Slight correction - the very first time the Stars and Bars were officially 
"raised" in the Statehouse was in the House of Representatives Chamber in 1938, 
the Senate followed suit in 1952 - but it was never flown over the State House 
till 1961.

      From: "Mike Dixon mdixon.6...@yahoo.com [FairfieldLife]" 
<FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
 To: "FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> 
 Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2015 1:30 PM
 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: The south aint gonna rise again...
   
    Bingo, should have read your post before posting mine. 

 

     From: "Michael Jackson mjackso...@yahoo.com [FairfieldLife]" 
<FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
 To: "FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> 
 Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2015 10:20 AM
 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: The south aint gonna rise again...
   
    Now that Judy has had a go at pretending to know something about it,
Here is the real deal on the Confederate flag, at least in SC.
It was put up over the Statehouse (where all the laws are made) in 1961 as part 
of the Centennial Celebration of the Civil War. That is when it was first flown 
Judy, the state legislature officially confirmed it a year later in 1962.
There is a man still alive here in SC who was on the Centennial planning 
committee who said it was put up by a legislative resolution that specified 
what date it was to be raised, but no date was included for taking it down.
After the Centennial celebration was finished no one paid much attention and it 
just stated up. It should be noted that the legislature was all white at that 
time. In retrospect critics claim the real reason the flag was flown was a way 
for white segregationists in the state legislature to mock the federal 
government which was in the process of creating civil rights legislation.
If that was not the original reason, it surely became so as the 1970's blacks 
began to be elected to the state legislature. But, eventually those black 
politicians did what their white counterparts were already doing, and that was 
using the flag for their own ends.
The white lawmakers would bow their backs when people would call for the flag 
removal and do so to curry favor with their redneck constituents, the black 
lawmakers did the same thing, calling for the flag removal to get points with 
their constituents. 
This went on till the 1990's when the NAACP called for the flag removal or else 
they would institute an economic boycott.The white lawmakers particularly the 
really ignorant ones like Jakie Knotts and the real crooks like Glenn McConnell 
laughed it off and said the boycott would have no effect on the state. 

They were wrong - people all over the place who had made plans to visit SC for 
various reasons began to cancel their plans conventions were canceled and the 
tourist industry began to really suffer. The merchants and businessmen began to 
scream at the lawmakers to take the flag down, especially those in the 
hotel/motel and restaurant industry. The idiot lawmakers ignored them, till 
they started to get threats of being unseated in their nest bid for reelection 
for not taking it down.
Belatedly big institutions that SHOULD have already called for the flag's 
removal finally joined in like the University of South Carolina. The debate 
raged and the lawmakers showed their true colors - yellow.
A proposal was made to leave it to the people by creating a referendum in the 
next general election. BOTH sides were running scared of such a solution. The 
black and white lawmakers claimed it was too important a decision to leave to 
the people and that it would be "too divisive" for the people to decide and 
might make folks mad at each other.
The truth is the flag opponents were running scared that all the rednecks would 
come out in great numbers and vote the keep the flag flying high, and the flag 
supporters were afraid all the black voters and their white liberal supporters 
would outnumber the "heritage" crowd. So they blabbered at each other for a 
while and then came up with a "compromise" that made no one happy. They removed 
the flag from over the State House dome, but placed it in a "place of honor" on 
the Statehouse grounds.
The opponents were incensed and so were the supporters that it had been removed 
at all.
Thus it stands today. Coming from such stock, (there is a few years old picture 
of my mother's family reunion where the young children were detailed to hold 
the edges of a really big Confederate battle flag as all the adults stood in 
the background as the pic was taken) I know that a lot of Southern folk think 
the flag stands for Southern heritage and not hate. Dunno exactly what that 
heritage is supposed to be - generally if you ask it goes back to the idea of 
honoring all the brave men who stood up to Northern aggression, you know, the 
damn Yankees?
Truth be told, a lot of those Confederates were idiots. Only about 10% of white 
Southerners owned slaves, and nearly half of the white population of the South 
served in the war. That means that the majority of the Confederate soldiers 
were dirt farmers who's direct competition were the slave owning plantation big 
shots. The dirt farmers were fighting to preserve an agricultural system that 
kept them in poverty.
But the bottom line is that no matter how poor and low-down someone is, they 
always feel better if they have someone to look down on, so the dirt farmers 
always had the slaves to feel superior to. For that, they were willing to die.

 

     From: salyavin808 <no_re...@yahoogroups.com>
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
 Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2015 8:04 AM
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: The south aint gonna rise again...
   
    


---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <dhamiltony2k5@...> wrote :

Scapegoating?  Yes, remove that flag.  Removing it now is an important actin 
the play of a large Dharma. Removing that flag is part and parcelof a public 
education in transcendent and inalienable rights in ourlong culture of equal 
rights for everyone in equal protection undercommunal law. That the rebel flag 
would be accepted and flown abovein any public space of our governance along 
with our larger symbolsof national and state flag shows a profound failure of 
some publicleadership and education in greater public process and values. It 
istime to remove that old battle flag of ignorance from our public spaces of 
governance.
Flags are just symbols. Everyone knows the country has changed. I'm sure they 
never would have flown it all these years if anyone thought it still 
represented the pre-civil war mentality. So taking it down now because of one 
lonely fruitcake's a-social psychopathology seems daft to me. That's why I 
called it scapegoating. It's just a pretty bit of cloth.
But then maybe i'm incapable of being a fair judge, I come from a country with 
a flag that has no negative historical connotations whatsoever. 



---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <no_re...@yahoogroups.com> wrote :

Let's scapegoat the flag. Someone kills loads of people and likes the flag so 
the flag has to go. I guess that makes a certain twisted sense. And I thought 
the southerners had rehabilitated themselves by claiming slavery was going to 
be abolished anyway? That's Hollywood for you.
I hope I'm still allowed to enjoy the Dukes of Hazzard...
South Carolina governor calls for removal of Confederate flag from statehouse

|  |
|  |     |  |     South Carolina governor calls for removal of Confederate... 
Governor Nikki Haley makes abrupt about-face in wake of Charleston killings to 
call for removal of flag that has flown on statehouse grounds for 50 years |  |
|     View on www.theguardian.com    |   Preview by Yahoo  |
|  |



  

     

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