I am willing to bet that lots of people who have the Con Flag on their
car or truck would love to see Jim Crow come back; I never saw the truck
of the two men who dragged a black man to death in Texas a few years
ago, but I would not be totally surprised to see the Confederate Flag on
the back of that truck.
The KKK is still around, and it still carries the Confederate Flag, last
time I knew. I have rarely seen blacks with the confederate flag on
their cars. The confederacy stood for something: a white supremacist,
proslavery regime. I would not insult the intelligence of those who fly
the flag by saying they don't know what it stood for and what it stands
for. As you wrote: "Even the most ardent southern "red neck" today, at
least in public, will say that equal rights for all American citizens is
a good thing." So, if that is what they are saying in public, what
doyou think they believe in private?
I wonder if you would make the same argument about the Nazi flag: There
is not one who would argue for genocide; that people just like the flag
and have notolgia for the "nifty" Nazi uniforms and boots.
Paul Finkelman
[log in to unmask] wrote:
> It seems quite clear that the "Confederate" flag under
> discussion originated (or at least saw strong revival and
> redefinition) as a political symbol in the 1950s.
>
> That said, political symbols evolve with time, and it seems
> unlikely that the flag now conveys or connotes, to those who
> display it, quite the same meaning as it did in 1954. In
> 1954 there was a vibrant and angry public political movement
> to sustain and preserve Jim Crow. No such movement exists
> today--indeed, in our public life today there is pretty much
> uniform consensus that Jim Crow was morally wrong. Even the
> most ardent southern "red neck" today, at least in public,
> will say that equal rights for all American citizens is a
> good thing. So the Confederate heritage movement today does
> not seem to connote, to those who support it, a
> straightforward politics of nostalgia for segregation.
> Whatever else the flag means to those who display it today,
> it does not mean the same thing as it did 50 years ago.
>
> I don't mean to argue here that the popular movement in
> support of the Confederate flag (and Confederate heritage
> generally) today is not regressive, or contentious, or
> reprehensible, or laudable, or desirable, or admirable. I am
> not writing here either to support or to denigrate it. What
> I DO mean to argue is that the "movement" exists in a
> different public and political context, and takes its meaning
> as much from that as it does from events 50 years ago. And
> of course, that political context has evolved out of the
> politics of 50 years ago, and has an interesting and complex
> relationship to it that deserves our attention.
>
> It seems to me that a good place to start would be with the
> public statements of those various groups organized to
> support display of this symbol. My guess is that the symbol
> means rather different things to those who support it than it
> does to those who condemn it. If we are to be fair to those
> with whom we disagree, we need to begin with the assumption
> that they mean what they say--so we should take a look at
> what they say.
>
> Of course, in today's political culture, the assumption is
> wide-spread that public statements mask deeper agendas.
> Perhaps so--indeed, likely so. But even so, it is easier to
> assert that than to demonstrate it. This is such a
> contentious public issue today, it is far too easy, even for
> decent and reflective and thoughtful observers, for the very
> best of us in other words, to resort to broader
> generalizations.
>
> Do let us know what you find.
>
> Best,
> Kevin
> Kevin R. Hardwick, Ph.D.
> Department of History
> James Madison University
>
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--
Paul Finkelman
Chapman Distinguished Professor
University of Tulsa College of Law
3120 East 4th Place
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74104-2499
918-631-3706 (office)
918-631-2194 (fax)
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