Tag Archive for Confederate

Statue Weigh-In

I feel compelled to weigh in on the issue of removing Southern Civil War statues.  I’m on the bring-’em-down side.  It isn’t a Northerner thing, or an anti-Southern-history thing. It’s the significance of many of the statues themselves.

A good number of them weren’t erected to commemorate the bravery of the Southern soldier or the grand leadership of a Confederate general.  Nor were they erected to celebrate all  that’s good in the Southern soul.

Instead, they went up during the Jim Crow era and as a reaction against the Civil Rights Movement.  They were meant to be reminders that some sections of our nation were still not prepared to consider Blacks as equals–and to promote the superiority of Whites and defeat the efforts of the Civil Rights Movement.

That’s why I want the statues taken down or moved to private places or at least places where they aren’t given prominence and reverence. I’m deeply saddened by these reminders that bigotry still exists in my country.

So. Carolina Helps Unite America

This morning, America took an overdue step forward in uniting our people.  The Confederate battle flag came down from the SC state building.

Those Southerners who see the flag as a symbol of their heritage forget that this was not the original Confederate flag under which the Southern states united to preserve their economy.  In fact, it’s a symbol of division rather than unity.  If the Civil War didn’t make it that, SC did in 1961 when they raised it in protest against desegregation, the law that said that everyone, including Blacks, deserves an equal chance at an education and that people should not be divided into groups according to the color of their skin.

I think the crowd witnessing the flag’s retirement summed it up in their massive chant of “USA! USA! USA!”