Posted on 07/11/2015 7:01:13 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
To no ones real surprise, the national Confederate-flag debate turns out not to be about flags alone. Its not even truly about history. And its certainly not about dealing with the issues of crime and poverty that still disproportionately impact the black community. It has now moved entirely into the realm of raw cultural and political power. Its an identity-politics hammer that is heads, I win; tails, you lose for all too many conservatives. With the Left in the lead, youre either a racist for refusing to bulldoze history or if you go along youre still a racist, but at least the Left has you under control.
In a piece on June 19, I articulated a simple principle: Official flag displays that are intended like the Democrats displays in the 1960s to demonstrate an official commitment to white supremacy are vile and should come down. Flag displays at Civil War monuments, memorials, and battlefields are part of history and should stay. In fact, there is no principled distinction between a flag and the monument itself. If one goes, why not the other?
Why not, indeed. A fever is now sweeping the land. In New Orleans, the mayor has proposed removing four monuments, including one of Robert E. Lee, as public nuisances. In her public statement, the mayor decried the false valor of Confederate soldiers. Nancy Pelosi introduced a resolution demanding that Mississippis state flag be removed from display on U.S. Capitol Grounds. Republicans in the House acquiesced in Democrat Jared Huffmans proposal to ban even privately placed Confederate flags at Confederate grave sites in national cemeteries. And in the most bizarre move of all, the Memphis city council just voted to disturb Nathan Bedford Forrests grave and move his remains from under his statue (with the statue-removal vote to come later.)
This is only the beginning. Speaker of the House John Boehner is proposing a bipartisan commission with a broad mandate to review all issues related to Confederate symbols (emphasis added). Creating this commission guarantees that the debate (such as it is) will carry on indefinitely. I eagerly await their conclusion that social justice demands removing all Confederate remains and Confederate markers from national cemeteries, no doubt to be followed by a mandate that Confederate soldiers in battlefield reenactments fight in Nike shorts and Target T-shirts, waving Coexist banners as they charge Union positions.
Lets fast-forward and imagine an increasingly plausible future where Confederate memorials are piles of rubble and Confederate bones are interred in landfills will America be a better nation? But lets fast-forward and imagine an increasingly plausible future where Confederate memorials are piles of rubble, Confederate bones are interred in landfills, and Confederate flags linger on mainly as fading stickers on a few mud-covered pickup trucks will America be a better nation? Will a single inner-city school improve? Will we have taken a single meaningful step toward finding a way to responsibly end mass incarceration? Will community and police relations improve, at all? Will the leftist urban elite stop oppressing the liberal urban poor?
Of course not. In fact, by screaming Squirrel! at the top of their lungs, the social-justice warriors would have been rewarded with yet another round of pop-culture accolades and are empowered to engage yet another target. And, at the end of the day, America will be more ignorant, the cultural Left will be more self-righteous, and our nations history will be viewed as an infinitely malleable tool for delivering only Left-approved messages to the hearts and minds of our citizens.
Many thousands of the men who risked their lives and spilled blood to defeat the Confederacy would be appalled. Abraham Lincoln would see the malice toward all, the charity toward none. Ulysses S. Grant would be shocked at the notion, for example, that Picketts Charge represented false valor, and the great warrior-abolitionist, Joshua Chamberlain, would be disgusted at the thought of digging up Confederate bones to make a political statement. But why take any guidance from Union heroes when determining how to remember the past? After all, tweeters and Facebookers know so much more about right and wrong, about justice and injustice. After all, theyve spilled their own online blood, and they have the hate-tweets to prove it.
As so often happens, the cultural Left is winning because dissenters are silent. Despite an avalanche of cultural propaganda, stubborn majorities of Americans still dont see the Confederate flag as a symbol of hate. Yet conservative political leaders apparently believe that the loud cultural minority is more important to appease than history is to preserve. So fire up the bulldozers, the hashtagging Left will accomplish what no Union soldier ever could knock General Lee off his horse.
Slave-owning George Washington, you and your phallic monument are next.
David French is an attorney and a staff writer at National Review.
If I knew how to post a photo, I would post the Whigroes battle flag.
Well tell me how to post a photo and I will show the Whigroe battle flag.
All I know how to do is type
<
Then type
img src=”web address of photo” [include the quotes]
Then type
>
“BTW, Nathan Bedford Forrest was the leader of the KKK, whose main purpose was to combat the atrocities perpetrated on the South after the War.”
Forrest also ordered the kkk to be disbanded and cut all ties to it.
Your post didn’t work because there’s an extraneous / before the >
Disgusting.
sorry. still learning.
My roots are in the South. Shilo was a battle fought close to my home. Not all Southerners owned slaves, my family didn't own any.
I spent some time in Rhodesia 78-79 and witnessed the atrocities there. The most racist people I've ever met were Black entitled people. Expect a lot of old tribal grudges to get settled in the step off .
If 13% commit 80% of violent crime, it could get ugly in the cities come go time. I'm old and sick with maybe 1 good fight left in me. I'm not going to rust away complaining how it used to be.
Get out of the cities if you can, while you can. And gear up campers. Bug in is better than bug out. It will start in the cities soon.
People made it through the Great Depression by being able to provide for themselves, that's a lot easier to do out in the country.
So it was the / ?
The predictions -- concentration camps, etc. -- are wildly over the top, but there's a limit to how much enmity the country can bear before it starts to have serious real-world consequences.
I think so. Thanks for the help.
I won’t be able to help again, because that’s all I know ;^)
Very flamboyant isn’t it?
TWO people know their history. :)
Well that was enough and you are sweet.
The DNC had better add Grave Desecration to the Party platform. They could have Igor propose the Resolution.
bkmk
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.