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    I wouldn’t touch this flag topic with a 10’ pole :-P

  • '17

    I removed photos from this post because I did not realize that posting non-WWII related photos isn’t permitted under General Discussion.

  • '17

    What do you guys think this flag means to the people in the two photos above?

  • '18 '17 '16 '15 Customizer

    @Imperious:

    Lets do this:  The Union starved the Confederates with that blockade which killed millions, so the blockade was by extrapolation an equal evil withslavery.

    Let’s say you had to make decisions about who let starve and who to let live. Of course the slaves starve and you can blame the Union for that.

    That’s how it works around here.

    Hoo hahaha! I get it!  :lol:


  • I would prefer it not be flying on government property, though I think this is a minor issue compared to the actual racism that still exists here.

  • '18 '17 '16 '15 Customizer

    @wheatbeer:

    What do you guys think this flag means to the people in the two photos above?

    What do you think the US flag means to the EDIT: Japanese-American US citizens interned here?

    Or to the Native Americans on the Trail of Tears.

    Garg has a point though. If the CSA flags are seen as evil and associated with slavery, the flag of the United States should be associated with all those same things for an even greater span of time. It is a logical progression for people to move from calling for the removal of Confederate flags to the very flag that flies all over our country now.

    Should this flag fly over any level of municipal, state or federal property: no, of course not. If it is part of a state flag (Mississippi), that is a little more complicated matter and there needs to be some historical context considered.

  • '22 '20 '19 '18 '17 '16

    But there are so many countries with tarnished flags, including Japan’s (as well as the UK, France, etc). Wheatbeer’s photos represent a cultural mindset that the Confederate flag became a part of that was associated with Jim Crow laws and institutional racism that was handed down for generations.

    Granted xenophobic Americans will wave US flags as a sign of patriotism but that applies to any country’s conservative base.

  • '18 '17 '16 '15 Customizer

    @General:

    But there are so many countries with tarnished flags, including Japan’s (as well as the UK, France, etc). Wheatbeer’s photos represent a cultural mindset that the Confederate flag became a part of that was associated with Jim Crow laws and institutional racism that was handed down for generations.

    Granted xenophobic Americans will wave US flags as a sign of patriotism but that applies to any country’s conservative base.

    Exactly my point. You condemn one, you pretty much have to condemn them all. At this point it just seems pretty stupid to be arguing over history. Particularly when there are more pertinent issues to deal with in the world.

    People are just ignorant and shortsighted about the whole thing.

    Says a middle-class, white, Christian, male with a bachelor’s degree.

    I am pretty much screwed from being seen as having a legitimate viewpoint on anything in this country. Other than maybe the National Hockey League.

  • '17 '16 '15

    @LHoffman

    Where was that picture taken? At first I thought California but those were US citizens not japanese. If they’re japanese hopefully it means they’re thinking we shouldn’t F!CK with the US.  If they’re US citizens they’re probably thinking disappointment at the least.  Anyway they had a nice view.


  • @barney:

    @LHoffman

    Where was that picture taken? At first I thought California but those were US citizens not japanese. If they’re japanese hopefully it means they’re thinking we shouldn’t F!CK with the US.  If they’re US citizens they’re probably thinking disappointment at the least.  Anyway they had a nice view.

    I think it’s this place: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gila_River_War_Relocation_Center

  • '18 '17 '16 '15 Customizer

    @barney:

    @LHoffman

    Where was that picture taken? At first I thought California but those were US citizens not japanese. If they’re japanese hopefully it means they’re thinking we shouldn’t F!CK with the US.  If they’re US citizens they’re probably thinking disappointment at the least.  Anyway they had a nice view.

    Well if you want to get technical about it…

    But yes, sorry, my bad. Allow me to edit that. What I meant obviously was Japanese-Americans (who were citizens).  :roll:

  • '17

    @LHoffman:

    What do you think the US flag means to the Japanese citizens interned here?

    The flag wasn’t raised at that camp as a symbol of hate against the Japanese.

    Many interred Japanese-Americans joined the 442nd infantry and fought under the US flag.

    I can’t find any evidence that Japanese-Americans then or now commonly (or even uncommonly) found the US flag offensive.

  • '18 '17 '16 '15 Customizer

    Let me first off say that I think we agree on this whole issue, I am just playing devil’s advocate to some degree.

    @wheatbeer:

    @LHoffman:

    What do you think the US flag means to the Japanese citizens interned here?

    The flag wasn’t raised at that camp as a symbol of hate against the Japanese.

    That said… The flag was not raised as a symbol of hate in 1941-45, but that does not mean that Japanese-Americans could not have made that leap themselves. After all, their being put in the camp was based purely on their race/ethnicity and whatever suspicions they may have engendered to the US government. Their internment was not based on hate per se, but it was certainly an act of discrimination. And I think you could get many people today to equate discrimination with racism and therefore hate, even if shrouded in bureaucracy.

    Do you have proof that the Confederate Battle Flag or their state flag was raised as a symbol of hate? I am not sure what, if any, country intends very specifically for their flag to be a symbol of anything negative. As you said, it is all what people make of it or how they associate it or what the government explicitly says it means. Otherwise they are just colored shapes.

    @wheatbeer:

    Many interred Japanese-Americans joined the 442nd infantry and fought under the US flag.

    And there were black slaves who fought for the south. Even if conscripted.

    @wheatbeer:

    I can’t find any evidence that Japanese-Americans then or now commonly (or even uncommonly) found the US flag offensive.

    Again, playing devil’s advocate in suggesting that they easily could have. And I am sure some actually did, even if that is but an assumption.

    What about the Native Americans who were killed or displaced from their traditional areas of living because of the United States? Same deal.


  • This countries being taken over by a certain groups of people.  :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil:

  • '17

    Japanese-Americans and Native Americans asking for the US flag to be changed: seem to be rare, possibly even imaginary.

    Hate groups using the Confederate flag as a symbol of white supremacy: real and copiously documented.

  • '17

    I removed a photo from this post because I did not realize that posting non-WWII related photos isn’t permitted under General Discussion.

  • '17

    @LHoffman:

    Do you have proof that the Confederate Battle Flag or their state flag was raised as a symbol of hate?

    No, I am not sure whether that can be proved or not. However, the Confederate flag’s popular resurgence coincided with the Civil Right’s Movement. I don’t believe that this is a coincidence.

  • Liaison TripleA '11 '10

    Well if Images are the argument of the day, I think this one says a lot.

    And if you want to make an argument that the flag was somehow “hijacked” one can easily say the same for the confederate battle flag.


  • I do hope that my future grandchildren get to grow up in the same great country I did.

    These future grandchildren may have to grow up singing some national anthem that I do not yet know…

    I would not like to tell these future grandchildren that my generation allowed a bunch of communist to chaotically divide yet another country as they took over.  That would be a sorry excuse for them not growing up here in the USA.

    BTW,
    I sense very little love and a lot of finger pointing in the above posts.
    The communists are very good at getting other peoples fingers pointed at each other’s throats.

  • Liaison TripleA '11 '10

    From a foriegn perspective and observation whilst this unfolds - I think all the talk of taking down the Confederate flag, or taking down the American flag, or the Jefferson memorial for that matter, are inherently anti/un America talks.

    And generally I perceive America as a huge world positive voice of reason, and not the tyranny that some would paint it as.

    As for the confederate flag specifically - to me it is a symbol of the right to respectfully disagree, and have an independent point of view, (Right or wrong) and in it’s very own way, The confederate flag is a symbol of what it is to be American.

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