@wheatbeer:
My argument is that flying the Kriegsmarine flag as a memorial is logically and (more to the point) legally the same as flying the Confederate battle flag as a memorial. The only differences lie in the realm of public opinion.
Okay, I will accept that.
@wheatbeer:
That Confederate soldiers are recognized as US war veterans gives those veterans a specific legal status (they are entitled to the same benefits as any other American veteran). Since all Confederate soldiers are now deceased, the main practical benefit they can enjoy is their eligibility to be buried in military cemeteries. In the eyes of the law, human beings can be veterans but flags cannot.
Agreed. However, a legal or official designation of a flag is an intrinsic implication of status deserving respect. Being an object is not the same as being a person, but my point is that if it is an accepted symbol of said veterans, it is therefore culturally and historically significant.
(I have done some brief looking and cannot find evidence of what was meant by “official veteran flag” pertaining to this discussion, but the Confederate flag is protected by some states in a manner similar to the US flag. As for which Confederate flag that is… I am not exactly sure.)
@wheatbeer:
The ultimate design-origin of swastika bearing flags does not change the fact those were the official flags of the era.
Agreed. The real question here is how the current German government would treat the situation because then we could have an apples to apples comparison. Because of this German law https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strafgesetzbuch_section_86a there are not going to be any Third Reich flags of any sort either on headstones, flags or monuments in Germany; either in an official capacity or a public one. The United States does not have such laws about Confederate symbols. So even though Confederate battle flags or the Stars and Bars do not appear to be officially erected at national cemeteries or battlefields, people may still display said flags there or plant them next to grave markers and the like. More to the point, there is no federal law against the display and I found multiple images of cemeteries (I am assuming not federally maintained) that have dedicated flagpoles with Confederate flags on them. They seem to treat them in the proper manner, meaning the US Flag, if displayed, is raised above the others.
If the German government does not display said flags, it would be in my opinion, improper for the United States to do so.
@wheatbeer:
@LHoffman:
Third, historical flags (those no longer used by said government) are not usually flown in an official capacity.
Both the Kriegsmarine and Confederate flags are historical. This point only supports my argument of their logical/legal sameness.
Agreed. But relates to my above comment.
@wheatbeer:
@LHoffman:
And fourth, as I often like to point out, not all German military men or civilians were Nazis.
As I stated before, this is not relevant to my argument.
I will accept that. However, the National Socialist flag (or just the swasika) carries political implications that the Confederate battle flag does not (at least not to the same degree. This is significant. You see a guy in a truck with a confederate flag on the back you might think he is a southern ‘redneck’, but it doesn’t necessarily mean he is a racist. You see a guy in a truck with a Nazi flag or swastikas on it… well, you see the difference. Or at least I am assuming the distinction is there.
@wheatbeer:
I mean that in the eyes of the law at present, the Confederate flag and the Kriegsmarine flag aren’t any different. There is nothing which you can legally do with a Confederate flag which you can’t legally do with a Kriegsmarine flag.
Agreed.