Confederate flag

sheskunk

Well-Known Member
nope, but our States should not be supporting the flying of it.
It's going well beyond that. Stores across the country are clearing their shelves. I saw a story on the news this morning where a man was being harassed by his neighbors for displaying a flag. I'm sure all of this will help stop racism. Some day soon there won't be a racist left alive on this planet. Except for the ones who think all black dudes have big dicks. ;)
 

londonfog

Well-Known Member
It's going well beyond that. Stores across the country are clearing their shelves. I saw a story on the news this morning where a man was being harassed by his neighbors for displaying a flag. I'm sure all of this will help stop racism. Some day soon there won't be a racist left alive on this planet. Except for the ones who think all black dudes have big dicks. ;)
How many black guys have you seen with little dicks ?
 

kmog33

Well-Known Member
that guy is as retarded as you are.
Buck you are the reason I come on here sometimes, you mak me smile a lot. For everyone you offend, they should be able to take a little verbal abuse when they're brains are functioning at 30%. I don't always agree with you, but I like the way you make your points.

Respect
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
"Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people"...and complete fucking idiots obsess about flags.
 

shishkaboy

Well-Known Member
"Though no one knows for sure, the number of slaves who fought and labored for the South was modest. Blacks who shouldered arms for the Confederacy numbered more than 3,000 but fewer than 10,000."
-Harvard historian John Stauffer
Doubt it




vs


Who would you "shoulder arms" for if you were "black"?

Please show me a pic of a large number of "black" confederate soldiers ready to "shoulder arms".
 

travisw

Well-Known Member
Doubt it




vs


Who would you "shoulder arms" for if you were "black"?

Please show me a pic of a large number of "black" confederate soldiers ready to "shoulder arms".
He omitted a few points from his source.

Black Confederate soldiers likely represented less than 1 percent of Southern black men of military age during that period, and less than 1 percent of Confederate soldiers. And their motivation for serving isn’t taken into account by the numbers, since some may have been forced into service, and others may have seen fighting as a way out of privation.

It is well known that in Louisiana and Tennessee, Stauffer added, Confederate units were organized by elite, light-skinned freedmen who identified with the slave-owning white plantation culture. (The Tennessee troops were never issued arms, though, and the black unit known as the Louisiana Native Guards never saw action — and quickly switched sides as soon as Union forces appeared.

But unless readers think that black Confederates were truly enamored of the South’s cause, Stauffer related the case of John Parker, a slave forced to build Confederate barricades and later to join the crew of a cannon firing grapeshot at Union troops at the First Battle of Bull Run. All the while, recalled Parker, he worried about dying, prayed for a Union victory, and dreamed of escaping to the other side.

“His case can be seen as representative,” said Stauffer. “Masters put guns to (the heads of slaves) to make them shoot Yankees.”

Freedmen in the Confederacy faced re-enslavement in Virginia and elsewhere, said Stauffer, so they made displays of loyalty that were really gestures of self-protection — a “hope for better treatment, a hope not to be enslaved.”

http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2011/09/black-confederates/
 
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