Many good people have been working in recent years to
preserve public acknowledgment and celebration of our Confederate history.
Our fights have been largely defensive reactions to the innumerable
strokes of our enemies, and most of them have been defeats. Our enemies
control most of the “respectable” political, religious, educational,
business and media institutions of American society, including nearly all
"Southern" institutions.
We have lost in part because many defenders of
Confederate symbols have not understood the nature of the battle.
Southerners are a conservative people. They prefer the traditional to the
abstract and are slow to adopt new theories (one of the several
characteristics that distinguish them from other inhabitants of the United
States). This is a good and healthy virtue, but like all virtues it can,
if we are not careful, become a self-defeating rigidity. The conservative
philosopher Russell Kirk contrasted mere stand-patter conservatism of the
dull-witted or poor in spirit who reject anything new with the true
conservatism of an Edmund Burke or a John C. Calhoun who perceived that it
was necessary to change in order to conserve because new conditions had
created new threats to our patrimony.
Unfortunately, too many spokesmen in the fight for
Southern heritage are stand-patters, i.e., dinosaurs on their way to
extinction. They are trying to live in a world that they grew up in but
which does not exist any more. The world that they grew up in accepted
Southerners and Southern heritage as a positive part of America. That
world began disappearing a half century ago and is almost gone.
After Reconstruction, which all sensible Northerners
came to realize had been a grievous mistake, most Americans, North and
South, took the Road to Reunion. Southerners had to agree that they were
glad that the Union had been saved and a stronger America had emerged.
(They were already genuinely glad of the end of slavery.) For the most
part they did this with sincerity and enthusiasm (they had to if they had
any hopes of personal success). Southerners became good and loyal members
of the new America. They have lived up to that pledge every generation
since, in fact have been the most loyal of all Americans and done more
than their fair share in every war.
As their part of the bargain, Northerners acknowledged
that Southerners had been brave and honourable in their war for
independence, and their heroes, like Lee and Jackson, would be celebrated
as AMERICAN heroes. (There were always a few old Yankees around who wanted
to exterminate the rebels, and indeed there still are, but they were a
minority.)
This is why “The Birth of a Nation,” creation of D.W. Griffith, son of
a Confederate soldier, could be regarded as a national epic at the
beginning of the twentieth century. Will Rogers, another son of a
Confederate soldier, was a national institution and he and Shirley Temple
and many others portrayed very sympathetic Southern characters in the
films of the 1920s and 1930s.
“Gone With The Wind”, book and movie, was an all-time best-seller in
the North as well as the South. Every major male non-Southern Hollywood
star in the 1950s and 1960s portrayed a heroic Confederate: Erroll Flynn,
John Wayne, Clark Gable, Allan Ladd, Charlton Heston, Richard Harris,
Montgomery Clift, Henry Fonda, Ronald Reagan, and Richard Widmark, to name
just a few. In all his best movies, John Wayne is a Confederate: “Red
River,” “The Searchers,” and “True Grit,” the last two based on
Southern novels.
Confederate battle flags were seen among American
fighting men, in real life and film, during World War II and Korea, and
Vietnam. Douglas Southall Freeman's “RE. Lee” and “Lee’s
Lieutenants” were celebrated as accounts of AMERICAN military valor.
When President Roosevelt inaugurated the first completed dam of the TVA,
he did so on a platform that flew U.S. and Confederate flags.
THAT WORLD DOES NOT EXIST ANY MORE! DEFENDERS OF
SOUTHERN HERITAGE SHOULD STOP ACTING LIKE IT DOES. The people who want to
do away with Confederate symbols are not people who will come around when
you argue a little historical interpretation with them, or when you point
out (as you know to be true) that your forebears were not fighting for
slavery, or prove that you are a loyal American whose heart contains no
hate and violence.
They do not care! They have no heritage of their own
and do not know what a heritage is. They believe in their own
self-interest and fashionable abstractions. We do not and will not in the
foreseeable future live in a world where Southern heritage will be
publicly honoured except by us. We live in a regime where Confederate
symbols are scheduled for complete obliteration. At present, we can expect
no help from our own institutions, the politics of Southern states being
dominated primarily by Big Business. (A phone call from the president of
NationsBank or the publisher of a big newspaper carries more weight with
any politician than 20,000 Confederates at a rally, or any number of
personal visits from earnest citizens. This is a fact.)
The Compromise is broken. Why this happened would take
several books to explain. Northern society has periodically gone through
fits of fanaticism which have focused upon us. When was the last time you
thought about telling people in New York or Seattle what to do? Never,
because it is not a part of our national character as Southerners. But
hundreds of thousands of Northerners are thinking about you and about
their right to suppress your evil ways. In their fantasy world, which is
the only culture of any significance they have, YOU are the evil obstacle
to making the world perfect. They have always been that way.
It has nothing to do with you. It is their problem. It
has nothing to do with the South except that the South lies convenient for
their aggressions. They cover up their emptiness, hatred, hypocricy, and
insignificance by identifying you as the Enemy. This is the way Puritans
behave when they lose their religion. Our forefathers saw this clearly. It
was that kind of society and people that they fought to be free of!
Many of our official defenders have not figured out
that the Compromise no longer exists. In a recent legislative election in
South Carolina, the leftwing candidate brought out a bevy of veterans and
SCV members to publicly condemn the conservative candidate because the
conservative candidate was a Southern activist who allegedly would not
repeat the Pledge of Allegiance.
It was as if the conservative candidate was one of the
spoiled Yankee children who promoted treason in time of war in the 1960s.
These good people are too blind to figure out that those 60s traitors are
now in power in America and are the ones who are hellbent on using their
power to destroy every last vestige of our Southern heritage and identity!
This unfortunately represents the attitude of too many
flag defenders. One despairs at such blindness. The compatriots I am
talking about, however, can be educated. I have seen it done. Democrats
and Republicans both, of the ruling establishment, are relying on this
kind of stupid "patriotism" to kill off challenges to their
power. Southern heritage is the first casualty of that power.
WAKE UP! It is not 1945 any more, or even 1975. You can
either honour your Southern heritage and preserve your Southern identity,
or you can give unthinking obedience to the America of today. You cannot
do both without engaging in self-defeating contradiction.
Here are a few suggestions.
*Don't compromise. Compromise is only a defeat and a
springboard for another attack. Don't think that being a good sport will
make the other side good sports. Who follows an uncertain trumpet? You
will probably lose. But a loss on principle preserves a rallying point.
John C. Calhoun says: a defeat on principle is not an overthrow, while a
victory by compromise is a defeat.
*Be worthy of your ancestors. Don't be a goody goody
"American" humbly begging to be allowed to keep a shred of your
heritage. You are a member of a great people who are under attack and have
been betrayed by their leaders. It is needed to defend the Southern people
here and now and not just the noble Confederate soldier.
*Think like a Southerner. We cannot defend just our
Confederate forebears, as important as that is. They are but a part of
Southern history. Lay claim to all of Southern history and culture, from
Captain John Smith and Pocahontas to Dale Earnhardt. To concentrate on
Confederate history alone is to concede to the enemy that the Confederacy
can be segregated off as an evil episode of slavery and treason. It also
plays into the North's everlasting tendency to claim anything Southern
that is good, as "American," that is, non-Southern. George
Washington is just as Southern as Robert E. Lee. Thomas Jefferson is just
as Southern as Jefferson Davis. Andrew Jackson is just as Southern as
Bedford Forrest. Alvin York, and Audie Murphy, and the Alamo are just as
Southern as Stonewall Jackson. Lay claim to all your heritage!
Avoid argument with the enemy and concentrate on
educating yourself and members of our people, especially the young, not
forgetting the many Yankees of good will. In Heritage Haters you are
dealing with people who send their children to private schools while
busing yours and still think they are morally superior to you because they
are in favour of busing and you are not. They are not interested in debate
or evidence. Remember, they are not attacking your great-grandfather's
war: they are attacking you! And, as we learned in the flag fight in South
Carolina, this goes double for the academic "experts" in the war
era, who are even less interested in evidence and perspective than the
ordinary flag hater.
*Don't be discouraged. So beautiful and powerful is our
heritage that it has taken them decades to cut away as much as they have.
It will take some time and hard work to recover lost ground.
*If you have to argue, turn the tables. There is little profit in
talking about slavery in today's climate. If you must discuss slavery call
it "domestic servitude," which is what it was. Most importantly,
point out that, sure, the South did not want outside interference with its
domestic servitude, but the North was NOT fighting to end slavery! The
significant factor is the North's motives! They are the ones who invaded
us, violating the fundamental American principle of the consent of the
governed. Most people who think they are aggrieved about slavery neither
know nor care anything about history. They are really aggrieved about the
segregation that marked more recent times.
If you must debate don't make indefensible statements
that will be laughed out of court, like the war was not about slavery,
most Southerners did not own slaves, and an exaggerated count of black
soldiers in the Confederacy. Yes, the war was partly about slavery, though
not on their side and not as centrally and in the way that they claim.
Counting families approximately one-fourth of Southerners were owners of
domestic servants, almost all of them of a few people who lived and worked
closely with the family. Yes, there were a great many black Confederates
who helped sustain the armies and the home front, but not as enrolled
soldiers.
* My standpatter compatriots, if you want to be a good
American as defined by the ruling institutions today, forget about your
Southern heritage. But most Southerners care for family, place, Christian
social order, courage, loyalty, honour---all things besieged in America
today. That is, after all, why we love our heritage.
*Stop supporting federal government wars out of
unthinking loyalty. For a long time the U.S. armed forces had a chilvalric
Southern flavour. They now combine all the worst aspects of bureaucracy,
imperialism, graft, affirmative action, and Political Correctness, in an
atmosphere of moral depravity.
*Cure yourself of Republican party thinking. What
further proof is needed that the South and Southerners have nothing to
expect from the Republican “conservatives” except payoffs to
individuals to betray their people? As the Rev. Robert Lewis Dabney
pointed out long ago, the Northern “conservatives,” in the entire
course of American history have never conserved anything. George W.,
though raised in Texas, suppressed innocuous Confederate plaques. McCain,
though a descendant of Confederates, branded our flag as a hate symbol to
be suppressed. The Republican governor of New York banished the Georgia
flag. Shortly after their candidate was elected President, the Wall
Street Journal and National Review published pieces ridiculing
Southern conservatives. The message was clear: Give us your votes and shut
up.
The worst thing that can happen to the South is to be
turned into an appendage of the bland, principleless elements represented
by the Republican party. Think like a Southerner, not like a knee-jerk “conservative.”
If Jesse Jackson causes a ruckus in Decatur, Illinois, applaud him. You
can be sure that if he was making trouble in your town, Decatur, Illinois,
would be cheering him on. They just don't want him to bother them. **