Tuesday, December 3, 2019

When it was cool to be Southern

 


Dear Friend (potential and actual) of the Abbeville Institute:

The ideology of political correctness that is toppling Confederate memorials is not peculiar to America. It is a global sickness that is forcing the historic peoples of Europe to ask the unnerving question:  “Who are We?” In 1980, it was still cool to be Southern. The “Dukes of Hazard” were popular nationally. And president Carter could say in some of his speeches that he was “proud to be an American but even prouder to be a Southerner.”
             
Culture wars do not arise as a reaction to poverty or injustice. They are ideologies designed by intellectuals to subvert a people’s confidence in their historic identity as a means of gaining political power. Everywhere we see elites in Europe and America cringing with misplaced guilt when accused of white supremacy, homophobia, or other bully terms found in the vocabulary of political correctness. Culture wars can be won only by a deeper intellectual and moral understanding of our traditions that can restore confidence in who we are and where we came from.

This is the intellectual and moral task of the Abbeville Institute. As we close the year, please consider making a tax deductible donation to help in educating our young people and the public in what is true and valuable in the 400 year long history of Dixie. 

Donald Livingston
President Abbeville Institute

4 comments:

  1. It's still cool to be Southern, even if ya wasn't born there but made Southern by the Grace of God.

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  2. 400 years of Dixie? It was only in the time of the Founders that D. Boone helped to open the 'western territories' west of the Appalachians.

    That raises to mind that maybe I don't understand what is Dixie as well as I thought.

    But I sure do vehemently agree of how to win the culture war. That knowledge and understanding of history and tradition presents the only sure way of winning.

    Rick

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    Replies
    1. It was only in the time of the Founders that D. Boone helped to open the 'western territories' west of the Appalachians.

      I imagine he's not referring to all of it but to the areas east of the mountains going South.

      Delete