Whatever many things the Rebel battle flag represented prior to the mid 1950s, since then it has been used primarily as a signifier of racism, oppression and maintenance of an unequal status quo. I just hate that it apparently takes the death of an unimpeachable negro to finally get people to acknowledge the reality that exists with regard to race and equality in this country. Finally, no one could say "hey, he was only 12 but he was big and mature looking," "his autopsy photo isn't a good representation of how big and menacing he was because you can't see muscle tone on dead people," "he scared me, he was big and seemed possessed and charged me like an animal," or "he was resisting and I felt scared for my life." Killing a man who is praying in his church pretty much lops off a lot of the banners that black men have foisted above their heads that allows people to characterize us as exigently dangerous.eCat wrote:I hate that one badly misguided kid with parent who were clearly out of touch parents (Dad - hey, I'm gonna buy my apartheid supporting son who has Rhodesian military posters a gun for his birthday to celebrate him becoming a man) has done something emotional enough to drive the debate but I do think its time to retire the Confederate flag to the history books and museums.
If it doesn't represent racism, it represents a divided America - and regardless of our views on states rights and the right to secede, its symbolism is , IMO, no longer relevant in modern America.
I have driven on roads that bear the names of Confederate generals who were willing to lose their lives in the pursuit of keeping my forefathers as chattel. People in my family have swung as strange fruit from trees where that flag was used as rallying point. If I never see it again outside of a museum will be fine with me...the same way a Jew would not feel an ounce of issue with the disappearance of a Nazi flag.
And this guy states it better than me... http://www.businessinsider.com/slack-ce ... nal-2015-6