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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Were I too be completely forth right I have only two flags that I would fly at my home. One is my family coat of arms and the other is the 13 stars and 13 strips of the revolutionary war. Both represent something I can fully support; no other flag I know of shares that same full level of support.
From everything I can read, there is no question that the Southern States certainly were disproportionately impacted by tariffs and duties that started just after the War of 1812 and which were perpetuated until the Civil War. But you are trying to make the argument that the secession was Lincoln's doing, and I can find no support for that argument. His election may have been the straw which broke the camel's back, but before he had actually even done anything, the South had seceded - some even prior to Lincoln's election!
If you want to blame a President, I'd start with John Quincy Adams and Buchanan.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tariff_of_...
The other major piece was the right of states and by extension the rights of individuals to live for themselves and not for the federal government.
The two were in contradiction in the south. That does not make the first any less wrong and the second any less right. Since they were connected the victory of the north condemned them both to no longer exist
I find it interesting that there is so much vitriol against Lincoln, however - a man who failed in every election until that of President. This wasn't a man of vast political power. And if one reads the texts of the Lincoln-Douglas debates, it becomes pretty difficult to reconcile the Lincoln you seem to want to portray with the one in those debates. Reading Lincoln's other writings, too, such as the Gettysburg Address (which was never written as a monumental speech) tells me much more about the man than a historian from 150 years after the fact. I'll take your comments with a very large grain of salt.
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