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Confederate flags, tinfoil hat crowd and other nutters.

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Re: Confederate flags, tinfoil hat crowd and other nutters.
Post by pokermind   » Wed Jul 01, 2015 11:57 am

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Oh I do love apologists. Genocide is not the same thing as slavery it is much much worse. You must agree with the famous leftist Joseph Stalin, "One death is a tragedy, a million deaths are a statistic."

Poker

gcomeau wrote:
pokermind wrote:Do you revere the flag of the United States?


Nope, never saw much point revering colored cloth... but let's pretend I did... I already addressed everything you are saying in this post:


viewtopic.php?f=16&t=7139&start=3


"The American flag legitimately represents far more than some of the isolated dishonorable and shameful incidents that occurred throughout the nation's history. The Confederate flag on the other had was purpose made for the Confederacy at the beginning of the war and was used ONLY by the Confederacy during the war.


It represents exactly one thing. The Confederacy and their cause. Anyone wants to claim they're waving it around to represent their proud heritage it's THAT HERITAGE they're saying they're proud of. Which as individuals they're still entirely entitled to do. It makes them pretty despicable (or, in the most generous interpretation I can come up with, horribly historically clueless) but they're allowed to be despicable or clueless.


But the government of your state putting its official stamp of approval on its display is a totally different animal. It is a disgrace."
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Re: Confederate flags, tinfoil hat crowd and other nutters.
Post by gcomeau   » Wed Jul 01, 2015 12:05 pm

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pokermind wrote:Oh I do love apologists. Genocide is not the same thing as slavery it is much much worse. You must agree with the famous leftist Joseph Stalin, "One death is a tragedy, a million deaths are a statistic."



Did you miss the part where in both cases (Nazis and the African slave trade) we're talking about deaths that are expressed in millions?

But in the latter case were are ADDING ON that the survivors were turned into human property and enslaved for their entire lives.


(And you may be a little fuzzy on the meaning of the word "apologist". You're applying it to the wrong side of this debate. The side making up excuses why slavery wasn't really thaaaaat bad? That's the apologizing side.)
Last edited by gcomeau on Wed Jul 01, 2015 12:52 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Confederate flags, tinfoil hat crowd and other nutters.
Post by Michael Riddell   » Wed Jul 01, 2015 12:09 pm

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pokermind wrote:Oh I do love apologists. Genocide is not the same thing as slavery it is much much worse. You must agree with the famous leftist Joseph Stalin, "One death is a tragedy, a million deaths are a statistic."

Poker


If he actually said it, Mr Dzhugashvili did have a point...

Mike. :P
---------------------
Gonnae no DAE that!

Why?

Just gonnae NO!
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Re: Confederate flags, tinfoil hat crowd and other nutters.
Post by biochem   » Wed Jul 01, 2015 11:29 pm

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The pro-Confederate flag and the anti-Confederate flag groups have been talking past each other for years. Everyone is talking and no one is listening.

On the pro-flag side - it's all about emotion and not logic.

The southern culture was a couple of centuries old at the time of the civil war and (white) southerners were every bit as proud of their culture as the DAR (daughters of the revolution) or Mayflower descendents were of theirs.

They really did see the civil war as the War of Northern Aggression. And there was more to the War than slavery. Certainly slavery was the biggest issue (if adding each issue as the percent cause of the civil war it would probably be 70-80%) But it wasn't the only issue. 70-80% doesn't get you all the way to war, that other 20-30% played a role as well. For example, the big business sociopaths that we've all been complaining about in other threads aren't new, they were busy last century too and were using their clout in Congress to pass tariffs etc. The southerners felt that the Northerners were trying to get them on all fronts not just slavery. They also felt entitled to leave a voluntary union if they so chose (they have a good point with this one re the USA response to the break up of the Soviet Union etc).

After they lost the war, things become even worse with Northerners expressing significant contempt for (white) southern culture. A contempt which continues today. Rednecks, uncultured, comedy skits featuring southern accents etc etc.

Whether or not these beliefs are factually correct isn't the main thing, it's all about emotions. To many the flag has come to represent that culture the Northerners feel such contempt for, their culture. And they have basically a "screw you" feeling about the anti-flag groups. They don't want to listen because they feel personally insulted.

In the south the flag is everywhere, it's in car dealership ads, etc. It's a lot more Dukes of Hazard (1980s TV hit show for those outside the USA) than KKK. So since they intend it to represent their culture not as a racist statement, they are personally insulted by the accusation of racism and feel it's more Northern contempt triggering the "screw you" response.

On the anti-flag side - it's also all about emotion

Being a slave was a horrible horrible thing. I agree murder was rare (the economic incentives were strongly against it) but rape wasn't. The selling of children wasn't. Grand theft slave (aka kidnapping) wasn't.

To them the emotions the flag evokes aren't nostalgia for a centuries old culture but a reminder that their ancestors were property and that they themselves were second class citizens until very recently. The stories THEIR grandparents tell aren't of battlefield heroics but of nightmares that were all too real.

To them the link to racism is real and solid.

To get sides together

1. Stop the name calling. As soon as white southerners are accused of being racist, the conversation is over.

2. The best response I've seen (and I don't have the exact quote so I'm paraphrasing the best I can) is that even though the flag is very important to (white) southern culture, it causes such pain to our black brothers and sisters, that the Christian thing to do would be to make the sacrifice and remove the flag.

It's a great response because 1. It doesn't shut down conversation by accusing people of being racist, 2. It affirms the value of (white) southern culture and acknowledges the sacrifice people are being asked to make and 3. It appeals to the very strong religious values present among white southerners and reminds them that those values are shared by their black brothers and sisters.

3. The extraordinary Christian response of the families of the shooting victims... "I forgive you" "hate won't win"

That extraordinary response love not attack helps bring people together.

4. Nicki Haley's initial response to the shooting “We woke up today, and the heart and soul of South Carolina was broken,” helped set the tone for her government. Not attack, not the political blame game but SHARED grief. That the grief was SHARED helps bring together the two sides.

5. And the mayor of Charleston "This hateful person came to this community with this crazy idea that he would be able to divide us, but all he did was make us more united and love each other even more." Again not attack but SHARED grief and SHARED Christian values.
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Re: Confederate flags, tinfoil hat crowd and other nutters.
Post by thinkstoomuch   » Thu Jul 02, 2015 8:52 am

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biochem wrote:The pro-Confederate flag and the anti-Confederate flag groups have been talking past each other for years. Everyone is talking and no one is listening.

...snip for ease of reading...


I agree to just about all of this snipped post.

The Southern soldiers by and large rarely fought because of slavery. Read enough of their letters and visited enough battlefields. What their high level leadershop wrote is different.

Fastest way to shut down any conversation is name calling.

Very good post.

THANK YOU,
T2M
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A: “No. That’s just the price. ...
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Re: Confederate flags, tinfoil hat crowd and other nutters.
Post by Donnachaidh   » Thu Jul 02, 2015 1:16 pm

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It should be noted that the Nazis used slave labor too.
_____________________________________________________
"Sometimes I wonder if the world is run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it." - Mark Twain
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Re: Confederate flags, tinfoil hat crowd and other nutters.
Post by gcomeau   » Thu Jul 02, 2015 1:29 pm

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So here's the thing.

I appreciate the "can't we all just get along" sentiment you're trying to advocate here, but some things shouldn't be swept under the rug in the name of sparing people's hurt feelings. The Germans might not like talking about the whole unfortunate Nazi episode in their history but they don't try to deny what it was or make excuses for it or put up with people re-writing history and glorifying it either. Because some historical lessons it's important to remember so they don't get repeated.

This subject would be very very high on that list.



biochem wrote:The pro-Confederate flag and the anti-Confederate flag groups have been talking past each other for years. Everyone is talking and no one is listening.

On the pro-flag side - it's all about emotion and not logic.

The southern culture was a couple of centuries old at the time of the civil war and (white) southerners were every bit as proud of their culture as the DAR (daughters of the revolution) or Mayflower descendents were of theirs.

They really did see the civil war as the War of Northern Aggression. And there was more to the War than slavery. Certainly slavery was the biggest issue (if adding each issue as the percent cause of the civil war it would probably be 70-80%) But it wasn't the only issue. 70-80% doesn't get you all the way to war, that other 20-30% played a role as well. For example, the big business sociopaths that we've all been complaining about in other threads aren't new, they were busy last century too and were using their clout in Congress to pass tariffs etc. The southerners felt that the Northerners were trying to get them on all fronts not just slavery.


To be blunt, there is no such thing as any human activity motivated 100% by a single factor. So of course there are always primary and secondary motivations.

Again, WW2 was hardly 100% about "let's kill all the Jews". It wasn't 80% about "let's kill all the Jews". Hell, it wasn't even really 50% or 40% or 30% about "let's kill all the Jews".

But it's still not wrong to put a lot of focus on the "let's kill all the Jews" aspect of what happened is it? Because that was kind of important.

So when we're talking about a war where it was 80% about "let's enslave all the black people" let's not pretend like there's any point nitpicking about whether its appropriate to just focus on the "let's enslave all the black people" bit. Fair?

They also felt entitled to leave a voluntary union if they so chose (they have a good point with this one re the USA response to the break up of the Soviet Union etc).


Then they probably shouldn't have started the shooting.

But let's pretend they didn't. Alternate history exercise! Then there would have been, broadly speaking, two paths forward:


1. The North actually does start the war and we get an actual "War of Northern Aggression" aimed at re-unifying the nation and freeing the slaves in which the Confederacy is ended before it really gets going.

2. The North doesn't go to war, and allows this government:

"Our new government is founded upon exactly the opposite idea; its foundations are laid, its corner- stone rests, upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery subordination to the superior race is his natural and normal condition. This, our new government, is the first, in the history of the world, based upon this great physical, philosophical, and moral truth. " - Vice President of the Confederate States of America, Alexander Stephens

...to take root and gain a solid foothold on North American soil.

Anyone feel like presenting an argument why option 2, the establishment of a fervently white supremacist nation, is something anyone is justified preferring to option 1 such that they should be all upset about their mistaken impression that option 1 actually happened instead of option 2? Because if not this whole "who was the aggressor" discussion is irrelevant.

Unless someone is upset about a Confederacy which declared that the cornerstone of it's government was built on the principle that black people should be perpetually enslaved to white people as the natural order of things not being established and living on then they have no grounds for being upset even if they ARE under the mistaken impression the north attacked first.

For anyone who thinks that bold quoted statement up there is a bad thing, thinking the North attacked to end that should meet only with approval. If it doesn't then whoever is upset about it needs to have a good long sit down with themselves and ask themselves what they're really angry about.

After they lost the war, things become even worse with Northerners expressing significant contempt for (white) southern culture. A contempt which continues today. Rednecks, uncultured, comedy skits featuring southern accents etc etc.

Whether or not these beliefs are factually correct isn't the main thing, it's all about emotions. To many the flag has come to represent that culture the Northerners feel such contempt for, their culture. And they have basically a "screw you" feeling about the anti-flag groups.


I'd give more credence to this if the flag wan't pulled back out of retirement in the first place in reaction to things like desegregation.


If anyone in the south wants others to stop looking down on their culture they should spend more time smacking those who wave the Confederate flag around upside the head for ruining their reputations and constantly insisting on using one of the most prominent symbols of racism they can think of to represent that culture.


But what they don't get to do is wave that flag around to represent their southern culture AND get all pissed off when people see them doing it and decide "southern culture" and "racism" have a tendency to go together. That is, after all, the message they're deciding to send themselves. Whether it's for "screw you" reasons or not.
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Re: Confederate flags, tinfoil hat crowd and other nutters.
Post by Howard T. Map-addict   » Thu Jul 02, 2015 2:21 pm

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I numbered biochem's points for reference.

1 That is what Osama bin Ladin's apologists say.
It assumes that the two parties both have moral positions.

2 Emotion without logic can push you far astray.

3 That "southern culture" was made by both "white"
and "black" ("redmen" too), and the "whites" had
systematically denied it to the "blacks" and claimed
it all for their own. ("I built this mansion and
plantation," wrote the Master, ignoring the work of
the Slaves.) That Denial is Theft, that Claim is Lies,
and the whole attitude behind them is Shameful!

4 What they saw as Aggression was a (supposed) attempt
to destroy Slavery. (Actually that supposition was
mistaken, because Northerners, and other American
"whites," were too racist to do that without much
provocation. But the supposition was their's.
I suppose that it was caused by guilty consciences.)

Those Slaveholders ought to have destroyed Slavery,
of course. They had from 1783 to 1860 to do so,
all by themselves.
Until 1845 there was no Northern interference strong
enough to be worth mentioning.
Instead, the Slaveholders went astray, by defending
and fortifying Slavery. That error was Shameful.

5 No.
Those supposed Other Issues did not cause War.
All of them could be, and had been, compromised.
You mentioned the Tariff. It was compromised in 1833,
and that Compromise was kept. After 1835, when the
National Debt was paid in full, the Tariff could have
been reduced further, because it was taking people's
money (importers are people) causing a Surplus.
But the Tariff was not reduced further, because the
Compromise Tariff was considered sacred.

Without Slavery, and with ALL of those Other Issues,
no secession-attempt and no war.
Without an*y* of those Other Issues, and with Slavery,
War: the same secession-attempt and war, that happened.

6 Again, No.
We won Independence as one country, not 13
(or 14, Vermont).
USA response to other's breakups: Not Our Business.
Just as the Russians did not send warships to arrest
the Shenandoah's crew for piracy.

7 Yes.
The Secessionist Culture had proved itself contemptible.
More than that, Despicable!
Contempt and Despite are the proper responses to it.

But that does not involve any parts of southern culture
that do not include Slaveholding and Treason.
That Confederate Apologists claim that it does,
is a shield that they attempt to pull over that part
that is Despicable.
Another lie of theirs.

8 So memory of injuries,
and the people who caused them,
and the lies that attempted to justify them,
are matters of emotion only, no logic at all?
What about facts? Have they a place in that argument?

I call "Nonsense!"

9 "To get both sides together" allows the inference
that they ought to get together, as equals or at least
as near-equals.
When one side is composed of Thieves and Liars,
they are Sinners, they are Evil.
Compromise with Evil, Tolerance of it,
refusal to despise it,
only encourages it.

The Remedy is for Sinners to Recognize their Sins,
to Repent them, to Confess them,
and then to undo the damage that they caused.

To "get together" with Evil is Wrong.
Even if the Evil is two levels less bad than the Nazis.

Howard Wilkins, Pointy-Headed Liberal
who notes that
many White Southerners had no part in that Evil.
Nikki Haley, for example.
================================

biochem wrote:1 The pro-Confederate flag and the anti-Confederate flag groups have been talking past each other for years. Everyone is talking and no one is listening.

2 On the pro-flag side - it's all about emotion and not logic.

3 The southern culture was a couple of centuries old at the time of the civil war and (white) southerners were every bit as proud of their culture as the DAR (daughters of the revolution) or Mayflower descendents were of theirs.

4 They really did see the civil war as the War of Northern Aggression.
5 And there was more to the War than slavery. Certainly slavery was the biggest issue (if adding each issue as the percent cause of the civil war it would probably be 70-80%) But it wasn't the only issue. 70-80% doesn't get you all the way to war, that other 20-30% played a role as well. For example, the big business sociopaths that we've all been complaining about in other threads aren't new, they were busy last century too and were using their clout in Congress to pass tariffs etc. The southerners felt that the Northerners were trying to get them on all fronts not just slavery.
6 They also felt entitled to leave a voluntary union if they so chose (they have a good point with this one re the USA response to the break up of the Soviet Union etc).

7 After they lost the war, things become even worse with Northerners expressing significant contempt for (white) southern culture. A contempt which continues today. Rednecks, uncultured, comedy skits featuring southern accents etc etc.

Whether or not these beliefs are factually correct isn't the main thing, it's all about emotions. To many the flag has come to represent that culture the Northerners feel such contempt for, their culture. And they have basically a "screw you" feeling about the anti-flag groups. They don't want to listen because they feel personally insulted.

In the south the flag is everywhere, it's in car dealership ads, etc. It's a lot more Dukes of Hazard (1980s TV hit show for those outside the USA) than KKK. So since they intend it to represent their culture not as a racist statement, they are personally insulted by the accusation of racism and feel it's more Northern contempt triggering the "screw you" response.

8 On the anti-flag side - it's also all about emotion

Being a slave was a horrible horrible thing. I agree murder was rare (the economic incentives were strongly against it) but rape wasn't. The selling of children wasn't. Grand theft slave (aka kidnapping) wasn't.

To them the emotions the flag evokes aren't nostalgia for a centuries old culture but a reminder that their ancestors were property and that they themselves were second class citizens until very recently. The stories THEIR grandparents tell aren't of battlefield heroics but of nightmares that were all too real.

To them the link to racism is real and solid.

9 To get sides together

1. Stop the name calling. As soon as white southerners are accused of being racist, the conversation is over.

2. The best response I've seen (and I don't have the exact quote so I'm paraphrasing the best I can) is that even though the flag is very important to (white) southern culture, it causes such pain to our black brothers and sisters, that the Christian thing to do would be to make the sacrifice and remove the flag.

It's a great response because 1. It doesn't shut down conversation by accusing people of being racist, 2. It affirms the value of (white) southern culture and acknowledges the sacrifice people are being asked to make and 3. It appeals to the very strong religious values present among white southerners and reminds them that those values are shared by their black brothers and sisters.

3. The extraordinary Christian response of the families of the shooting victims... "I forgive you" "hate won't win"

That extraordinary response love not attack helps bring people together.

4. Nicki Haley's initial response to the shooting “We woke up today, and the heart and soul of South Carolina was broken,” helped set the tone for her government. Not attack, not the political blame game but SHARED grief. That the grief was SHARED helps bring together the two sides.

5. And the mayor of Charleston "This hateful person came to this community with this crazy idea that he would be able to divide us, but all he did was make us more united and love each other even more." Again not attack but SHARED grief and SHARED Christian values.
Last edited by Howard T. Map-addict on Thu Jul 09, 2015 11:08 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Confederate flags, tinfoil hat crowd and other nutters.
Post by pokermind   » Fri Jul 03, 2015 6:24 am

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Image

Hmm, the "I believe in your right to your opinions as long as they agree with mine," is the theme song of all dictatorships. This holier than Thou attitude is the root cause of violence in our society IMHO. Note it is practiced by both sides of this argument, and since I have my own opinion by myself.

Hmm, back to the Tequila, Poker
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Re: Confederate flags, tinfoil hat crowd and other nutters.
Post by gcomeau   » Wed Jul 08, 2015 11:40 am

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I'm still trying to figure out what the point of that cat is... seeing as you've posted it three times in this thread you must think it's important...


pokermind wrote:
Hmm, the "I believe in your right to your opinions as long as they agree with mine," is the theme song of all dictatorships.


Oh for cripes sake... dictatorship? Really?

This is a debate. What happens in a debate is one side expresses their opinion, the other side expresses their opposing opinion, and they both argue why they're right and the other side is wrong and (ideally) one side is recognized to have made the superior argument by at least some people and some minds are maybe changed.

NOBODY here is saying anybody isn't entitled to their opinion. saying someone's opinion is wrong does not equal saying they aren't allowed to have it. You can be wrong all damn day. You're perfectly entitled to be.
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