Spearhead wrote:
unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Look, did we reintegrate the south or didn't we? Loyalty to your state was more of a driving force than loyalty to the union. I can see how federal loyalists would have an issue with the confederate flag (history painting things as it has), but not the people caught up in the civil war. What about all the land and homes razed by Union forces? Should we blacklist northern leaders as well? Remove Lincoln from US currency?
1. No, we didn't reintegrate the South. Hence the vast network of military bases, and Jim Crow. Good article
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/artic … 69,00.html2. Loyalty to the Union was always the driving force behind the Civil war. Kmar already explained it was a war between people who considered themselves Americans. Loyalty to your state was more of a driving force? Where'd you ever hear that?
3. People have an issue with the confederate flag because it is a message to others that says "the second the Federal government does something I don't like, or the second a President gets elected whom I think will do something I don't like (Lincoln), I'm going to violently attempt to take over federal property". (Fort Sumter). And of course, the whole slavery thing.
4. No one has ever said the Union did not do bad things. You, on the other hand, seem to believe "history painting things as it has" is the reason people associate the Confederate flag with slavery. As if it's just an artificial "painting" over some higher truth.
5. Blacklist the abolitionists? Blacklist a President? Because people have an issue with naming things after a fake President? Okay, dude, lol...
1. I thought I was being fairly facetious on that point. Look, the CSA is a non-entity. The south has been reabsorbed into the union, regardless of cultural differences throughout the US.
2. lol @ "where'd you ever hear that." While you're being snippy, can I ask you if you've ever read anything on the history of American culture? Back then, it was common to see people identify themselves as citizens of a state before being called "Americans." Robert E. Lee himself refused a union command because he didn't want to take up arms against Virginia. A civil war being what it is, many of those who eagerly threw their lot in with the south didn't consider themselves to be committing treason against anything. National identity grew in time, but it wasn't always like that.
3. I've already said I can see where people would have an issue with the confederate flag nowadays, being avowed federal loyalists. However, the
civil war is over, and it's important to not hold grudges against the
American people and families involved, nor deprive the descendants of "repatriated" Americans their heritage if you don't want to drive the wedge between the "north" and "south" in farther. If you still want to call the "president" of the south a butthead, go ahead; he was.
4. I seem to believe that? Winners traditionally paint history in their favor. The confederate flag is associated with slavery because that's what the media focus on the American civil war is. That said, see 3. Also, go read about slavery in the north, if you can find a book that doesn't skip all the unpleasant facts.
5. I was making absurd suggestions to highlight the absurdity of this entire issue.