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I wish the confederacy had gone with the flag with the crescent and palmetto on it. I wonder if the people who use the flag now as a symbol of "white pride" would feel as comfortable using it with a "muslim" symbol on it
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Being a Northerner, I just don't get it. How can anyone possibly be proud of their Southern heritage to the point of flying a Confederate flag (the obvious one) without that being based on racism? How can you be proud of ancestors who participated in something despicable? My father is half German and there was a time many years ago when distant relatives from Germany wanted to get in touch. It was easy enough to figure out that they had been Nazis. My father's reaction was "they're not my f***ing relatives!" |
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http://i219.photobucket.com/albums/c...to/monster.png http://www.greenfarmparts.com/v/vspf...eere-parts.jpg http://www.famouslogos.org/logos/ferrari-logo.jpg http://th117.photobucket.com/albums/..._Budweiser.jpg And yes, law enforcement is aware of that these symbols are being used. |
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http://images.eonline.com/eol_images...ard.121008.jpg This is how I like to see the "Confederate Flag" with Bo, Luke, and Daisy Duke, oh and maybe Flash the hound dog. I'm in hot pursuit! Not that hot mess with Jessica Simpson, ewwww. Forreal though, my eldest sister had some Tiger Beat pictures of John Schneider. I remember when she got married and moved out we found some of Ponch from CHiPS, but she was far more into Larry Wilcox. |
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I'm not trying to have a battle of atrocities with you, but to compare a Confederate to a Nazi is a comparing a molehill to a mountain. |
Seriously, some gangbangers are using the John Deere logo? I am SOOOOO laughing out loud right now. I am from the heart of John Deere country and I keep thinking of my BIL as a secret gang banger instead of a corn and soybean farmer.
Also not having a dog in this fight, I think if you want to express your southern pride there are about 10,000 ways you can do it besides waving a rebel flag, which as discussed above isn't even technically an official conferate flag. Forget flags and "be southern" in your accent and enthusiastically welcoming behavior. If the woman was southern in that way, would she have made the news? Why would you want to celebrate your southern'ness in such a hateful and negative way? My husband used to work with a Jewish guy (yes, here in Dubai) whose family apparently were slave owners somewhere in the south, although they are currently and for some time from the San Francisco area. He feels the need to display the rebel flag and brag that Jews were slave owners too. Wow. Good for him. But he's exactly that guy. People are going to be nice to him even though he's in a place where I'd try to keep it on the downlow, but is a huge Star of David around his neck necessary? Only if you're TRYING to cause trouble. And that's all the rebel flag does as far as I'm concerned. |
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The John Deere logo is used as a gang symbol??? What's next?
http://i22.photobucket.com/albums/b3...ose/tampax.jpg I have PMS and I'm going to kill you! http://i22.photobucket.com/albums/b3...se/huggies.jpg Beware, I am going to poop on you! http://i22.photobucket.com/albums/b3...esCAE45N32.jpg Fear me, even though I have a teeny weenie! |
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To put a positive spin on why the south wanted to separate and why 130 years later people want to celebrate that I think is a bogus excuse. Going back to the ever-dreaded nazi comparison, the reason they needed to get rid of the Jews was because they were killing the economy. That was part of their thinking... everything that was wrong with Germany was the Jews' fault. So you can say the Swastika represents Germany's economic rebirth if you want. It still means 6 million dead to me. And the rebel flag to me represents a long and abiding dislike of personal freedom of all kinds, hate in it's most uneducated, head in the sand form. |
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Suffice it to say that symbols can have different meanings to different people. The wise and thoughful person is aware of that and takes into account both what they themselves understand a symbol to mean and what they know others might understand the symbol to mean. And that can work both ways. Quote:
I'm sure that you know that participation in the slave trade and all the atrocities that went with it was not limited to Southerners. It involved people from all over America (not to mention the British and many other non-Americans), and it was sanctioned and supported by federal law. Does that mean the American flag is tainted? To be clear: I'm not so much trying to defend any Confederate flag, much less the Confederacy itself, as I am trying to highlight this point: I think one of the biggest hinderances to understanding other people or other perspectives is the phrase "I just don't get it," or its cousin, "I just don't understand how people can think that." If no effort has been put into trying to understand another's perspective, it's a cop-out and that just reinforces one's own biases. Understanding another's perspective doesn't mean agreement with it, but it does mean being open to the possiblity that maybe, just maybe, there is more than one way to see things. |
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I am not affected by the flag, as I understand that not everyone flying it is proclaiming his/her racism. Yes, there are other symbols that could be used, but these individuals have chosen this one. I've lived in the north and the south, and I never got the "OMG look at the flag. Let him/her show up in MY neighborhood and we'll have a rumble!" vibe. I'm not sure where folks are getting that. |
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