jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's kind of interesting to see how politicians and talking heads are bullshitting about people coming together, finding unity etc. It makes me sad the rest of the country is gladly buying into it. SC is still the same it was yesterday, with the same problems. The flag is just an object, after all.
If it was just an object, not so many people would care so much about it. Do you know Governor David Beasley, a Republican, lost his election to a Democrat because he dared to move the confederate flag from the top of the Capitol dome to where it was until this morning?
This is exactly what it is. Politics. I live in South Carolina, and I can assure you that the overwhelming majority of South Carolinians have other things to worry about. People I work with (black, white, foreign-born) don't have the time to protest the flag in Columbia. They have day jobs. They are also savvy enough to understand that public figures jump on the opportunity to advance their careers. Nikki Hayley is delusional if she thinks a former seamstress can get much further than Columbia, but I command the girl for trying. This is very American![]()
Sorry for rambling, I'm just really disgusted by politicians who exploit yet another tragedy. Psychopaths.
Wow, there is a lot packed into that response. Those protesting the flag don't have jobs, or at least day jobs? Nikki Haley is simply a "former seamstress" who is potentially "delusional"? Haley, who based on the best evidence is a grown woman, is simply a "girl" to you? It sounds like someone is bent out of shape about others not knowing their place.
Anonymous wrote:It us like keeping a picture if your ex girlfriend on your nightstand after you married someone else. I am not saying thorw away the photo, but at least keep it in the closet!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You don't control the way others interpret symbols..... We would all be well served to remember this.
That cuts both ways, which is why most thinking people don't buy into the "heritage not hate" crap that apologists keep putting out there, because thinking people are acutely aware that the only major historical events associated with the Confederate flag are the bloody and awful Civil War which cost so many lives, which was indeed about slavery, after which the Confederate flag was largely abandoned and laid dormant for decades, only to be resurrected in connection with the KKK in the early 1900s, and making a strong resurgence in protest to desegregation and the Civil Rights movement. Sadly those are things that have not been correctly, completely or accurately taught in many southern States, leaving some to believe the revisionist version and deny those associations.
It does cut both ways!!! I am pro flag. I mean precisely that- your description of the flags meaning differs greatly from mine. If you understand that my flying the flag is not about segregation (for me!) then you'll understand my position better, just as I should open my mind to yours.
That approach does not necessarily lead to agreement, but at least acknowledges that there are real people with differing views.
By this standard, any Muslim could fly the flag of ISIS, because it's just a bunch of words which proclaim faith in Allah and a belief that Mohammed is a prophet. What is the harm in that?
It is impossible to argue with you since you are so deeply versed in southern history -- actually you think you know so much that you don't.... Simply look in google images for confederate reunion and you'll find picture after picture of the stars and bars from the years after the war.... Do you think the veterans kids and grandkids attended these? You make dogmatic class statements that the flag was hidden until the segregation debates - simply not true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You don't control the way others interpret symbols..... We would all be well served to remember this.
That cuts both ways, which is why most thinking people don't buy into the "heritage not hate" crap that apologists keep putting out there, because thinking people are acutely aware that the only major historical events associated with the Confederate flag are the bloody and awful Civil War which cost so many lives, which was indeed about slavery, after which the Confederate flag was largely abandoned and laid dormant for decades, only to be resurrected in connection with the KKK in the early 1900s, and making a strong resurgence in protest to desegregation and the Civil Rights movement. Sadly those are things that have not been correctly, completely or accurately taught in many southern States, leaving some to believe the revisionist version and deny those associations.
It does cut both ways!!! I am pro flag. I mean precisely that- your description of the flags meaning differs greatly from mine. If you understand that my flying the flag is not about segregation (for me!) then you'll understand my position better, just as I should open my mind to yours.
That approach does not necessarily lead to agreement, but at least acknowledges that there are real people with differing views.
By this standard, any Muslim could fly the flag of ISIS, because it's just a bunch of words which proclaim faith in Allah and a belief that Mohammed is a prophet. What is the harm in that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You don't control the way others interpret symbols..... We would all be well served to remember this.
That cuts both ways, which is why most thinking people don't buy into the "heritage not hate" crap that apologists keep putting out there, because thinking people are acutely aware that the only major historical events associated with the Confederate flag are the bloody and awful Civil War which cost so many lives, which was indeed about slavery, after which the Confederate flag was largely abandoned and laid dormant for decades, only to be resurrected in connection with the KKK in the early 1900s, and making a strong resurgence in protest to desegregation and the Civil Rights movement. Sadly those are things that have not been correctly, completely or accurately taught in many southern States, leaving some to believe the revisionist version and deny those associations.
It does cut both ways!!! I am pro flag. I mean precisely that- your description of the flags meaning differs greatly from mine. If you understand that my flying the flag is not about segregation (for me!) then you'll understand my position better, just as I should open my mind to yours.
That approach does not necessarily lead to agreement, but at least acknowledges that there are real people with differing views.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You don't control the way others interpret symbols..... We would all be well served to remember this.
That cuts both ways, which is why most thinking people don't buy into the "heritage not hate" crap that apologists keep putting out there, because thinking people are acutely aware that the only major historical events associated with the Confederate flag are the bloody and awful Civil War which cost so many lives, which was indeed about slavery, after which the Confederate flag was largely abandoned and laid dormant for decades, only to be resurrected in connection with the KKK in the early 1900s, and making a strong resurgence in protest to desegregation and the Civil Rights movement. Sadly those are things that have not been correctly, completely or accurately taught in many southern States, leaving some to believe the revisionist version and deny those associations.
It does cut both ways!!! I am pro flag. I mean precisely that- your description of the flags meaning differs greatly from mine. If you understand that my flying the flag is not about segregation (for me!) then you'll understand my position better, just as I should open my mind to yours.
That approach does not necessarily lead to agreement, but at least acknowledges that there are real people with differing views.