All
this here hate for the Confederacy bull hockey has done got plumb ridiculous,
lately, and I think it’s about time I spoke my piece on the subject.
It
was bad enough back when ‘those people’.... and, yes, I am using the same term General
Robert E. Lee used when referring to the enemy, and I feel it will suffice as
well, today, as it did back then.... let us continue. It was bad enough when
‘those people’ were all going after the Southern States for having the
Confederate Battle Flag or similar such Confederate influences incorporated
into the designs of their state flags.
Bed-sheeted pinheads |
Current Georgia State Flag & the 1st National Confederate Flag |
Still, they kept on about it here in
Then,
when that crazy little Klu-Kluck-wannabe shot them poor folks’ church up, in
Charleston, SC, a few years back, ‘those people’ decided that the Battle Flag
was to blame for that one idiot’s evil doings. So, the next thing you know, the Governor of South Carolina ordered that the Battle Flag
be taken down off’n the State House grounds there. As if that t’weren’t
enough, amid all the media-driven hoopla during the time, the U.S. National
Park Service took it upon themselves to remove the Confederate Battle Flag
from.... of all places.... the Civil War
battlefields where it used to fly. Really?? If that old flag belonged anywhere,
surely it would have been on the battlefields where it had originated from.
SC State Troopers reverently fold the removed Battle Flag |
Now, ‘those people’ are back at it, again.... only
they’ve upped the ante a bit. This very week, in Virginia, North Carolina, and also
here in Georgia, Confederate statues have been defaced
and damaged, and now, there’s what they’re calling a ‘nationwide’ push to erase
all mention of Confederates everywhere.
Without an ounce of regard as to how the rest of us feel
about the matter, this small minority of the population, with the media as its
megaphone, are going after those beautiful granite and marble statues and
memorials that were erected long ago to honor the achievements of our
Confederate ancestors, saying they, too, invoke racism and are hurtful to
people of color, and so, must now come down, removed from public view, erased
from history.
'Progressive' protesters tear down and destroy a Confederate monument, in Durham, NC |
The Confederate Defenders of Charleston monument, in SC |
The Peace Monument, in Atlanta, GA, covered in paint; saved from destruction when a lone police officer placed himself between the protesters and the monument |
These ‘young progressives’, as they are often referred
to, are so callow; so inexperienced in life.... so sure they know all that they
need to know about everything.... yet, are so obviously ignorant of our American
history, that it makes us older folks somewhat ashamed and sorry for them.
It is said the South seceded to perpetuate slavery.... yet,
six slave states sent men to die for the North, and the Southern states
rejected an offer from President Abraham Lincoln that would have made slavery
permanent in exchange for their return to the Union. In addition, although most
Northern states had ended slavery by 1860, many had also passed “black laws,” a
forerunner of Jim Crow, which placed tight restrictions on blacks and often
forbade them from even living in the state.
Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of the United States of America |
And let's not forget that West Virginia was admitted into the
Folks, slavery was more than just a Southern problem; it
was an American problem.
Instead of removing all
vestiges of the Confederacy, how ‘bout we use these statues and the names
inscribed on them to start a new conversation, one that acknowledges the roles
of everyone involved and offers hope for our nation and its people, both black
and white.
"Nothing is more unfair than to judge of the sentiments of one age by the improved moral perceptions of another." |
You can’t change history. You can’t whitewash it. You can learn from it, though, and that is exactly why our Confederate memorials should stay in prominent, public places.... to remind us all where we’ve been, what we’ve endured, so that we could get where we are, today.