would have been susceptible to foreign invasion - as long as the invaders were anti-slavery.
And, since, Britain outlawed slavery a little more than a generation before the U.S., this writer’s “moral” argument would require him to comdemn the American revolutionaries and wish for a failed attempt at independence. According to him, the DoI and the Constitution had no “moral” authority.
Bottom line: self government includes a large element of moral authority, but it doesn’t require a 1.000 batting average. That’s beyond the capacity of man - and would be even if everybody agreed on the criteria.
Good article - if you’re a 7th Grader.
The firing on Fort Sumter was supposedly incidental to slavery.
What was the moral right to invade the west?
If the Union is a compact between the soverign states then shouldn't breaking that compact at least require consultations with the other states if not their approval as well?
The Republic emerged from the rebellion stronger and more solid than ever. It's been the presidents since - Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, FDR, LBJ, Nixon, et.al. - who went and threw all that away.
We know better than the left.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.