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To: WhiteSox1837

Thats the problem, some like yourself think the South’s rememberance of its own history is ‘bigotry’.

Its not. Its family history as much as anything else. The common myth found in the North is everybody involved in the war on the Southern side was pro slavery, which simply isn’t true. They think they were all racists, which is only arguable if you apply today’s standards to a society that literally ‘disappeared’ over 150 years ago.

Most Southerners I’ve had the pleasure to meet and call friends remember the ‘fight’, the good fight. Its not called ‘The Last Gentlemen’s War’ for nothing.

You don’t find anyone calling for reinstatement of slavery, for goodness sake, yet some in the North pretend thats what the CSA battle flag, and the “South will Rise Again” means.

Its simply not the case at all. Its a matter of regional pride in their forefathers that had the guts to ‘stare across the deadly space’. Its about a war in which the entire adult population of countless towns throughout the South were literally decimated...and yet they still fought on. Its about valor, and courage, and honor, and honoring those that fell - on both sides btw, in my experience.

Northerners, when this topic comes up, as you inadvertently demonstrate, prefer to look to the worst aspects whenever a CW thread comes up.

We all know what those ‘aspects’ were.

By the third year of the war, those troops, especially those in the Army of Northern Virginia, were not fighting for slavery, far from it. By that point, nobody was thinking much about ‘The Cause’ at all, they were fighting for their brothers - literally, and their neighbors - again literally, because of the unusual nature of the war itself.

Next time you feel the urge to slam those that find the CSA ‘battleflag’ a source of pride, perhaps consider they were fighting, and dying, along with their family and friends.

I don’t respect ‘The Cause’.

I have a very deep and abiding respect for all who ‘stared across the deadly space’. I admire the raw courage it took to walk across that deadly field in Gettysburg on July 3rd, 1863....just as I admire those that held the copse of trees that was the focal point of a charge of 12 - 15 thousand members of an army that had routinely kicked the Army of the Potomac’s ass for the past year. I’m amazed at that courage it took to cross, and recross the cornfield at Sharpsburg/Antietam. Let alone trying to defend, or attack the infamous ‘sunken road’ now referred to as ‘Bloody Lane’.

To insinuate looking at those unbelievable men, on both sides, with awe, and admiration is to admit to not understanding family, in short.

They aren’t ‘celebrating slavery’ with this, nor are they even hinting at it. That only comes from Northerners with a false axe to grind in my opinion.

Think about this next time you want to besmirch the South, friend.


418 posted on 05/24/2007 11:09:00 AM PDT by Badeye (You know its a kook site when they ban the word 'kook')
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To: Badeye
Such a long reply, yet you failed to answer my principle question. Perhaps you missed it, in that case I shall repeat it. Other than the threat of abolition how was the federal goverment trampling the rights of the southern states? Of the war was not about slavery why were all the Northern states free states and yet the southern states slave states?
421 posted on 05/24/2007 11:17:44 AM PDT by WhiteSox1837
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