Thursday, July 4, 2019

Civil War PC is Mental Imprisonment

 



Yesterday The Times published an article titled: “What Should Happen to Confederate Statues?” Among its remarks were the following:

Many Confederate statues being debated today did not originate during the Civil War era, when Southerners built obelisks in cemeteries and other tributes with themes of mourning. The towering figures of individual soldiers and monuments in public squares generally came later, historians say, during the rise of Jim Crow laws and subsequently during a backlash against desegregation.

“That is when you are simultaneously seeing the dedication of these monuments,” said Christy Coleman, the chief executive of the American Civil War Museum in Richmond, Va. “They are not separate things. They are a reassertion of the ideal.”

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) originated that bogus narrative when they released the chart below. While it documents that the vast majority of the “towering figures of individual soldiers and monuments in public squares” were erected between 1900 and 1920, the SPLC falsely attributes the surge to white supremacy and Jim Crow. Only someone mentally imprisoned by political correctness could reach such a conclusion for four reasons.

First, and foremost, the period coincided with the war’s semi-centennial when veterans were dying off. A twenty-one year old who went to war in 1861 was sixty years old in 1900 and eighty in 1920.

Second, the same factor caused the number of Union soldier statues erected to swell during the same era. Presumably, Jim Crow and white supremacy cannot explain the Union statue-building. Third, the South was too impoverished for decades after the war to financially afford memorials like those that Northerners had been building for years in honor of their Civil War heroes. Notwithstanding its population growth, the South did not recover to its of pre-war economic activity level until 1900.

Fourth, Jim Crow was not isolated to 1900 – 1920. It extended for years on either side of the interval.

When The Times attributes the second minor surge of Confederate monument building during the 1960s to “a backlash against segregation” it overlooks the fact that the early 1960s coincided with the Civil War Centennial. Although the United States Post Office issued five Civil War commemorative stamps between 1961 and 1965, only  an imprisoned mind could believe that the Office was motivated by “a backlash against segregation.”

6 comments:

  1. It's the same thing we saw for ww2 memorials.

    --generic

    ReplyDelete
  2. The first part of the podcast is a warning on what is next and the price for failing to stand up to this tyranny.

    http://whitegirlbleedalot.com/on-independence-day-the-fellas-let-us-know-once-again-they-are-just-not-that-into-us-a-new-podcast-from-colin-flaherty/

    Y'all have a nice day.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks and he's a good man. He sent me his first book to review.

      Delete
  3. Some petri dish specimen attacked two Confederate monuments early
    Thursday morning in Wilmington. Even if they located her nothing will be done.
    That's why this crap/destruction keeps happening because there is
    no consequences; no rule of law; a lawless society; the slime
    hide in the darkness as in Omega Man:
    https://www.wwaytv3.com/2019/07/04/confederate-statues-vandalized-thursday-morning/
    It seems to be more legal for filth to pour over our border
    than to protect private property and our illustrious history.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It seems to be more legal for filth to pour over our border
      than to protect private property and our illustrious history.

      Well said.

      Delete