Mike Dwight
VIP Member
- Jul 23, 2017
- 1,756
- 54
- 85
- Banned
- #1
That is actually a very well phrased question, a timely question, a question no one ever really put to anyone in school, "is Confederate patriotism legal"? Many people have, very well founded, detractions and objections to violent patriotism, racism, or bigoted actions. Confederates were associated with this more than average. "Patriots were those colonists of the Thirteen Colonies who rejected British rule during the American Revolution and declared the United States of America as an independent nation in July 1776." Confederation was one of two competing political theories of the separation of the United States of America from British Empire. The State of the Union and Confederacy were repeated in equal dialogue from all 15 Presidents before Lincoln. In fact, Confederate relations just happened to be the political philosophy to drop off with one side of a war.
You won't hear anyone say that, a well-informed one third of the race of Southern farm men who fought and became casualties, heard a clear vocal argument about slavery, race relations, liberty, freedom, when that's not the case, and they just heard about rumored invasions, and they heard a call of government, defended the rights of government, were patriots, and upon capture asked about the aggressive cause of men from other states.
Is Confederate patriotism legal? Well, someone may ask, what is the occurrence, are we under state-specific alien invasion? Are all other governments bought out besides your county mailroom?What kind of high endeavor do we all find completely unobtrusive, within individual rights of every US citizen, and is Also Confederate Patriotism?!
No one will fully highlight this element of Woodrow Wilson, President Woodrow Wilson, as a real topic of discussion. The 14th Amendment I think created Natural Born Citizenship and made restrictions on Confederate Political office, but Woodrow Wilson was a child during the war, and wasn't subject to restriction to political office. What rallied a country to Confederate Patriotism in the 1913 election? The full depth of historian discussion is a split ticket with Theodore Roosevelt's Bull Moose party and the Republican party allowing the long-ousted Democrat party to win. Theodore Roosevelt would be President later. However this was a fully dedicated Confederate Patriotic man, as a Second George Washington, see "second war of independence". A ulster-scot Presbyterian leading minister, see Thomas "stonewall" Jackson, a defender of all the free people and their gender relations, see "bonnie blue flag". The occasion I assume, without all-male voter exit polls, stemmed from New York (bloody Yankees) and the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire. Such incidents represent a shoe on the other foot, so to speak, that in the State of New York, the Labor practices involved, trapping up women of foreign lands to work for sweatshop bosses. In the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, some 120 various immigrant Romanian or Italian or Jewish women, burned alive because of an upper floor factory fire with locked doors among the abusive labor practices. Two years later, all election in both Houses and Presidency swung toward Democrats and limitations on indecent, perhaps read impious, Business.
In a very short time, a reluctant Woodrow Wilson would instead be known for his slow entry in World War I? His very own invention, the League of Nations, promoted not a Union of Europe, but the independent characters of these countries coming to the common cause. Their logo is a Star in blue background. Alma Gluck's old Southern Favorites would take off in this period on the LP. She was a Romanian born, immigrated, and married woman on a New York and island estate. (Sorry I forget all their little islands).
So how can people say that Confederate Patriotism might be illegal when after the war, its reconciled with American patriotism? More obscure information from a more obscure president than the last one. After World War II, General Eisenhower won election, and became some different Presbyterian entirely, in office. The kind that gets to repurpose the word to a Church of his own creation. It all seems pretty anti-scholar nationalist, but all the same, look into it! From President Eisenhower's Presbyterian Church, we now recite, "there is One Nation, Under God, Indivisible". Presbyterians used to lead all opposite direction of discussion on these issues. We now have patriotic Duties, note my original premise, to recite "One Nation, Under God, Indivisible". "In God We Trust" meant to be decorative, added to money, and its a Presbyterian suggestion. As we know, the Nations of the United Kingdom, as its often recited, are England, Scotland, and Northern Ireland. Presbyterianism by Scottish Parliament was established in Scotland and didn't catch on in England. Presbyterianism Should be scholarly inseparable since 1560 until 1958 with the vantage point, character, and Parish voice of the people of Scotland in or out of Union Jack. That is a very quiet viewpoint in the rebuilt "united Presbyterian Church" that every USA Presbyterian Church became a member.
How does "Confederate Patriotism" easily become a point of discussion then? There is a Huge Korean Presbyterian Church, and this Church of course, still promotes the idea of a Closer Bond of the People of the United States and Korea when Not subjected to a Federal Union, and that the South Korean Government is in the Right state of existence, which reasonable people can be led to believe the native Korean populace isn't receptive or benefitted from every bit of American trivia. Not until the Nationalist age of the 1900's was it so difficult for people to link the Church and friendly relations between castle-states. That's the Confederate mindset in the spiritual promotion of Presbyterianism during the war, and that is the interaction if you wish, with the Korean Presbyterian Church Abroad, that easily, any person, could be without much restraint concerning useful Confederate Patriotism.
You won't hear anyone say that, a well-informed one third of the race of Southern farm men who fought and became casualties, heard a clear vocal argument about slavery, race relations, liberty, freedom, when that's not the case, and they just heard about rumored invasions, and they heard a call of government, defended the rights of government, were patriots, and upon capture asked about the aggressive cause of men from other states.
Is Confederate patriotism legal? Well, someone may ask, what is the occurrence, are we under state-specific alien invasion? Are all other governments bought out besides your county mailroom?What kind of high endeavor do we all find completely unobtrusive, within individual rights of every US citizen, and is Also Confederate Patriotism?!
No one will fully highlight this element of Woodrow Wilson, President Woodrow Wilson, as a real topic of discussion. The 14th Amendment I think created Natural Born Citizenship and made restrictions on Confederate Political office, but Woodrow Wilson was a child during the war, and wasn't subject to restriction to political office. What rallied a country to Confederate Patriotism in the 1913 election? The full depth of historian discussion is a split ticket with Theodore Roosevelt's Bull Moose party and the Republican party allowing the long-ousted Democrat party to win. Theodore Roosevelt would be President later. However this was a fully dedicated Confederate Patriotic man, as a Second George Washington, see "second war of independence". A ulster-scot Presbyterian leading minister, see Thomas "stonewall" Jackson, a defender of all the free people and their gender relations, see "bonnie blue flag". The occasion I assume, without all-male voter exit polls, stemmed from New York (bloody Yankees) and the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire. Such incidents represent a shoe on the other foot, so to speak, that in the State of New York, the Labor practices involved, trapping up women of foreign lands to work for sweatshop bosses. In the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, some 120 various immigrant Romanian or Italian or Jewish women, burned alive because of an upper floor factory fire with locked doors among the abusive labor practices. Two years later, all election in both Houses and Presidency swung toward Democrats and limitations on indecent, perhaps read impious, Business.
In a very short time, a reluctant Woodrow Wilson would instead be known for his slow entry in World War I? His very own invention, the League of Nations, promoted not a Union of Europe, but the independent characters of these countries coming to the common cause. Their logo is a Star in blue background. Alma Gluck's old Southern Favorites would take off in this period on the LP. She was a Romanian born, immigrated, and married woman on a New York and island estate. (Sorry I forget all their little islands).
So how can people say that Confederate Patriotism might be illegal when after the war, its reconciled with American patriotism? More obscure information from a more obscure president than the last one. After World War II, General Eisenhower won election, and became some different Presbyterian entirely, in office. The kind that gets to repurpose the word to a Church of his own creation. It all seems pretty anti-scholar nationalist, but all the same, look into it! From President Eisenhower's Presbyterian Church, we now recite, "there is One Nation, Under God, Indivisible". Presbyterians used to lead all opposite direction of discussion on these issues. We now have patriotic Duties, note my original premise, to recite "One Nation, Under God, Indivisible". "In God We Trust" meant to be decorative, added to money, and its a Presbyterian suggestion. As we know, the Nations of the United Kingdom, as its often recited, are England, Scotland, and Northern Ireland. Presbyterianism by Scottish Parliament was established in Scotland and didn't catch on in England. Presbyterianism Should be scholarly inseparable since 1560 until 1958 with the vantage point, character, and Parish voice of the people of Scotland in or out of Union Jack. That is a very quiet viewpoint in the rebuilt "united Presbyterian Church" that every USA Presbyterian Church became a member.
How does "Confederate Patriotism" easily become a point of discussion then? There is a Huge Korean Presbyterian Church, and this Church of course, still promotes the idea of a Closer Bond of the People of the United States and Korea when Not subjected to a Federal Union, and that the South Korean Government is in the Right state of existence, which reasonable people can be led to believe the native Korean populace isn't receptive or benefitted from every bit of American trivia. Not until the Nationalist age of the 1900's was it so difficult for people to link the Church and friendly relations between castle-states. That's the Confederate mindset in the spiritual promotion of Presbyterianism during the war, and that is the interaction if you wish, with the Korean Presbyterian Church Abroad, that easily, any person, could be without much restraint concerning useful Confederate Patriotism.