Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a proud descendant of confederate veterans. My father proudly displayed our confederate battle flag in Vietnam. The confederate flag fills me with pride in my region. I don't care what you have to say otherwise.
I'm a proud descendant of Scotland, and I'm happy to wear my family tartan, but I don't fly the Scottish flag at my house.
Well it wouldn't bother me if you did though perhaps I live in a free state of mind, and others would castigate you for flying th colors of a "foreign power."
You're not my master and you'll never take my colors from me.
What a strange reversal of fortune for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a proud descendant of confederate veterans. My father proudly displayed our confederate battle flag in Vietnam. The confederate flag fills me with pride in my region. I don't care what you have to say otherwise.
I'm a proud descendant of Scotland, and I'm happy to wear my family tartan, but I don't fly the Scottish flag at my house.
Well it wouldn't bother me if you did though perhaps I live in a free state of mind, and others would castigate you for flying th colors of a "foreign power."
You're not my master and you'll never take my colors from me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a proud descendant of confederate veterans. My father proudly displayed our confederate battle flag in Vietnam. The confederate flag fills me with pride in my region. I don't care what you have to say otherwise.
I'm a proud descendant of Scotland, and I'm happy to wear my family tartan, but I don't fly the Scottish flag at my house.
Well it wouldn't bother me if you did though perhaps I live in a free state of mind, and others would castigate you for flying th colors of a "foreign power."
You're not my master and you'll never take my colors from me.
Anonymous wrote: First Lieutenant Arch Hodge hoisted one over LaHaye du Puits in Normandy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a proud descendant of confederate veterans. My father proudly displayed our confederate battle flag in Vietnam. The confederate flag fills me with pride in my region. I don't care what you have to say otherwise.
I'm a proud descendant of Scotland, and I'm happy to wear my family tartan, but I don't fly the Scottish flag at my house.
Well it wouldn't bother me if you did though perhaps I live in a free state of mind, and others would castigate you for flying th colors of a "foreign power."
You're not my master and you'll never take my colors from me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are, of course, free to debate whether the Confederate flag represents racism. However, it is indisputable that the Confederacy was, for its entire existence, an enemy of the United States of America. Therefore, flying its flag is akin to flying a Nazi flag or the flag of another entity that was always an enemy of the U.S.
The confederate battle flag has been proudly displayed by U.S. Service men in every major conflict since the civil war.
Where?! Not in the armed forces!
And not by any US service man I ever had the privilege of serving with in the US Army. You will NEVER see any Confederate Flag flying above any US base in the world.
Not above a base of course. That's just dumb, though I believe one was flown in ww2 over a Japanese island
It was sanctioned - the co was a son of the confederacy.
So you went from "The Confederate flag has proudly been displayed in every major conflict since the Civil War" to MAYBE just one over an occupied Japanese Island in WWII?
I guarantee you, if the Japanese Island story is true, that it was never sanctioned by US military officers or the US government. If true, that was a horrible thing to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are, of course, free to debate whether the Confederate flag represents racism. However, it is indisputable that the Confederacy was, for its entire existence, an enemy of the United States of America. Therefore, flying its flag is akin to flying a Nazi flag or the flag of another entity that was always an enemy of the U.S.
The confederate battle flag has been proudly displayed by U.S. Service men in every major conflict since the civil war.
Where?! Not in the armed forces!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are, of course, free to debate whether the Confederate flag represents racism. However, it is indisputable that the Confederacy was, for its entire existence, an enemy of the United States of America. Therefore, flying its flag is akin to flying a Nazi flag or the flag of another entity that was always an enemy of the U.S.
The confederate battle flag has been proudly displayed by U.S. Service men in every major conflict since the civil war.
Where?! Not in the armed forces!
And not by any US service man I ever had the privilege of serving with in the US Army. You will NEVER see any Confederate Flag flying above any US base in the world.
Not above a base of course. That's just dumb, though I believe one was flown in ww2 over a Japanese island
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a proud descendant of confederate veterans. My father proudly displayed our confederate battle flag in Vietnam. The confederate flag fills me with pride in my region. I don't care what you have to say otherwise.
I'm a proud descendant of Scotland, and I'm happy to wear my family tartan, but I don't fly the Scottish flag at my house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't need to go to the deep south. We them at OBX and we see them at the Eastern Shore every time we go.
And I see them in the redneck havens of south central PA, quite often.