Confederate Flag Day Address
Oakwood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia
March 4, 2017
Oakwood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia
March 4, 2017
The Abbeville Institute
I had the honor of delivering the keynote
address in 1994 at the Last Capitol of the Confederacy in Danville when
we dedicated the monument to the Third National Flag. Much has changed
since.
Enemies of traditional culture have succeeded in removing that
monument. The City Council of Charlottesville recently voted to remove
the statue of General Robert E. Lee from its prominent place in that
city. There are calls to remove the Confederate statues on Monument
Avenue here in Richmond.
Some of the less radical enemies of traditional culture argue that
these monuments and statues must be recast in a different historical
context. My purpose today is to talk about a different context. The
attacks on Confederate symbols, including the Battle Flag and the
National Flags, the statues 1 just described, and the many monuments
placed in courthouse squares, on streets and on battlefields throughout
the states, must be seen in the context of a larger scheme to destroy
traditional culture.
We are standing here today in this cemetery on another example of
this cultural struggle. For decades, devoted Virginians who only desire
to honor the lives and sacrifices of those combatants buried here in the
Confederate Section of this cemetery have been opposed by those who
intend to strike the valor of those buried here from our collective
memory or to persuade this generation of Americans and all future
generations that only the darkest evil motivated those combatants.
But the attack on Confederate symbols docs not stop with these
examples. As some in Charlottesville have openly proclaimed, monuments
to Thomas Jefferson are the next target. Where will these demands end?
If Jefferson symbols must be removed, then those of James Madison, James
Monroe, George Mason and Patrick Henry must go. Do we then leave
untouched tributes and monuments to the Father of the Nation, George
Washington? Must we rename the national capital?
The ultimate aim of the followers of Saul Alinsky and the allies of
George Soros is to destroy the culture that produced the United States
Constitution, which has survived for more than two and a quarter
centuries. We would be willfully blind not to see that the attacks on
our traditions are organized, focused and destructive.
The fight to preserve Confederate heritage is only a part of a much
larger struggle. We should be working with other defenders of
traditional culture to resist the assault of the Radical Left.
Continuing the fight independent of, and separate from, our natural
allies would be foolhardy. In George Orwell’s famous satire of the
totalitarian Soviet Union — his novel Animal Farm — the
character Snowball, a pig, exhorts the animals on Farmer Jones’ farm
with the chant “Four legs good, two legs bad.” That chant would become
the battle cry of the animals in their revolt against Farmer Jones and
humans in general. Orwell was describing the Russian Revolution. He
could just as well have been describing the French Revolution of 1789
with its slogan “liberty, equality, fraternity.”
Snowball’s chant was effective, but cynical. Orwell understood that
the chant served several purposes: (1) It aroused the emotions of the
animals. (2) It reduced everything to a simplistic formula – a
thought-stopping slogan. (3) It drowned out dissenting voices. Snowball
used that slogan to galvanize a mob to revolt.
That same tactic is at work today throughout the United States,
funded largely by George Soros. It is an explicit element of Saul
Alinsky’s Rules for Radicals, which is the playbook of the
Radical Left.
Confederate symbols are simply one of the targets, but a
useful one for the Radical Left especially since the deranged Dylan Roof
murdered nine innocent people in a Charleston, South Carolina church.
During the celebration of the bicentennial of the adoption of the
U.S. Constitution in 1978-79, the Radical Left launched opposition
because the Constitution tolerated slavery. That opposition got nowhere
then. But since then, the systematic undermining of champions of the
Constitution, particularly those Virginians among the Founders who were
slaveholders, has had its effect.
It is not a stretch, in my view, to liken the destruction of all
symbols of religion following the Russian and French Revolutions to the
destruction of Buddhist statues in Afghanistan and the Roman structures
in Palmyra, Syria by Radical Islamists to the assault on our monuments,
statues and symbols here. It won’t stop with the Lee statue in
Charlottesville or the Danville monument. It won’t stop with the
renaming of Calhoun College at Yale University. The Radical Left isn’t
interested in improving our culture. This radical movement wants to
replace it by first destroying or making detestable every symbol of
every tradition that produced the American Republic.
Unless we understand our proper role in this culture war, we cannot
expect to continue celebrating Confederate Flag Day or our heritage.
It’s time for us to organize with others who understand the broader
cultural war, just as the Radical Left has organized its diverse groups.
If we fail to do so, we will lose this culture war by default.
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