Flags and the Thought Police
Posted by robgambrill 9 years, 10 months ago to Culture
I never really cared for the confederate flag, but I heard today that E-bay had banned their sale.
Just to see what would happen, I decided to try and order one off of Amazon, just as they decided not to allow the sale of rebel flags as well.
As they were taking down the offerings, I noticed that other historical flags were being pulled as well. The picture is from my "Wish List". Not sure the web masters knew which flags to pull off the site.
I eventually managed to order both a "Don't Tread on Me" flag and a small rebel flag as a souvenir of the day the thought police decided I shouldn't be able to buy a flag because of somebodies idea of what it stands for.
I could be mistaken, but I think for a lot of people, the confederate flag has to more to do with a wish to be free of the federal government than history or race issues.
The seller shipped the rebel flag right away, guess he didn't want to get stuck with the inventory.
. I guess I am not comfortable with banning the sale of flags, even unpopular ones.
Just to see what would happen, I decided to try and order one off of Amazon, just as they decided not to allow the sale of rebel flags as well.
As they were taking down the offerings, I noticed that other historical flags were being pulled as well. The picture is from my "Wish List". Not sure the web masters knew which flags to pull off the site.
I eventually managed to order both a "Don't Tread on Me" flag and a small rebel flag as a souvenir of the day the thought police decided I shouldn't be able to buy a flag because of somebodies idea of what it stands for.
I could be mistaken, but I think for a lot of people, the confederate flag has to more to do with a wish to be free of the federal government than history or race issues.
The seller shipped the rebel flag right away, guess he didn't want to get stuck with the inventory.
. I guess I am not comfortable with banning the sale of flags, even unpopular ones.
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And you are a fool.
The 3/5 compromise was a measure that was critical to getting the Southern States to adopt the Constitution, but which was passed separately:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three-Fift...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origins_of...
http://www.historynet.com/causes-of-the-...
http://americanhistory.about.com/od/civi...
Can you point me to more information on the tarriffs issue? My understanding was that tarriffs were put on _incoming_ goods from other nations - not outgoing goods. I appreciate your elaboration.
While I was living in Richmond, there was a DJ on a station down there, not from the south, who made a comment on air, LIVE, that Monument Avenue was the street with all the second place trophies running down it. Well, I laughed my dupa off, but people were screaming for his head! He was made to publicly apologize, and nearly lost his job. It was crazy! And my roommate for a few years was in the Daughters of The Confederacy. Her dad was pissed she was living with a Yankee... It was an unusual city, and I'm glad for the experience, but I would never live in Richmond again. It was a very strange place... Dangerous as well.. And they have not, nor do I think they will EVER forget the war of northern aggression... I was of the mind that they needed to get over it, wipe off the hands and move on!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three-Fift...
I agree wholeheartedly that the North was not a just on a noble crusade. However, the North-led US Government specifically limited slavery in new territories and states admitted to the Union, and the South specifically referred to these actions in withdrawing. For example, New York wrote laws prohibiting the transport of slave, which stopped wealthy southerners from bringing servants when vacationing in New England. Read the secession letters from South Carolina et al. They clearly refer to the limits on slavery as a reason for their actions.
Look at it a different way. What distinguished the North from the South? Agrarian model extended based on growing season and slavery.
If the South had simply changed their economic model and abolished slavery, they would (like now) have morphed into a version of the model of the North.
Why didn't they change it? Money, based on an economic model of (as I've noted elsewhere today) Milton Friedman's "involuntary servitude". It was wrong. It violates reasonable Objectivist logic, and this money, the money taken from the backs of others, was the basis of secession and the consequent Civil War.
The war was primarily about taxing one group (Southern Agriculture) in order to give the money to another group (Northern Manufacturing who monetarily supported/elected the GOP/Lincoln which was created from the failed Whig Party.) Slavery was not a reason for the war, just a way for Lincoln, the consumate lying politician, and for the historians (who sought to deify Lincon) , to excuse his war crimes and unconstitutional acts.
Lincoln envisioned the Reconstruction as an act of revitalization for the South, reuniting them with the rest of the nation, but his assassination destroyed his vision. The bitter abolitionists who took over the Reconstruction saw it as a way to punish a rebellious population, and the South was pillaged economically, treated far more harshly than any other nation defeated by the U.S. That created an angry, resentful South that treated the African Americans as a surrogate for the abusive North.
Many of the various monuments and the tolerance for the rebel battle flag were a kind of backhanded excuse to soften Southern bitterness. President Wilson (racist to the core) actually admired the Ku Klux Klan, and stated he felt that "Birth of a Nation" (that portrayed the KKK as heroes) was the greatest film made.
The Civil war is history. Time to treat it as such, objectively, as symbolic of anachronistic thinking.
However Ebay and Amazon serve as a marketplace for a lot of small businesses. They pretty much said we are not going to sell this stuff and you can't either. What is the small business guys alternative market place? What if the search engines said they would not link to merchandise bearing the confederate flag?
Starts to sound more like censorship than a business preference .
(Apologies --That's just me playing Devil's advocate to your devils advocate).
It makes me think of the beginning of the slavery of mankind, not the emergence of freedom for the blacks.
Guess I am just a glass half empty kind of guy. :)
I don't think the Oriental and Nazi versions are related. I think the Nazi black swastika is derived from Aryan runes.
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