Tearing Old Dixie down - August 16, 2017 Baltimore, in the middle of the night |
"Shhhh! Don't mention the war!" (Basil Fawlty)
Unfortunately, the effect will be the opposite since "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it". (George Santayana)
Just last night the Democratic Mayor of Baltimore, Catherine Pugh, ordered Confederate monuments stealthily removed under the cover of darkness. She thought it "very important to move quickly and quietly."
In a New York Times article, three journalists (Nicholas Fandos, Russell Goldman and Jess Bidgood) stated, "David Goldfield, a professor of history who studies Confederate symbols at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, said the removal of the monuments in Baltimore was likely to be part of a 'rolling cascade' of cities and states ridding themselves of, or at least relocating, similar statues."
Therefore, before YouTube removes music videos about Old Dixie, here's a reminder by Johnny Cash why a civil war must never again be allowed to happen in America.
Susan, the second war between the states has already begun. It's liberal blue states against traditional, conservative red states. And most of the blue states are in the north, and most of the red states are in the south or the west. It's 1861 all over again.
ReplyDeleteLet's hear it for inalienable rights, the Paleo dixie, which the confederacy denied.
ReplyDeleteI have no idea what "Paleo dixie" is, but there were many honorable people supporting the Confederacy and it's hard to see the logic of saying that it was okay for the colonies to "secede" from Great Britain and deny the rights of the Southern states to secede from the union -- especially the states that wrote the right of secession into their constitutions like Virginia.
ReplyDeleteIt truly was a war of northern aggression and the South was devastated by what today would be called crimes against humanity if they weren't politically correct because of the demonization of the South.