Full disclosure, I am white and was born and have lived all
my life in a secessionist state. Like most of you, I am tired of hearing about
the Confederate flag. Its supporters argue that its place on the South Carolina
statehouse should be attributed to “heritage and not hate” and that we cannot
change history based upon the ever-fickle whims of public sensibility. Opponents
of the flag believe its presence was (and is) nothing more than a blatant
reminder of racism, oppression, and slavery. Therein lies the difficulty of interpreting
symbols, they rarely remain stagnant and the stars and bars are no exception.
The flag first went up at the South Carolina capital on April
11, 1961 at the request of Representative John A. May who subsequently
announced his intention to introduce a bill that would have it remain there for
one year to celebrate the Confederate War Centennial. For whatever reason, the
adopted bill omitted a removal date so the flag simply remained where it was.
That we know. The mindset of those who placed it there can become murkier.
We know that up until 1948, the Confederate flag rarely
appeared outside of Civil War reenactments or Confederate commemorations and
was utilized simply as a tribute to the heroism of Confederate veterans. Then
came the State’s Rights Democratic Party or “Dixiecrats” who adopted the flag
as “a symbol of Southern protest and resistance to the Federal government.” The
Dixiecrats, and their presidential nominee Strom Thurmond, ran on a
pro-segregation platform opposed to Federal “totalitarianism” and “interference
with individual rights.” From this point on, the flag became increasingly
intertwined with the pro-segregationist movement.
Given that context, one could argue that by the time the flag
was placed atop the South Carolina capital in 1961, few involved would have
been unaware of its racial connotations. Daniel Hollis, a member of the commission
that planned South Carolina’s Confederate War Centennial, later indicated that
even he was against placing the Confederate flag atop the capital.
One could perhaps argue that, like the 1948 Dixiecrats,
accused-killer Dylan Roof further hijacked the symbolism of the Confederate
flag when he associated it with the racially-motivated Charleston church
shootings. Regardless, the tide has turned against the stars and bars and we
found out today that it will no longer fly at the capital of South Carolina.
The decision did not shock me as much as the backlash against
it did. After all, the majority of those who defend the Confederate flag are
political conservatives who lean heavily toward state’s rights and the removal of
the flag was a decision made by Republican-controlled state legislation and
endorsed by the Republican governor. The removal is, in many ways, a case study
in the exercising of a state’s right to decide what appears at its own capital.
By virtue of the Google News lottery, I found myself reading
the FoxNews.com write-up of the decision which invariable leads me to the comment
section. I observed the following patterns:
1. Rampant use of the derogatory suffix “tard” by proponents of all ideological persuasions. Notable examples include “Foxtard” and “Obamatard.” Your lack of creativity is only narrowly surpassed by your inability to participate in meaningful dialogue.2. In a few instances, comments dismissing racial aspects of the issue as inventions of the “liberal dogs” were followed by comments referring to African-Americans as “pavement apes.”3. One person accused government welfare of being nothing more than “reparations” while an angry liberal referred to Social Security Disability checks as “patriot payments” disproportionately going to small government conservatives.
There was even a solid response to a “The South will rise
again…” comment when someone finished the thought with “…in illiteracy and
obesity rates.” What was really striking was the lack of information when it
came to what the decision means. Several people assumed that this was a Federal
ban on buying, selling, or displaying the flag and/or the end of America.
While several large retailers have stopped carrying it
(Wal-Mart, Amazon) they did so for the most important reason in business:
money. If something goes from being a fiscal asset to a financial liability you
stop carrying it. Once again, the people most upset about the decision made by
these private businesses tend to be ardent supporters of autonomy for private
businesses.
The bottom line is that you can still buy and display a
Confederate, Nazi, or ISIS flag if you want to. You can fly it in your yard
next to a giant sign that says “Death to America” because that is your right. That
being said, I am not sure that we need to digitally edit Dukes of Hazard reruns or remove historical markers, but I do
support the decision to remove the Confederate flag from South Carolina’s
capital. Laying aside any racial implications, it is a historical flag that
represents one of the darkest and most divisive periods in this country’s
history. It belongs in a museum and at re-enactments, not atop a state capital.
At its best, a democracy reflects the evolving views of its
majority while protecting the rights of its minority. It would appear that South
Carolina has exemplified that in this case.
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