5 Government-Sanctioned Ways America Still Honors the Confederacy

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A new survey [3] by the Southern Poverty Law Center catalogs more than 1,500 public monuments, statues, schools, cities and military bases in southern communities and across the United States that continue to honor the Confederacy.

Tensions between those who support symbols of the Confederacy as heritage and those who view them as emblematic of racism and oppression is nothing new, but the battle has become more mainstream in recent years. While some protesters have successfully rallied to remove pro-Confederacy monuments from public spaces, one need only visit a Trump rally to find T-shirts, hats and other collectibles brandishing vestigial tokens of the racist South.

Many brand attempts at removing these representations as examples of political correctness, arguing we are trying to rewrite history. But as the SPLC points out, “this is not an attempt to erase history. It is an effort to end the government’s endorsement of a symbol that has always represented the oppression of an entire race.”
Here are five government-endorsed ways the Confederacy is still being honored.

1. Public Schools
The SPLC identified at least 109 public schools named after Confederate leaders such as Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson and Jefferson Davis.

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Robert E. Lee High School, Jacksonville, Florida (image: Subwayatrain/Wikipedia [4])

“Of the 109 schools, 27 have student populations that are majority African American, and 10 have African American populations of over 90 percent,” the SPLC writes. The center notes many of these schools were built during the modern civil rights movement.

2. Monuments and Statues
Of the 718 monuments on public spaces throughout the Unites States, the majority were dedicated prior to 1950, though at least 32 were dedicated or rededicated after 2000. The majority of the monuments are in Southern states, with Virginia, Georgia, and North Carolina laying claim to most Confederate symbols.

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General P.G.T. Beauregard Equestrian Statue in New Orleans by sculptor Alexander Doyle (image: Infrogmation/Wikipedia [5])

The survey notes that while most memorials “honor the heroism and valor,” some “glorify the Confederacy’s cause.” One South Carolina monument, erected in 1902, reads, “The world shall yet decide, in truth’s clear, far-off light, that the soldiers who wore the gray, and died with Lee, were in the right.”

3. Military Bases
Ten U.S. military bases in six states honor Confederate leaders, including General P.G.T. Beauregard, General Edmund Rucker and General Braxton Bragg.

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Barracks of the 1st Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg (image: Jonas N. Jordan, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Digital Visual Library/Wikipedia [6])

4. Official Holidays or Observances
Six southern states observe holidays or observances that honor the Confederacy, the SPLC reports. In Alabama and Mississippi, state employees take off work for two Confederacy-related holidays.

5. The Confederate Flag
While South Carolina and Alabama passed laws to remove the Confederate flag in the wake of last year’s mass shooting at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, SPLC found six former Confederate states that still fly or represent the Confederate flag.

The survey notes that Mississippi “conspicuously incorporates the Confederate battle sign into its design.” And despite joining South Carolina in removing the Confederate flag from its capitol grounds, Alabama still adorns the uniforms of its state troopers with “a likeness of the flag.”
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Alabama Highway Patrol logo (image: Wikipedia [7])

Honoring the Confederacy under the guise of celebrating American heritage is an unconvincing argument. As historian Juan Cole wrote [8] days after the 2015 massacre in Charleston:
Those who fought beneath the Confederate flag were fighting to retain slavery. They wanted an economic system in which they could kidnap people from Africa and coerce them into working for no salary. Any individual found kidnapping people today and coercing their labor for no remuneration would go straight to jail. So why should the flag symbolizing these activities be retained?

By Elizabeth Preza

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Fort Hood here in Texas is named after a Confederate general. Also don't forget that Arlington National Cemetery sits on Robert E Lee's former land.
 
Also don't forget that Arlington National Cemetery sits on Robert E Lee's former land.

The home of a traitor, used by the federal government to inter men killed by treasonous Confederates.

In May 1864, Union forces suffered large numbers of dead in the Battle of the Wilderness. Quartermaster General Montgomery C. Meigs ordered that an examination of eligible sites be made for the establishment for a large new national military cemetery. Within weeks, his staff reported that Arlington Estate was the most suitable property in the area.

The property was high and free from floods (which might unearth graves), it had a view of the District of Columbia, and it was aesthetically pleasing. It was also the home of the leader of the armed forces of the Confederate States of America, and denying Robert E. Lee use of his home after the war was a valuable political consideration.

The first military burial at Arlington William Henry Christman was made on May 13, 1864.

The first African-American to be buried there was William H. Johnson, an employee of President Lincoln. Lincoln arranged for him to be buried in Arlington National Cemetery. Lincoln had Johnson's name engraved on the tombstone, alongside the word "Citizen."

The southern portion of the land now occupied by the cemetery was used during and after the Civil War as a settlement for freed slaves. More than 1,100 freed slaves were given land at Freedman's Village by the government, where they farmed and lived during and after the Civil War.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arlington_National_Cemetery

The penalty for treason is death. Lee and all his fellow traitors to our nation should have been tried, convicted, and executed, and their filthy corpses fed to pigs.
 
The penalty for treason is death. Lee and all his fellow traitors to our nation should have been tried, convicted, and executed, and their filthy corpses fed to pigs.
Abraham Lincoln disagreed with this sentiment...as president of these United States, I'll go with Lincolns evaluation.
 
Abraham Lincoln disagreed with this sentiment...as president of these United States, I'll go with Lincolns evaluation.


His mercy to traitors was repaid with a cowardly assassin's bullet.

The South should have been made into a prison camp for treasonous racists for all eternity.
 
Abraham Lincoln disagreed with this sentiment...as president of these United States, I'll go with Lincolns evaluation.
So did Lee. They both understood the consequences of that action meant the war would have continued as a guerrilla war and things would have gotten a whole lot uglier.
 
Plenty of Confederate flags still flying and there isn't a damn thing you can do about it but whine.

I guess their grasp of psychology isn't too great lol. If you want people to do more of something, tell them they're not allowed to do it. That sort of thing brings out the contrarian in a lot of people.
 
only in the stupidity that is America can Democrats declare their own flag a symbol of treason, demand that it be wiped away, blame their racist ways on republicans, and feel like winners over it all.
 
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