Sometimes
the best way to approach a subject is just to go ahead and put it all out
there. So, here goes …
It
is 2015. Why is the presence of the
Confederate flag in the South STILL a big issue?
If
you know me personally or if you have been following my blog, you know I was
born and raised in South Carolina. Even
today, South Carolina still flies the Confederate flag over its state
capital. And year after year it has been
made abundantly clear to South Carolinians and to everyone else in the world that
the flag ain’t going anywhere, either.
There
was a story circulating in my local area a few weeks ago about some high school
students who took a picture at a historical site in Gettysburg and posted the
picture on Instagram with the caption, “The South will rise again.” Later on in the comments, someone posted the
remark that they had already purchased their first slave. That comment was supposed to have been a joke
according to the person who posted it.
Well … not funny.
In
another recent local news story, a student at Duke University hung a noose on a
tree, forgot about it, and left it there for the entire campus to see. That student later issued an apology that
went something sort of like this. My
bad. I didn’t realize hanging a noose on
a tree in the South was a big deal.
(Yes, this is my loose translation of that “apology”.)
I was reading the comments on the pages of my local news stations and on social
media, and I found the overwhelming sentiments on that flag incident I mentioned are that “we”
(READ – Black people) just need to get over it.
The Confederate flag is a part of Southern history, and “we” need to
accept its historical significance, stop being so sensitive, and basically shut
the hell up.
Well,
I can agree with one thing. The
Confederate flag is indeed a part of Southern history. What I don’t agree with is that “we” need to
accept the flag and all it symbolizes as being okay to wave, wear, or revere. And here’s what baffles me the most. Why is
it so difficult for some people to comprehend why the Confederate flag strikes
such a nerve with Black people?
Supporters
of this flag are quick to say that Black folks need a history lesson on the
significance of the flag. The flag symbolizes
history and not hatred. And here’s my
favorite … “we” are racists if we get offended by the flag. What kind of stuck-on-stupid reverse
psychology is that supposed to be?
When
I think of the Confederate flag, I think of how it was present at every lynching
of Black people by angry mobs. When I
think of the Confederate flag, I think of how it was waved after homes and
churches of Black people were bombed and burned to the ground. When I think of the Confederate flag, I see
it being carried by hooded members of the KKK as they spread their doctrine of
White supremacy and as they tried to strike fear the lives of Black people by
leaving burning crosses for all to see.
When I think of the Confederate flag, I see it flying highly and freely
by crowds of people attempting to block the doors of schools as National Guard
troops escorted children to school during the times of integration.
Clearly,
the Confederate flag has a drastically different meaning for some of us. So … dear kind sir or ma’am, please excuse us
Black folks for being overly sensitive. What
are “we” thinking?!?!?
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