The two nations were Germany and the United States? Or are you skipping over the slavery that was done away with up north?
We were speaking about a parallel between Germany and the South. You didn't see it. I'm suggesting you might want to open your eyes.
Nazis had a nazi battle flag?
They did. It had a swastika on it.
You know I'm afraid you're going to offend Germans now as well as people like me if you keep working this angle by shooting from the hip...
I'm not worried about offending Nazis or Nazi sympathizers any more than I worry about bruising the feelings of the Klan.
As for your shooting from the hip, no. I'm arguing from a knowledge of history. If you don't know that history you might want to at least go to Google and type in WWII German Battleflag. It was designed by Hitler.
The Confederate Flag was the Red White and Blue reminder of the Articles of Confederation which was the First Constitution of the original 13 Colonies/States.
You're thinking of the original flag, not the Confederate battle flag. The original flag of the confederacy was a very different looking animal. Here's what one looks like.
The flag being objected to is the Confederate War flag, one that was by and large relegated to museums and family chests until the Civil Rights movement was under way. It was popular among racists in my part of the country and stood for the ol "They told us what to do with our coloreds then but we're not going to let them tell us now" nonsense. We'd done our level best to deny blacks everything but literal freedom in the South.
The original stars and bars wasn't well received and this response encapsulates the feeling: William T. Thompson, the editor of the Savannah-based Daily Morning News called for another and said, in 1863 that he opposed it, like others, "on account of its resemblance to that of the abolition despotism against which we are fighting."
Ok good we agree and are at peace then. Give acknowledgment please to the South to have this same changeability, please.
That time and circumstance would have ended the practice at some point? Okay, it's a strong possibility that in a few generations it would have been significantly blunted and even ended by the South for any number of reasons thereabouts or thereafter. But that doesn't impact or affect the point in opposition to flying the battle flag of an enemy nation born in support of the slave trade over capital domes, state or other.
The Confederacy is. Stay on point.
It's identity, however, was marked when every one who had slaves stopped and then told the South it had to be evil to still have them.
Most of the north was actually composed of free states. And it was that drive that moved the Southern power brokers into a desperate gamble that failed, bringing an end to slavery sooner than even those in the north had envisioned.
It was told it was too rich because it had slaves, and too evil, and too aggravating.
No, it was told "This far and no further." It was given to understand that its presence in the territories would be denied it, at the very least by the use of popular sovereignty and a numbers game the South wasn't in a position to win. And that loss of territory and the states that would arise because of it, free, would signal the power shift that would end the economic practice and reality for the South.
The Confederacy was a measure of time in the life of the South.
Predicated and existing to serve an evil institution. Regarding the war flags of that effort, raised like Lazarus to protest integration and the fear of real equality for blacks before the law here, with anything other than contempt is compounding the mistakes of our forefathers.