Racism
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Re: Racism
Probably picked the 2nd losiest. Taking it down would have been the most lossy.
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Re: Racism
This story is getting surprisingly little traction on my Facebook homepage.
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- The Sybian
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Re: Racism
I'm going to notify the authorities about the Dylan who played on my Kindergarten tee ball team. Wouldn't surprise me to read his name in the papers for something like this in the future.Gunpowder wrote:Wow, this guys name is Dylan as well.
STOP NAMING KIDS DYLAN
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Re: Racism
My only experience with that state is ten days on Kiawah Island which is about 20 miles outside Charleston. Spent parts of a couple days and nights in Charleston. Lovely places both.
But the mere fact that they still fly a confederate flag over the statehouse would indicate that it really isn't such a lovely place after all.
But the mere fact that they still fly a confederate flag over the statehouse would indicate that it really isn't such a lovely place after all.
"beautiful, with an exotic-yet-familiar facial structure and an arresting gaze."
Re: Racism
IT'S NOT "CONFEDERATE". IT'S THE STATE FLAG AND IT JUST SYMBOLIZES STATE'S RIGHTS TO TELL THEM LIBTARD JACKASSES IN WASHINGTON THAT THEY CAN GO FUCK THEMSELVES FOR TREADIN' ON THEM.Pruitt wrote:My only experience with that state is ten days on Kiawah Island which is about 20 miles outside Charleston. Spent parts of a couple days and nights in Charleston. Lovely places both.
But the mere fact that they still fly a confederate flag over the statehouse would indicate that it really isn't such a lovely place after all.
Typical Northerner.
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Re: Racism
It is an embarrassment being on a fucking web community with you, you dumb-ass, son of a fucking bitch! If I see [unintelligible] I will fucking rape you to death!BSF21 wrote:IT'S NOT "CONFEDERATE". IT'S THE STATE FLAG AND IT JUST SYMBOLIZES STATE'S RIGHTS TO TELL THEM LIBTARD JACKASSES IN WASHINGTON THAT THEY CAN GO FUCK THEMSELVES FOR TREADIN' ON THEM.Pruitt wrote:My only experience with that state is ten days on Kiawah Island which is about 20 miles outside Charleston. Spent parts of a couple days and nights in Charleston. Lovely places both.
But the mere fact that they still fly a confederate flag over the statehouse would indicate that it really isn't such a lovely place after all.
Typical Northerner.
"beautiful, with an exotic-yet-familiar facial structure and an arresting gaze."
Re: Racism
Charles Pierce: What happened in a church in Charleston, South Carolina on Wednesday night is a lot of things, but one thing it's not is "unthinkable." Somebody thought long and hard about it. Somebody thought to load the weapon. Somebody thought to pick the church. Somebody thought to sit, quietly, through some of Wednesday night bible study. Somebody thought to stand up and open fire, killing nine people, including the pastor. Somebody reportedly thought to leave one woman alive so she could tell his story to the world. Somebody thought enough to flee. What happened in that church was a lot of things, but unthinkable is not one of them.
Re: Racism
+1. Killin' me man.Pruitt wrote:It is an embarrassment being on a fucking web community with you, you dumb-ass, son of a fucking bitch! If I see [unintelligible] I will fucking rape you to death!BSF21 wrote:IT'S NOT "CONFEDERATE". IT'S THE STATE FLAG AND IT JUST SYMBOLIZES STATE'S RIGHTS TO TELL THEM LIBTARD JACKASSES IN WASHINGTON THAT THEY CAN GO FUCK THEMSELVES FOR TREADIN' ON THEM.Pruitt wrote:My only experience with that state is ten days on Kiawah Island which is about 20 miles outside Charleston. Spent parts of a couple days and nights in Charleston. Lovely places both.
But the mere fact that they still fly a confederate flag over the statehouse would indicate that it really isn't such a lovely place after all.
Typical Northerner.
Dances with Wolves (1) - BSF
"This place was rockin'," said BSF21.
"There is nothing ever uncommon about BSF21."
"This place was rockin'," said BSF21.
"There is nothing ever uncommon about BSF21."
Re: Racism
Reverence for the confederacy is something that should never have been tolerated in this country.
Re: Racism
"What a bunch of pedantic pricks." - sybian
Re: Racism
While I agree I'm not sure how you can legislate that. (I'm not talking about confederate symbols like the flag. That shit should be considered as verboten as a Swastika.)Rex wrote:Reverence for the confederacy is something that should never have been tolerated in this country.
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Re: Racism
Not talking about legislation--not everything needs to be addressed by the government. Should be part of the national ethos that you don't romanticize treason against the United States in the name of a racist and barbaric way of life. As you put it.
Re: Racism
Again, though. It's only celebrated in a fairly isolated part of the country. The same part that committed the treason in question. Maybe the south should have been made to suffer more in Reconstruction though that hardly seems like the answer.Rex wrote:Not talking about legislation--not everything needs to be addressed by the government. Should be part of the national ethos that you don't romanticize treason against the United States in the name of a racist and barbaric way of life. As you put it.
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Re: Racism
There is a surprising number of people all over the country who romanticize the confederacy. I read a book about it once. Can't remember the title right now...
"What a bunch of pedantic pricks." - sybian
Re: Racism
It all ties in to the Cliven Bundy right-wing anti-government nut jobs but fortunately I don't think there's a whole lot of those out there.
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Re: Racism
Y'all need another nThe Sybian wrote:I'm going to notify the authorities about the Dylan who played on my Kindergarten tee ball team. Wouldn't surprise me to read his name in the papers for something like this in the future.Gunpowder wrote:Wow, this guys name is Dylan as well.
STOP NAMING KIDS DYLAN
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Re: Racism
Yep, knew this was coming when I saw the transcript. Isn't this the selective quoting shit those dudes always accuse MSNBC or whoever of doing?
http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2015/06 ... countries/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2015/06 ... countries/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Racism
There are a lot of things that could be reasonably called treason done by people in suits in Washington, all the time. Note that no southern official was tried for treason after the Civil War.
States wanting to secede from the Union doesn't necessarily trouble me.
The reasons that Lincoln and others didn't want the southern states to leave the union might be a bit broader than the simple answer of 'slavery' that is encoded in our US history text books. Questioning this orthodoxy does not require any reverence for the Confederacy.
States wanting to secede from the Union doesn't necessarily trouble me.
The reasons that Lincoln and others didn't want the southern states to leave the union might be a bit broader than the simple answer of 'slavery' that is encoded in our US history text books. Questioning this orthodoxy does not require any reverence for the Confederacy.
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Re: Racism
Not being tried for treason was part of terms of surrender I thought.
Hold on, I'm trying to see if Jack London ever gets this fire built or not.
Re: Racism
I blame Andrew Johnson.Rex wrote:Reverence for the confederacy is something that should never have been tolerated in this country.
Did you see that ludicrous display last night?
Re: Racism
The South was thoroughly defeated. How much leverage did their leaders have at that time or for years to come?A_B wrote:Not being tried for treason was part of terms of surrender I thought.
But my major point is that I think the notion that the war between north and south was between anti-racist and racist entities that could not agree about the central racial issue of slavery is orthodox dogma. Rarely scrutinized, and not able to withstand much.
Re: Racism
Johnson wanted a much harsher post-war treatment of the south. He hated black people, but if he had his way there would've been plenty of trials for treason of the leaders of the confederacy.
I blame Rutherford Hayes.
eta:
the 'leverage' the south had was the attitude of Lincoln, as carried forth by Grant. All that malice toward none, charity toward all bullstuff. Grant's conduct and terms at Appomattox, (and Sherman's much more generous terms for Joe Johnston's surrender, so generous Johnson immediately rescinded some of them), and Grant's huge popularity allowing him to restrain the druthers of Johnson and the more ardent Republicans in the early reconstruction period.
The enduring desire of Lincoln for a soft peace, carried forth by Grant on the strength of his popularity, saved the south from the fate of most losing sides in civil wars. And saved the nation from the other nasty things that usually follow civil wars (like brutal oppression that leads to refighting the war later.)
I blame Rutherford Hayes.
eta:
the 'leverage' the south had was the attitude of Lincoln, as carried forth by Grant. All that malice toward none, charity toward all bullstuff. Grant's conduct and terms at Appomattox, (and Sherman's much more generous terms for Joe Johnston's surrender, so generous Johnson immediately rescinded some of them), and Grant's huge popularity allowing him to restrain the druthers of Johnson and the more ardent Republicans in the early reconstruction period.
The enduring desire of Lincoln for a soft peace, carried forth by Grant on the strength of his popularity, saved the south from the fate of most losing sides in civil wars. And saved the nation from the other nasty things that usually follow civil wars (like brutal oppression that leads to refighting the war later.)
Who knows? Maybe, you were kidnapped, tied up, taken away and held for ransom.
Those days are gone forever
Over a long time ago
Oh yeah…
Those days are gone forever
Over a long time ago
Oh yeah…
Re: Racism
I don't know anyone who has ever read a history book who thinks that.DC47 wrote: But my major point is that I think the notion that the war between north and south was between anti-racist and racist entities that could not agree about the central racial issue of slavery is orthodox dogma. Rarely scrutinized, and not able to withstand much.
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Re: Racism
There are people who write history books that say that.
Who knows? Maybe, you were kidnapped, tied up, taken away and held for ransom.
Those days are gone forever
Over a long time ago
Oh yeah…
Those days are gone forever
Over a long time ago
Oh yeah…
Re: Racism
By 'that' do you mean my opinion, or the one I claim is now unscrutinized orthodoxy in America?brian wrote:I don't know anyone who has ever read a history book who thinks that.DC47 wrote: But my major point is that I think the notion that the war between north and south was between anti-racist and racist entities that could not agree about the central racial issue of slavery is orthodox dogma. Rarely scrutinized, and not able to withstand much.
Re: Racism
The latter.DC47 wrote:By 'that' do you mean my opinion, or the one I claim is now unscrutinized orthodoxy in America?brian wrote:I don't know anyone who has ever read a history book who thinks that.DC47 wrote: But my major point is that I think the notion that the war between north and south was between anti-racist and racist entities that could not agree about the central racial issue of slavery is orthodox dogma. Rarely scrutinized, and not able to withstand much.
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Re: Racism
A few months ago I was considering some contemporary racial issue, and my thoughts wandered to the civil war. As a teenager, I was way into history, and this was my favorite aspect of world history. But I hadn't read or even thought much about it in many years. I realized that although I have a pretty good recall of the players and events around that time, in terms of explaining the cause of the Civil War I could only come up with variations on the same theme: "anti-racist and racist entities could not agree about the central racial issue of slavery."
I thought that was pretty striking. It didn't fit what I know now about political behavior or even racism. I have far more complex views of the causes of recent wars.
I wondered if I was perhaps just limited due to my lack of exposure to more complex views. I asked two people why they thought the Civil War had been fought. Both espoused the theory I mentioned above. One was a very smart, highly-educated (attended four excellent colleges and universities) college professor (not history). The other was a very smart high school student who had just taken an advanced U.S. History class.
I asked them why thy thought the Civil War had occurred. They provided versions of the theory I mentioned above. I asked if they had ever heard of another theory. They had not. I asked if they could come up with one. They tried, but couldn't say anything they found at all convincing.
Trying out one variation, I asked if they thought the War might have been about the South pursuing their interests in preserving slavery and the North being motivated by preserving the Constitution that established a federal government or in preserving the sanctity of the nation established by the Revolution. They didn't think this held water, and didn't think this had been part of what they studied in school.
We were each puzzled as to why there seemed to be no debate in the history classes we had taken about the Civil War's causes, even though we were well aware of alternative arguments about the causes of the Revolutionary War.
It's just a sample of three, including me. But we each thought that what we had learned about the motivations behind the Civil War was a simple story, based on race and slavery.
I found that striking. Feeling a bit ignorant about something I once thought I knew well, I later did a bit of thinking and even less reading about alternative theories. I've got some ideas, but don't feel done with this at all. So I'd be glad to hear about any source of insight on the topic. I recall reading a history paper that someone once copied here, and found it really interesting. Perhaps I'll be lucky enough for this to happen again, saving me a lot of work.
I thought that was pretty striking. It didn't fit what I know now about political behavior or even racism. I have far more complex views of the causes of recent wars.
I wondered if I was perhaps just limited due to my lack of exposure to more complex views. I asked two people why they thought the Civil War had been fought. Both espoused the theory I mentioned above. One was a very smart, highly-educated (attended four excellent colleges and universities) college professor (not history). The other was a very smart high school student who had just taken an advanced U.S. History class.
I asked them why thy thought the Civil War had occurred. They provided versions of the theory I mentioned above. I asked if they had ever heard of another theory. They had not. I asked if they could come up with one. They tried, but couldn't say anything they found at all convincing.
Trying out one variation, I asked if they thought the War might have been about the South pursuing their interests in preserving slavery and the North being motivated by preserving the Constitution that established a federal government or in preserving the sanctity of the nation established by the Revolution. They didn't think this held water, and didn't think this had been part of what they studied in school.
We were each puzzled as to why there seemed to be no debate in the history classes we had taken about the Civil War's causes, even though we were well aware of alternative arguments about the causes of the Revolutionary War.
It's just a sample of three, including me. But we each thought that what we had learned about the motivations behind the Civil War was a simple story, based on race and slavery.
I found that striking. Feeling a bit ignorant about something I once thought I knew well, I later did a bit of thinking and even less reading about alternative theories. I've got some ideas, but don't feel done with this at all. So I'd be glad to hear about any source of insight on the topic. I recall reading a history paper that someone once copied here, and found it really interesting. Perhaps I'll be lucky enough for this to happen again, saving me a lot of work.
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Re: Racism
I can only imagine what a Black person feels like when he or she sees that flag. Threatened? Intimidated? Angered that there are people who have no problem flying a reminder of a time when Blacks were property?
And 7 or 8 generations later, what kind of an imbecile still feels nostalgia for such a time? When slavery drove the economy, when poor whites were not much better off? When the secession of the southern states led to mass carnage and the destruction of so much.
And you guys know the subsequent history better than I, but that flag should be treated as an object of shame and those who display it should be subjected to derision. The fact that 150 years later, it still flies in front of a statehouse beggars belief.
(And yes, I am speaking from a desk way, way above the Mason Dixon line).
And 7 or 8 generations later, what kind of an imbecile still feels nostalgia for such a time? When slavery drove the economy, when poor whites were not much better off? When the secession of the southern states led to mass carnage and the destruction of so much.
And you guys know the subsequent history better than I, but that flag should be treated as an object of shame and those who display it should be subjected to derision. The fact that 150 years later, it still flies in front of a statehouse beggars belief.
(And yes, I am speaking from a desk way, way above the Mason Dixon line).
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Re: Racism
DC47 wrote:The South was thoroughly defeated. How much leverage did their leaders have at that time or for years to come?A_B wrote:Not being tried for treason was part of terms of surrender I thought.
But my major point is that I think the notion that the war between north and south was between anti-racist and racist entities that could not agree about the central racial issue of slavery is orthodox dogma. Rarely scrutinized, and not able to withstand much.
True. It was a more gentlemanly time so it may have not been a formal agreement.
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Re: Racism
Who said the North was anti-racist? Just because one regime is evil doesn't mean that its enemy is pure. Hell, I'm happy that Stalin beat the Nazis.
Re: Racism
Probably the same as the Seattlers and I would feel if a state flew a "FUCK DAVES" flag and also had a history of lynching Daves.Pruitt wrote:I can only imagine what a Black person feels like when he or she sees that flag. Threatened? Intimidated? Angered that there are people who have no problem flying a reminder of a time when Blacks were property?
Last edited by mister d on Fri Jun 19, 2015 9:27 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Racism
And here i thought a "Seattle Necktie" was just a bolo.mister d wrote:Probably the same as me and the Seattlers would feel if a state flew a "FUCK DAVES" flag and also had a history of lynching Daves.Pruitt wrote:I can only imagine what a Black person feels like when he or she sees that flag. Threatened? Intimidated? Angered that there are people who have no problem flying a reminder of a time when Blacks were property?
Hold on, I'm trying to see if Jack London ever gets this fire built or not.
Re: Racism
Please don't tell me you think we should be able to legislate against Swastikas.brian wrote:While I agree I'm not sure how you can legislate that. (I'm not talking about confederate symbols like the flag. That shit should be considered as verboten as a Swastika.)Rex wrote:Reverence for the confederacy is something that should never have been tolerated in this country.
And the unicorns shall come down with them, and the bullocks with the bulls; and their land shall be soaked with blood, and their dust made fat with fatness. - God
Re: Racism
I believe he's saying, like the swastika, the confederate flag should be considered so awful that no state would consider flying it on government property.
(And yes, if some state thought "hey, this is cool", the federal government should step in and either have it removed or let the state fuck itself into having to remove it.)
(And yes, if some state thought "hey, this is cool", the federal government should step in and either have it removed or let the state fuck itself into having to remove it.)
Re: Racism
Oh, I can get with that. I was thinking on an individual level.
And the unicorns shall come down with them, and the bullocks with the bulls; and their land shall be soaked with blood, and their dust made fat with fatness. - God
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Re: Racism
brian wrote:I don't know anyone who has ever read a history book who thinks that.DC47 wrote: But my major point is that I think the notion that the war between north and south was between anti-racist and racist entities that could not agree about the central racial issue of slavery is orthodox dogma. Rarely scrutinized, and not able to withstand much.
Did we get a consensus on this?Rex wrote:Who said the North was anti-racist? Just because one regime is evil doesn't mean that its enemy is pure. Hell, I'm happy that Stalin beat the Nazis.
Here's my take as someone, who like DC, is a history buff with a particular interest in the Civil War, though I don't presume to be a historian:
1. The South absolutely, positively did secede in order to preserve slavery. There had long been a fear that the political balance was drifting to a point where the federal government would be able to outlaw slavery, and the 1860 election was their final tipping point. Any talk of "states' rights" in an abstract sense beyond the one, specific "states' right" to keep slavery legal is bullshit.
2. At the same time, it's equally erroneous to portray the North as launching a great moral crusade to end slavery. Northerners who actively sought the immediate universal abolition of slavery were a minority. Many more did oppose slavery on moral grounds, but weren't willing to start a war for that sole purpose (Lincoln was in this camp, at least at the start). Most other Northerners opposed slavery, but on the grounds of it being economically backward, or small farmers fearful of having to compete with wealthy slaveholders, rather than out of a humanitarian concern for the slaves. The North fought the war first and foremost to preserve the primacy of the federal government over the states, and recognized midway through that abolishing slavery would be a useful way to disrupt the South's war effort. That the South's cause was based on the preservation of an institution any civilized modern person regards as barbaric has retroactively helped the moral judgment of the North.
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Re: Racism
Right, the abolition of slavery during the Civil War was part of the realpolitik of the time -- a necessary evil to win the war.
I don't claim to be a historian either, certainly not even an amateur one on the level of SL, but I assumed that anyone with even a college-level intro to U.S. history understanding of the Civil War realized all that.
I don't claim to be a historian either, certainly not even an amateur one on the level of SL, but I assumed that anyone with even a college-level intro to U.S. history understanding of the Civil War realized all that.
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Re: Racism
As the great Lincoln once said here in the Swamp, it was a battle between the South who enslaved blacks and the North who merely oppressed them.
(My Civil War knowledge is actually quite lacking)
(My Civil War knowledge is actually quite lacking)
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