Friday, December 11, 2020

The Elephant in the Room


There are very few human symbols that find absolute approval or, in the alternative, disapproval. Symbols are called that because they represent something far larger than themselves. An unknown symbol is an oxymoron. At present, the symbol that is seemingly most under attack in this country is the Confederate battle flag albeit other flags that represented that short-lived, tragic nation, the Confederate States of America are also under assault—especially those that contain the battle flag in their canton.

But the battle flag in particular is under attack by the politically correct because they say that it is a symbol of “racism”—a Trotskyite term invented to sow discord between the races in the United States. Because of the power of political correctness these days, the claim of racism is far stronger than any claim that the flag represented a standard for treason. That claim together with the claim of the flag being “racist” are untrue. The battle flag represented neither racism nor treason, but a struggle by the People of the South for independence from a tyrannous central government, a struggle that was little different from that waged eighty-five years earlier against the British Empire. From that struggle came the American flag against which an actual claim might be made regarding the institution of slavery. For no flag of the Confederate States of America ever flew over a slave ship but the Stars and Stripes most assuredly did—and that on ships from northern ports!

4 comments:

  1. Well, now I have known this and maybe some of you have known this. Trouble is, no one seems to stand up and do something about it. I still wear a confederate belt buckle, ever since I was 16. I fly the flag every January 19, and I am not from the south. F PC crap. Celebrate no matter what.

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  2. In Georgia, in the dark of night, our old flag which featured the state seal on a battle flag and replaced it with some artless junk. After a lot of complaints, it was replaced a flag composed of the seal in place of the circle of state stars on the Stars and Bars. The good thing about this is that few people, even some Confederates don't know that the Stars and Bars is actually the Confederate National Flag.

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    1. The person who designed the last flag said when asked if it signified the First National, replied it can mean anything you like. :(

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