Anonymous wrote: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.
Many people do. You must be disappointed that not everybody is like you![]()
I don't see the flag as racist. It's a flag for crying out loud. It represents the region that is culturally different from other regions withing the country. Nobody flips out when they see state flags.
I can sort of excuse black people's perspective on this. On the other hand, everything is racist for the black folks nowadays; sane people just shrug at the claim.
I do see the Confederate Flag as racist and so does every skin head in the country. It is also a Losers flag which actually makes me embarrassed for the people who display it. You lost the war that you started and yet you fly the flag to remind everyone that you are a loser?
So why legitimize a hate group that took on a symbol as their own by adopting their interpretation? It's original meaning was to represent states' rights. But I'm sure you are aware of this, no?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I lived in the deep south as a child of a military officer. I am jewish, and believe in equality -- and did in 1975. What I found (at 11 yo), the people who called me a "N**** Loving Pollack Jew" where the same people that burned the cross in our front lawn....they were the same people that tried to intimidate us into leaving, and alway used the confederate flag -- it matched their white robes.
Oh, and they succeeded in driving us out. My family moved away as soon as my father could get transferred.
Lord knows there's no hate up north- what a bunch of narrow minded idiots.
Anonymous wrote:I lived in the deep south as a child of a military officer. I am jewish, and believe in equality -- and did in 1975. What I found (at 11 yo), the people who called me a "N**** Loving Pollack Jew" where the same people that burned the cross in our front lawn....they were the same people that tried to intimidate us into leaving, and alway used the confederate flag -- it matched their white robes.
Oh, and they succeeded in driving us out. My family moved away as soon as my father could get transferred.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Many people do. You must be disappointed that not everybody is like you![]()
I don't see the flag as racist. It's a flag for crying out loud. It represents the region that is culturally different from other regions withing the country. Nobody flips out when they see state flags.
I can sort of excuse black people's perspective on this. On the other hand, everything is racist for the black folks nowadays; sane people just shrug at the claim.
I do see the Confederate Flag as racist and so does every skin head in the country. It is also a Losers flag which actually makes me embarrassed for the people who display it. You lost the war that you started and yet you fly the flag to remind everyone that you are a loser?
So why legitimize a hate group that took on a symbol as their own by adopting their interpretation? It's original meaning was to represent states' rights. But I'm sure you are aware of this, no?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get being proud of one of the most shameful parts of American history.
That flag is the Cross of St. Andrew, and represented State's rights - it's a very important part of history. Those groups you hate that have 'adopted' this flag has bastardized its true meaning. By accepting their premise, you are simply playing into their ignorance - you are being used.
I am consistently amazed at those who can't think independently.
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.
Many people do. You must be disappointed that not everybody is like you![]()
I don't see the flag as racist. It's a flag for crying out loud. It represents the region that is culturally different from other regions withing the country. Nobody flips out when they see state flags.
I can sort of excuse black people's perspective on this. On the other hand, everything is racist for the black folks nowadays; sane people just shrug at the claim.
I do see the Confederate Flag as racist and so does every skin head in the country. It is also a Losers flag which actually makes me embarrassed for the people who display it. You lost the war that you started and yet you fly the flag to remind everyone that you are a loser?
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.
Do you know of any articles that might explain this for in depth?
Pretty much any high school history book should do.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get being proud of one of the most shameful parts of American history.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
It's not about slavery for me that's the whole point- you are the one with the fantasy that southern whites want to enslave blacks. If that makes you feel good about yourself (at my expense), so be it. There's no irony, no reversal of fortune. I am deeply proud of my heritage, I walk standing tall and you cannot I take that or my colors away from me.
So taking the slavery thing out, you are still celebrating a heritage of secession. You chose to leave America rather than to work within the Constitution.
You can have your colors. Wear them as a poncho for all I care. It helps to identify 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.
Many people do. You must be disappointed that not everybody is like you![]()
I don't see the flag as racist. It's a flag for crying out loud. It represents the region that is culturally different from other regions withing the country. Nobody flips out when they see state flags.
I can sort of excuse black people's perspective on this. On the other hand, everything is racist for the black folks nowadays; sane people just shrug at the claim.
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: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.
Do you know of any articles that might explain this for in depth?