Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $20,400
25%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 25%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: dammyankee

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Confederate Kook Still Smarts Under Civil War "Occupation" (El Rushbo Defends The Union Alert)

    12/04/2006 6:10:06 PM PST · by goldstategop · 2,876 replies · 23,529+ views
    Rush Limbaugh.com ^ | 12/04/2006 | Rush Limbaugh
    RUSH: John in Shreveport, Louisiana. Hello. CALLER: Mr. Rush, don't you think you're being a hypocrite when you're not -- when you don't want the Iraqis to decide the problems themselves, especially since Abraham Lincoln took two -- two generals named Lincoln [sic--Grant] and Sherman who were responsible for the deaths of 59,000 southern people? And since you hate Confederate heritage that much, don't you think that we should allow the people of Iraq to decide their own fate? RUSH: (Laughing.) Gee. I hate Confederate heritage? CALLER: No kidding. RUSH: On the basis of what do you say that? CALLER:...
  • Committee says flag should come down

    01/10/2005 5:21:30 PM PST · by stainlessbanner · 218 replies · 3,321+ views
    news14 ^ | 10-Jan-2005 | staff
    CHARLOTTE, N.C. – The confederate flag flying in Elmwood Pinewood Cemetery in uptown Charlotte should be taken down – that is a recommendation from a committee looking into the flag issue. The confederate battle flag flies above a section of the cemetery dedicated to confederate soldiers. Some were concerned about the image this created for the city. Last month, the community relations committee executive council met to review information gathered on the flag. The information included public feedback and legal research. In a draft report, the committee recommended: The current flag be taken down and placed in a glass enclosed...
  • The Civil War's Tragic Legacy

    01/06/2005 8:00:30 AM PST · by cougar_mccxxi · 554 replies · 5,137+ views
    Walter E. Williams, George Mason University ^ | January 1999 | Walter E. Williams
    The Civil War's Tragic Legacy The Civil War produced at least two important outcomes. First, although it was not President Lincoln's intent, it freed slaves in the Confederate States. Second, it settled, through the force of arms, the question of whether states could secede from the Union. The causes of and the issues surrounding America's most costly war, in terms of battlefield casualties, are still controversial. Even its name the - Civil War - is in dispute, and plausibly so. A civil war is a struggle between two or more factions seeking to control the central government. Modern examples of...
  • Flag-Wavering

    01/04/2005 3:00:22 AM PST · by stainlessbanner · 24 replies · 1,002+ views
    eddriscoll.com ^ | 24-Dec-2004 | Ed Driscoll
    Talk about a tempest in a teacup (that's had a shot of Southern Comfort poured in it). I was clicking through the Internet Movie Database, when I came across this thread, which begins with an African-American moviegoer absolutely unloading on the upcoming remake of The Dukes of Hazzard. Like all recent Hollywood big screen remakes of '70s TV shows, the finished product will of course, be somewhere between mediocre and craptacular, and quickly forgotten. But as the readers of the IMDB illustrated, adapting the Dukes presents a special challenge to its filmmakers, the Wall Street Journal reports (subscription may...
  • Teenager Barred from Prom for Confederate-Inspired Dress Sues

    12/21/2004 3:45:01 PM PST · by anymouse · 85 replies · 4,694+ views
    Herald-Leader/Knight Ridder/Tribune ^ | Dec. 20, 2004 | BETH MUSGRAVE
    Jacqueline Duty's prom dress created a stir even before she showed up for the May 1 event. When Duty came to the Russell High School prom in a self-designed red, white and blue gown with the Confederate battle flag as part of the design, she was told to leave. School leaders, who had heard about Duty's plans to wear the Confederate-inspired sequined gown, wouldn't allow her to enter the prom or even leave her vehicle, her lawyers say. "Her only dance for her senior prom was on the sidewalk to a song playing on the radio," said Earl-Ray Neal, her...
  • BRAVE NEW SCHOOLS: Uncivil war over girl's Confederate prom dress

    12/21/2004 11:22:26 PM PST · by JohnHuang2 · 132 replies · 4,290+ views
    WorldNetDaily.com ^ | Wednesday, December 22, 2004
    Wednesday, December 22, 2004 BRAVE NEW SCHOOLSUncivil war over girl's Confederate prom dressTeen says district violated her 1st Amendment right to free speech Posted: December 22, 20041:00 a.m. Eastern © 2004 WorldNetDaily.com Jacqueline Duty in her prom dress (Photo: Lexington Herald-Leader). A high-school senior who was barred from her prom because she showed up wearing a self-designed sequined dress patterned after the Confederate flag has filed suit, claiming her First Amendment rights were violated. Jacqueline Duty came to the Russell High School prom May 1 wearing the dress and was told to leave, according to a report in the Lexington, Ky., Herald-Leader....
  • Teen sues over Confederate flag dress

    12/22/2004 11:53:59 AM PST · by kattracks · 45 replies · 1,689+ views
    NJ.com ^ | 12/22/04 | AP
    LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — A teenager is suing her school district for barring her from the prom last spring because she was wearing a dress styled as a large Confederate battle flag. The lawsuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court claims the Greenup County district and administrators violated Jacqueline Duty's First Amendment right to free speech and her right to celebrate her heritage at predominantly white Russell High School's prom May 1. She also is suing for defamation, false imprisonment and assault. "Her only dance for her senior prom was on the sidewalk to a song playing on the radio,"...
  • Confederate Flag (Prom Dress) UPDATE

    12/20/2004 3:09:38 PM PST · by DixieOklahoma · 107 replies · 28,403+ views
    SCV supports Jaqueline Duty Confederate Prom Dress Lawsuit to be filed in Federal court in Lexington, KY Press Release - December 17, 2004 - For Immediate Release This past May Jacqueline Duty, an attractive honor student in Russell, Kentucky, prepared to attend prom night wearing a special dress she had designed herself. It was a classically cut strapless sheath, ankle-length with a shallow slit on one side, and sewn completely out of beaded sequins. And it tastefully incorporated a symbol of her Southern heritage; a Confederate Battle Flag turned upwards so that the starry blue arms of the St. Andrew’s...