Results so far:
| Yes | 28% | 147 votes | Total: 528 votes | |
| No | 72% | 381 votes |
I try to learn something about US history without any expectation to be or become an expert of it and I notice that, after the independence in 1776, this new Country, former English colony with all the future in front of it, found a great difficulty in keeping its political and economic unity because its industrial revolution, begun in the first decades of the XIX century, took place only in the northern States, while the southern ones remained bound to agriculture, mainly based on cotton and tobacco.
These two forms of economy created two different societies; the North was more modern and progressive, while the South much more conservative, based on the economic and political power of land owners and cotton dealers. The real shame of the South economy was that it was founded on slaves' work, all Black people deported from Africa since the beginning of the previous century and until the first half of the XIX, despite the attempts of the federal government to make respect the ban on slavery by the South.
This conflict become even a bloody civil war in the period 1862-1867 among the slave States of the South (that called themselves "Confederate", with their own flag) and those of the North (with capital in Washington). The Confederate White men wanted to keep their economic and racial privileges on the Black, treated like beasts because considered sub-humans, only good to work for the White men.
For all these reasons, the Confederate flag, carried by the soldiers of the South in battle, should be banned because, in my mind, it's the symbol of slavery, racism, privilege and conservative mentality. Still today, something of these characters is present in the southern States, the most conservative and also the poorest ones of the U.S., in the average.
Then, this is the flag of the Secession War and it is a division and weakness symbol for America.
We cannot forget that the racial segregation between White (always in dominant position) and Black people in the South had continued after the Secession War, until the dramatic years of the 1960's and 1970's, when the Country was tormented by the bloody protests and campaigns for the civil rights started by the Black community of America, led by Martin Luther King and Malcom X, against racial segregation. Surely, the Black people of the South couldn't adopt this flag as their own, like all the other White people involved in this fight for equal rights between races.
I would like to see the ban of this flag, but I don't know how to cancel it from the mind of many White citizens of the South, who vote and provide the Republican Party and its Presidents with funds. They belong, in the largest part, to the middle and upper class of the South, still holding the best places in the economy and politics of their States; they still hate Black people fearing to lose or share their privileges with them. So, the Confederate flag is their symbol against the rest of the U.S., considered as dominated by "Negroes, Jews and Communists".
In their hypocrisy, many of them defend this flag talking more generically about "Our land traditions and culture". They avoid to mention the racial discrimination problem that, today, regards also the many Latin-American immigrates that the White men of the South (and not only, in the U.S.) exploit as clandestine workers.
So, if the US government were really determined to reduce the racial and economic discrimination, the Confederate flag should surely be banned as the symbol of all these problems that must be resolved. I think the progress toward social and economic justice in the South needs to be achieved also on the cultural field, by removing certain dangerous "worms" from people's mind.
Learn more about this author, Aldo Bonincontro.
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If we are to stand by our Constitution, then we need to realize that the Constitution was written for everyone. There may be some things in it that we may not agree with all the time. If you look back, what was the Constitution based on? A group of people that had a disagreement with a King. What did they do? Simply, they left. I'd leave it like that but, that seems a little childish and there was more to it than that.
There will always be something in our history that we may not want to be reminded of. It's how we place that issue in our minds that helps us rationalize it. If it is something like the issue of the Confederate flag we need to ask ourselves some questions. One being, "Was that flag a part of our history, be it good or bad?" Maybe the question needs to be, "Does that flag represent something that was changed of a significant historical event?" Still another. "Are we afraid that it will lessen other Country's view of the U.S.?" Seems to me that there are some of those same issues that are going on in other Countries right now.
What were those issues? Freedom comes to mind here. Human Rights is another. The Civil War is a part of our history whether we like it or not. The Confederate flag is nothing more than a relic that represents that part of our history. I know that my southern brothers and sisters are waving the flag crisply right now, but I am not saying that the flag should be banned. What I am trying to point out to all those that are taking issue with the flag is that by saying that the Confederate flag should be banned is like saying the Statue of Liberty needs to be hidden from view in the New York harbor. The Statue of Liberty is another part of our history and it represents more than Freedom. It represents hope.
The Confederate flag could be looked at in the same way. Freedom and hope. Hope that our Country will never see the horrific battles that the Civil War brought about. Hope that our Country will take that experience and use it to show other Countries what came out of a basic perseverance of a human right. Maybe that Confederate flag could represent that there are other ways to achieving an ends to a means.
You can't change history and so it goes without saying that it doesn't matter if the Confederate flag is banned or not. The history is still there and that can not be changed or banned.
Learn more about this author, DCMerkle.
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