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72.1 | Please move No. 72 | ODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZ | R-SQUARED | Fri May 29 1992 10:11 | 8 |
|
Moderator,
Sorry, I meant to put this in the Rat Hole... mental lapse?
r�
|
72.2 | | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | REM RATAM CONTRA MVNDI MORAS AGO | Fri May 29 1992 10:25 | 4 |
| If it's all right with you, R^2, I'll leave it where it is. This is a
topic in itself, not a digression from something else.
-dick
|
72.3 | Many embarrassed by link to racism | ODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZ | R-SQUARED | Fri May 29 1992 17:12 | 103 |
| Atlanta Journal--Friday, May 29th
Current state flag dates to '56 battle over desegregation
by Steve Harvey
When state Rep. Frank redding (D-Decatur) first suggested that
Confederate symbols had no place in a modern Georgia flag, other
legislators scoffed. Then Gov. Joe Frank Harris and his successor,
Zell Miller, declared it a non-issue.
Mr. Redding, who is black, proposed legislation changing the flag
in 1987, after Georgia made national news when white supremacists
attacked civil rights marchers in Fortsythe County.
In a speech on the House floor that year, Mr. redding invoked the
image of the marchers and the jeering counterdemonstrators who pelted
with rocks while waving Confederate flags. He wondered how Robert E.
Lee and Jefferson Davis would have felt at the sight of "one of those
crazies" waving their emblem.
Mr. Redding suggested replacing the current flag with the one that
existed before 1956.
MILLER SEES ADVANCEMENT
On Thursday, with the glare of the publicity from the 1996 Olympics
approaching, Mr. redding and other supporters picked up their most
powerful ally when Mr. Miller joined the cause.
"We've made alot of advancement in the last several years," Mr.
Miller said. "This is the final step Georgia must take to really
become a member of the new South."
Mr. Redding was ecstatic "Georgia is going to move into the 21st
Century, and we're going to do it in a way that's going to show respect
for all Georgians," he said.
Until recently, most Georgians probably didn't know that today's
flag has been around only since 1956.
Adopted under the administration of former Governor Marvin Griffin,
it was seen as a symbol of defiance of the Supreme Court-ordered school
desegregation.
Three other Southern states. South Carolina and Alabama fly the
Confederate flags over over their capitol buildings, while Georgia and
Mississippi have incorporated it into the design of their state flags.
Supporters of the current state flag contend that it was an attempt
to honor Georgia's heritage. But in 1956, Rep. Denmark Groover
(D-Macon) decalred, "This will show that we in Georgia intend to uphold
what we stood for."
Before that, the flaf had displayed three diffeent designs during
the previous 150 years.
The first state flag in 1799 was a simple blue field with the state
seal in the center. In 1879, state lawmakers - many of whom served in
the Civil War - modified the flag to include three horizontal red and
white panels to the right of the plain blue field. In 1905, the added
the state seal.
In 1988, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People mounted an extensive lobbying effort, gaining 16,000 signatures
on petitions urging that the flag be changed. Before this year,
support for restoring the flag to the 1956 design gained little
momentum. In March, a 90-member group called the Georgia Civil Rights
Network launched a campaign to change the flag. The coalition includes
the American Civil Liberties Union, Common Cause, the King Center, the
NAACP and the National Organization for Women.
The group began lining up corporate allies and circulated petitions
to present to the Legislature next year.
More recently, Attorney General Michael J. Bowers announced in a
newspaper his support for changing the flag, saying it was hateful to
the state's black residents.
U.S. Rep. John Lewis, Georgia's only black congressman, was
recently quoted as saying he does not display the state flag outside
his Washingtom office because he finds it offensive.
Mr. Miller said he consulted Mr. Lewis along with other political,
business, and religious leaders before deciding to support changing the
flag.
Racial tensions following the Rodney King verdict in Los Angeles
also were a factor, as were concerns that the state's image would
suffer as Georgia prepares to host the 1994 Super Bowl and the 1996
Olympic.
"More and more, I see this as an issue that has the potential to
tarnish the image of the state, both nationally, and internationally,"
he said.
Addressing the issue now, he said, would allow the state to move on
towards more pressing concerns, such as teen pregnancy, infant
mortality, and high school dropout rate.
ARE THE MOVES POLITICAL?
Some critics question Mr. Miller's motives.
"This is part of a broad based attack, accross the country, to
erase all such symbols," said Charles Lunsford, spokesman for the
15,000 member Sons of Confederate Veterans. "I think it's unfortunate
that he would take an action against a huge majorityjust to placate a
small group of people. He ought to put it on a statewide ballot if he
thinks it should be changed."
Some wonder if he was swayed by politics concerns, possibly in an
attempt to be named keynote speaker at the Democratic National
Convention in July.
But others acknowledged that the move could only enhance Mr.
Millers national reputation.
"I think back at the progressive speech he made in Charlotte and
how that caught people's attention. To me, this is a higher note,"
said Rep. Calvin Smyer (D-Columbus), a member of the Democratic
National Committee. "For a Southern Governor to do this, it has to
catch the attention of national Democrats."
|
72.4 | Now wait a minute... | DECWET::PALMER | A is A | Fri May 29 1992 22:56 | 23 |
| So.... from reading .3, I take it that the people who want to
change it, want to change it back to the 1905 design? Which,
the article says, is a flag with a large red, white, and red
stripe, with a blue canton (which has the state seal).
Isn't that, though, *very* similar to the Confederate "Stars
and Bars"? (I've also seen a sculpture with the Georgia
flag as it was in the Civil War - it was like a Stars and Bars,
but with a different design in the canton than thirteen stars).
If they don't like the current Georgia flag (which has the
Confederate battle flag as about half of it, I think), why
would they be any less offended with the 1905 one? It seems
they both have about the same amount of Confederate heritage.
Maybe it's that the 3-striped stars-and-bars style isn't
something that a lot of the current flag's opponents recognize,
so they're not bothered by it?
All of which makes the latest change proposal look, to me,
like so much political grandstanding.
Jay
|
72.5 | Same problem they had at Hahhvahd..... | OGOMTS::RICKER | Lest We Forget, 1861 - 1865 | Mon Jun 01 1992 04:05 | 5 |
|
A living death is being buried in a Hahhvahd dorm wiv a bunch of pc
nerdniks who won't let you hang yer reb flag out the window.
The Alabama Slammer
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72.6 | Exactly what I thought... | ODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZ | R-SQUARED | Mon Jun 01 1992 09:22 | 18 |
| re: -.2
You are correct. It looks exactly like a "Stars & Bars" with the
State Seal in the blue field. However, if you go back further than
that, you have a solid blue flag with a state seal in the center.
That was the original state flag from the late 1700's. Problem is,
it has an uncanny resemblance to FINAL flag of the Confederacy, the
"Bonnie-Blue", with a single star in the center. In Georgia, the
"Bonnie-Blue" would be more recognizable than the "Stars & Bars",
I think... It got prominent footage in GWTW ;)
r�
|
72.7 | Another opinion..... | OGOMTS::RICKER | Lest We Forget, 1861 - 1865 | Wed Jun 03 1992 06:58 | 80 |
|
DON'T FURL THAT FLAG!
A 'SOUTHERN PARTISAN MAGAZINE' reader recently sent us a
most remarkable newspaper clipping, A COLUMN WRITTEN OVER A DOZEN
YEARS AGO BY A MAN NAMED W. EARL DOUGLAS. Even then, a movement
was underway to ban the use of the Confederate Battle Flag in the
South because it reminded blacks of slavery days. DOUGLAS, A BLACK
JOURNALIST, was writing in reaction to that logic. With permission
from THE CHARLESTON NEWS AND COURIER, here are selections from the
column of APRIL 27, 1979 by W. EARL DOUGLAS.
"The suggestion that the Confederate Battle Flag should be
removed has caused heartburn among unreconstructed descendants of
Confederate soldiers. Alas, it has also brought heartburn to this
black writer, who cannot buy the socialist philosophy of the
Garrisons and Sumners of yesterday or today. And would rather wave a
symbol of striving for independence than a food stamp or welfare check,
which symbolize the hell of defeat more pronounced than that received
in any war."
"I CANNOT BE CONVINCED THAT SOUTHERN INDEPENDENCE MEANT ONLY
THE PERPETUATION OF SLAVERY, BECAUSE HISTORY OF THE TRUTHFUL KIND
TELLS ME OTHERWISE. The Constitution of the Provisional Government of
the Confederacy forbade the importation of slaves. How then was
slavery the motivating force behind the thrust for Southern
independence? How did black and white slave-owners exist side by side
in this region, which was painted by abolitionists as one of black
and white hostility? WHY WERE THERE ALWAYS MORE FREE NEGROES IN THE
SLAVE SOUTH THAN IN THE SO-CALLED FREE NORTH OF THE ABOLITIONISTS?
Such questions remain unanswered....WHITES AND BLACKS PARTNERS IN THE
DESTINY OF THE SOUTH AND NOT (as the Uncle Tom's Cabin mentality of
the abolitionists would have had us believe) ONLY AS MASTER AND SLAVE."
"Today, over a century since that much heralded emancipation,
it is here in the land of the unfurled Confederate battle flag where
Negro progress stands above that achieved in any other region of the
country. For it is here, in the heartland of the old Confederacy,
where over 70 percent of all black owned housing is to be found and
where this nation's only viable black economic middle class exists -
the Southern black farmer."
"The real tragedy of the Confederate battle flag is that
Southerners, white and black, have permitted it to be driven between
them like a wedge, separating them from a common goal. The racism so
evident in this controversy is not the flying of the flag but that
we've permitted it to be designated as pro-white and anti-black.
I am reminded that it was my grandfather and grandmother who kept the
home fires burning while the Confederacy waged its war. Which is why
I cannot view loyalty to the South or the desire for independence as
being monopolized by either race."
"If hate had been the prevailing emotion between the races,
then it is a safe bet that the Confederacy nver would have been born.
Fortunately there was love, understanding and compassion. AND THE
TWO GREATEST LIES EVER PERPETRATED BY HISTORY [are] THAT THE SOUTH
INSTIGATED THE WAR AND THAT IT WAS FOUGHT BY THE NORTH FOR THE
PURPOSE OF FREEING SLAVES. The Negro was merely used as the excuse
for that war, while the real reason for it is reflected in every area
of our lives, when the tentacles of government form the bars of a
new slavery."
"NO DON'T FURL THAT CONFEDERATE BATTLE FLAG. LET IT WAVE ALL
ACROSS THE SOUTH TO REMIND AMMERICANS THAT THERE EXISTS HERE A
LIBERTY, FREEDOM AND INDEPENDENCE THAT WILL NOT BE DENIED. LET IT FLY
AS A TESTIMONIAL TO REAL MEN AND REAL WOMEN WHO WOULD RATHER WORK
AND FIGHT THAN SHED TEARS AND BEG FOR GOVERNMENT CHARITY. Finally,
let it act as a cohesive force, drawing all Southerners together in
the cause of freedom."
Less than two months after he wrote these words, W. Earl
Douglas died. His stirring exhortation, still valid, lives on.
Article by Richard Quinn
Southern Partisan Magazine, Second Quarter 1991
Reprinted without permission
The Alabama Slammer
|
72.8 | Can Everybody Be Right? | ODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZ | R-SQUARED | Wed Jun 03 1992 10:56 | 39 |
|
It seems that the "pro-flaggers" and "anti-flaggers" get really
emotional over the Battle Flag issue. It helps to remove yourself,
personally, from the issue in order to make sense out of it.
I see two basic assumptions. Those who embrace the flag seem to
have feelings founded in their Southern heritage. The flag represents
a human struggle that brought out the best in many men and women. It
also represents a regional/cultural "distinctness" with which Southerners
enjoy identifying. The only time they get into trouble is when, as in
the Southern Partisan article, they clumsily try to suggest that things
were bad in the old days but our's was a "nice, consentual, sort of
caste/slavery social order" and we can always find a place in the world
where people's rights are in worse shape.
The other component, those who oppose the flag, seem to be more
mindful of more recent history. The assumption here is that the flag
is an attack on civil rights. In fact, the Georgia flag added the
"battle portion" in order to thumb their noses at the Supreme Court
for decisions to integrate public schools--the separate is not
equal controversy. Sometimes these folks run into trouble when they
show a lack of interest in the historical facts. There is a hysteria
surrounding the ten klansmen marching down the street with a Battle
Flag, surrounded by three score state troopers.
True Southerners, who have no fear of the 21st century, would
_probably_ condemn the Georgia General Assembly for prostituting
the battle flag as they did, if they themselves knew the facts.
It is a matter of smoothly incorporating the pride and self-
reliance of the Old South with the opportunity and inclusion of
a New South.
It leaves us with a problem. Can we, in Georgia, now say that
the flag was altered for one reason, but we're going to leave it
as it is in the hopes that we can reclaim the original symbolic
significance of the flag?
|
72.9 | My $0.02 for what its worth... | OGOMTS::RICKER | Lest We Forget, 1861 - 1865 | Thu Jun 04 1992 04:57 | 31 |
|
I agree with your assumptions. You are always going to have two
view points of any issue. It's human nature.
The reason I wrote the article into the conversation, was to
present one man's opinion of the battle flag of the ANV. I personally
do not believe of a man's right of owning another man. It would seem a
strange statement coming from someone who defends, so to speak, the
Southern viewpoint. But I am not going to deny the fact that slavery
existed. And I will not say it was a "nice, consentual, sort of
caste/slavery social order" to hold a man in bondage.....I might
portray a Confederate soldier from Alabama, but, that does not mean
I would support slavery in any shape, way or form..
What makes my blood boil about this Flag issue is, the way that
the battle flag is misrepresented. Nothing makes my blood boil more
than to see that honorable symbol, that men fought and died nobly
following, used and abused by the likes of KKK, Skinheads, etc. It
casts an evil shadow over an once proud symbol of men's struggle for
independence.
In my humble opinion, I believe it's too late for the noble
standard. It has been abused to much by such hate groups that the
battle flag will never regain the proud respect it once had and it's
a damn shame.....It's not the symbol of the flag, but the people who
missed used it. I believe the original symbolic significance of the
flag is lost to the ages.
The Alabama Slammer
|
72.10 | A African American piont of view | ANARKY::WILLIAMS | | Sun Jun 07 1992 20:00 | 11 |
| As a African American (and you people thought this was a white only
conference) why not put the colors of the A.N.C. next to the Stars &
Bars. That way the southerns could have their pride and the African
Americans could have their pride. Its a shame that too many whites
think that the only people you suffer in the war was the white person
and that the war is only seen thru white eyes. You must remember that
we (African Americans) have fought and die in every war that this
country has been in. Why not seen it thru our eyes and then maybe you
will understand us.
phillip
|
72.11 | Flag Carries alot of Baggage with It | ODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZ | R-SQUARED | Mon Jun 08 1992 10:18 | 33 |
|
Phillip,
I think that I understand the spirit in which you suggested putting
the ANC flag in the same flag as the battle flag. If it isn't al-
ready apparent, I have a bias against battle flag, just as I would
have one against the ANC flag.
I have heard that the design of the battle flag goes back to the
Scottish Cross of St. George, Patron Saint of Great Britain. That
is, unlike the British Union Jack which goes vertically and
horizontally, instead of corner to corner.
I think the battle flag is great for human interest, education, and
nostalgia, but it has no place in America as a State symbol today.
I feel that way mostly because so much HAS changed. The flag was
designed by an "Anglo-centric" society. The demographics of the South
are nothing like the way they were 130 years ago.
It still bothers me that many Americans regard England as the "mother
country". Even as early as the ACW, many of the soldiers were Hiberno
and southern European as well as Afro and Anglo.
On a lighter note, the Bonnie Blue Flag, solid blue with a large white
star in the center was "borrowed" from a flag that the Mexicans had in
the war with Mexico. It is Iberian in its' origin.
r�
P.S.-Phillip, I didn't see an intro note for you; I'd love to hear
about your interest in the ACW. I look forward to hearing your
perspective on other issues!
|
72.12 | Correction... | ODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZ | R-SQUARED | Mon Jun 08 1992 10:26 | 6 |
|
The Scottish, "x-cross" is a St. Andrews, not St. George.
The English, "+-cross" is a St. George.
The Union Jack is a combination of the two.
|
72.13 | My 2p worth | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Tue Jun 09 1992 05:51 | 15 |
|
From this safe distance, I would agree with .9.
The value of the Confederate flag was lost as soon as it was
hijacked to serve as a symbol for opposition to desegregration.
It should be removed from the Georgia flag, NOT because it was
the flag of secession but because as long as it remains it carries
the overtones of 1956, not 1861.
1956 means Bull Connor and George Wallace, 1861 means
Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee, altogether a nobler breed.
Toby
Toby
|
72.14 | | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | REM RATAM CONTRA MVNDI MORAS AGO | Tue Jun 09 1992 12:12 | 12 |
| The whole thing is that a symbol is whatever people believe it to be.
Its use by truckers and assorted hot-rodders notwithstanding, the ANV
battle flag and its derivatives have, through the agency of the KKK and
many other distasteful organizations and individuals, come to symbolize
for most people hatred and racial bigotry.
It's a damned shame, but this symbolism is so powerful that I don't
think there is any way to eradicate it; the best course, IMHO, is to
remove it in the interests of racial and social harmony.
-dick
|
72.15 | | TOHOPE::WSA038::SATTERFIELD | Close enough for jazz. | Tue Jun 09 1992 16:39 | 12 |
|
I've given some thought to this controversy over the past couple of years.
At first I was against removing the battle flag, it was a last remaining
symbol of a proud heritage. But when I found out the origins of the present
flag in 1956 I started changing my mind. I don't want Georgia represented
by an act that grew out of the prejudices of that time. If we go back to
the previous flag we are still honoring the Confederacy with the "stars and
bars" but without the baggage of prejudice and offence.
Randy
|
72.16 | Georgia beat 'em to it | ODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZ | R-SQUARED | Tue Jun 09 1992 17:17 | 16 |
|
Randy,
FYI, the Atlanta Journal-Consitution illustrated a chronology of the
State Flags over the years. The Georgia "Bars" predates the
Confederate "Bars". I can only assume that they didn't want to use
narrow bars (stripes) so that it wouldn't be confused with the
early Federal (U.S.) Flags.
I guess that historical fact would leave us with a situation in
which everybody would be happy--probably not...
r�
|
72.17 | A wee nit. | MASALA::DRUDMAN | Always the Black Knight | Thu Jul 02 1992 15:47 | 23 |
| Actually, R�,
8. The three flags superimposed to form the Union Jack.
--The English flag of St. George, the Scottish flag of
St. Andrew, the Irish flag of St. Patrick
From my "Things That Come in Threes" topic in TRIVIA.
Re: .9 I'd say, Phillip, that the majority of contributors
to this file have more than a passing knowledge of
"Black" as well as "White" people's roles, difficulties,
triumphs, and hardships during the Upris.. ah, the Late
Unpleasantness. Admittedly, you probably have a better
feel for it. On the other hand, I've heard a story or
two handed down the years from ex-slaves to one generation
before mine, a few of which made my hair stand on end.
As for the base topic, I have to agree it is a hot non-topic, and
hope they can resolve it quickly (I'd say remove it, as in this
instance it is a detriment rather than a reminder of glories past)
and move forward, rather than back.
Don
|
72.18 | The Irish Flag? | ODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZ | R-SQUARED | Sat Jul 04 1992 09:20 | 7 |
| Don,
That's interesting, what does a St. Patrick's look like? The only
Irish colors I am familiar with are the ones in the same pattern
as the French tri-color.
r2
|
72.19 | Union Jack | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Mon Jul 06 1992 14:18 | 17 |
| RE .18, .17:
St. Andrew's cross is a white diagonal "X" on a blue background.
St. Patrick's cross is a red diagonal "X" on (I think) a white
background.
St. George's cross is a red horizontal "+" on a white background.
If you look carefully at a Union Jack, you can see all three
crosses, with St. George's superimposed on St. Patrick's, and both
superimposed on St. Andrew's. (Does that make the Scots the
"foundation" of the UK? :^} )
MikeR
|
72.20 | I'm not sure I want to ask them... | KIRKTN::DRUDMAN | Always the Black Knight | Thu Sep 03 1992 06:27 | 6 |
| I don't think the Scots feel that. A lot of them would just as soon
not be a part of the U.K.
Better to look at it that St. George's cross is on top of the other two...
Don
|
72.21 | I wouldn't ask, either, but... | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Thu Sep 03 1992 15:25 | 8 |
| RE .20:
I know of one moderately prominent Scot who _did_ feel that Andrew's
cross was the "foundation" of the Union Jack. But I'm sure there are
many, as you say, who don't look at things that way.
MikeR
|
72.22 | Too hot to handle... | ODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZ | Shake that grits tree! | Wed May 12 1993 11:53 | 10 |
| For those of you wondering how this turned out. It never came
to a vote in the General Assembly. The only thing the Governor
could get out of them was a willingness to put it to a referendum.
A referendum to change the flag would certainly have failed so
the Governor "tabled" the issue for another time.
The main supporters were the Governor, Lt. Governor, and Attorney
General.
r�
|
72.23 | Shelby's view | CPDW::PALUSES | Bob Paluses @MSO | Wed May 12 1993 14:09 | 12 |
|
a little while ago some little tv spot had a few minutes on the
issues around the use of the confederate flag today. They showed diff
points of views. They asked Shelby Foote, and in an emotional
response, he blamed people like himself for the bastardizing of the
Confederate flag. Basically he said that historians and war buffs
should have stepped in the minute groups like the klan started using
the confederate flag for their symbol and never let them become
associated with it. He felt that now that great symbol has been
misused and people are associating it with hate instead of honor.....
Bob
|
72.24 | Fix the KKK but good! | PKHUB1::MROPRT | | Wed Dec 07 1994 11:20 | 6 |
| I think a good compromise that would take the Stars and Bars proudly
into the next century would be to keep it and superimpose over it under
the convergence of the cross a white arm and a black arm joining in a
handshake. That'd fix the KKK from messin' wit ma battle flag!
Bill M
|
72.25 | Wrong Flag | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Wed Dec 07 1994 12:09 | 26 |
| RE .24:
While I think your idea is a good one, you are (I think) using
incorrect terminology. The "Stars and Bars" refers to the first (or
close to the first) national ensign of the CSA, which had a blue canton
with a circle of white stars in the corner (where the US flag has the
stars) and three broad horizontal bars of red, white, and red. This
flag was carried by some units at First Manassas, but when draped close
to the staff (like with no wind) it was hard to tell from the Stars and
Stripes, leading to confusion over whether an approaching unit was "we"
or "they".
The familiar Confederate battle flag with the diagonal blue "X" on a
red background, with stars on the "X", was _not_ called the "Stars and
Bars"; it was an outgrowth of the confusion at Manassas. It was never
a national ensign of the CSA, though it did appear in the canton of the
"Stainless Banner".
Since it is the battle flag, and not any of the CSA national ensigns,
which causes all the controversy today (most folks outside the
historical/reenacting community wouldn't know a CSA flag if they saw
it), I suspect you are talking about the battle flag, not the Stars and
Bars.
MikeR
|