Howard T. Map-addict wrote:What I noticed about that line was the "honest toil"
part. The "toiling" was (in large part) done by the
slaves, and then the "earned property" was stolen from
them, by the slaveholders, the local, state, and even
the federal governments, and sometimes even by others
of the "master class" who happened by.
But it now seems that you know that, too, and we
are looking at that abomination from different angles.
Regarding the bakery, were I the lawyer,
I would advise against suing, and were I the judge,
I would dismiss the lawsuit.
I find it a Bad Idea.
We are a capitalist country, earning our livings by
selling our services, and here are a baker & a florist,
refusing their services to people whom they despise
at the risk of bankruptcy and starvation,
and now in the court are those same despised people,
suing to force those anti-capitalist fools to accept
their money anyway, and prosper!
Me, I would not do it. I'd refuse to force money into
their pockets, and then I would urge my friends to
Boycott them. Let them go bankrupt and starve,
if that is who they are!
When a heritage is abominable,
love of it is just that bad.
Howard "Map-addict" Wilkins, Pointy-Headed Liberal
pokermind wrote:I can only shake my head, here I give you the first Confederate national song to look at, and you did not catch the salient point. There is a line in there "We fight for our property we earned by honest toil" Property was a polite word for slaves in the south at that time that would prove your argument that the war was about slavery.
Many southern apologists refuse to acknowledge that the war was about slavery.
The law in South Carolina was a protest to integration passed in the middle of the Civil Rights struggle and IMHO should be repealed. I'm old enough to recall the Whites only sings in the south and thinking how stupid and unfair it was.
So why I could not contradict your points, I agreed with them. Hence cute kitty.
OK it's OK for gays to sue a bakery for not making a gay wedding cake due to the owner's beliefs, but it's not OK to sue Wallmart for refusing to make a cake with the Confederate flag so justify that contradiction to me. Both after all are just business decisions. Hmmm, a hint discrimination is discrimination both are justifiable law suits.
I still maintain that love of heritage and hate of injustice the flag represents are both valid for the individuals holding them. Who am I or you for that matter to judge the more valid view.
Poker