Ladies and gentlemen, I submit that
what we see happening in the United States today is an apt illustration of why
the Confederate flag was raised in the first place. What we see materializing
before our very eyes is tyranny: tyranny over the freedom of expression,
tyranny over the freedom of association, tyranny over the freedom of speech,
and tyranny over the freedom of conscience.
In 1864, Confederate General Patrick
Cleburne warned his fellow southerners of the historical consequences should
the South lose their war for independence. He was truly a prophet. He said if
the South lost, “It means that the history of this heroic struggle will be
written by the enemy. That our youth will be trained by Northern school
teachers; will learn from Northern school books their version of the war; will
be impressed by all of the influences of History and Education to regard our
gallant debt as traitors and our maimed veterans as fit subjects for derision.”
No truer words were ever spoken.
History revisionists flooded America’s
public schools with Northern propaganda about the people who attempted to
secede from the United States, characterizing them as racists, extremists,
radicals, hatemongers, traitors, etc. You know, the same way that people in our
federal government and news media attempt to characterize Christians, patriots,
war veterans, constitutionalists, et al. today.
Folks, please understand that the only
people in 1861 who believed that states did NOT have the right to secede were
Abraham Lincoln and his radical Republicans. To say that southern states did
not have the right to secede from the United States is to say that the thirteen
colonies did not have the right to secede from Great Britain. One cannot be right
and the other wrong. If one is right, both are right. How can we celebrate our
Declaration of Independence in 1776 and then turn around and condemn the
Declaration of Independence of the Confederacy in 1861? Talk about hypocrisy!
In fact, southern states were not the
only states that talked about secession. After the southern states seceded, the
State of Maryland fully intended to join them. In September of 1861, Lincoln
sent federal troops to the State capital and seized the legislature by force in
order to prevent them from voting. Federal provost marshals stood guard at the
polls and arrested Democrats and anyone else who believed in secession. A
special furlough was granted to Maryland troops so they could go home and vote
against secession. Judges who tried to inquire into the phony elections were
arrested and thrown into military prisons. There is your great “emancipator,”
folks.
And before the South seceded, several
northern states had also threatened secession. Massachusetts, Connecticut, and
Rhode Island had threatened secession as far back as James Madison’s
administration. In addition, the states of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
and Delaware were threatening secession during the first half of the nineteenth
century–long before the southern states even considered such a thing.
People say constantly that Lincoln
“saved” the Union. Lincoln didn’t save the Union; he subjugated the Union.
There is a huge difference. A union that is not voluntary is not a union. Does
a man have a right to force a woman to marry him or to force a woman to stay
married to him? In the eyes of God, a union of husband and wife is far superior
to a union of states. If God recognizes the right of husbands and wives to
separate (and He does), to try and suggest that states do not have the right to
lawfully (under Natural and divine right) separate is the most preposterous
proposition imaginable.
People say that Lincoln freed the
slaves. Lincoln did NOT free a single slave. But what he did do was enslave
free men. His so-called Emancipation Proclamation had NO AUTHORITY in the
southern states, as they had separated into another country. Imagine a
President today signing a proclamation to free folks in, say, China or Saudi
Arabia. He would be laughed out of Washington. Lincoln had no authority over
the Confederate States of America, and he knew it.
Do you not find it interesting that
Lincoln’s proclamation did NOT free a single slave in the United States, the
country in which he DID have authority? That’s right. The Emancipation
Proclamation deliberately ignored slavery in the North. Do you not realize that
when Lincoln signed his proclamation, there were over 300,000 slaveholders who
were fighting in the Union army? Check it out.
One of those northern slaveholders was
General (and later U.S. President) Ulysses S. Grant. In fact, he maintained
possession of his slaves even after the War Between the States concluded.
Recall that his counterpart, Confederate General Robert E. Lee, freed his
slaves BEFORE hostilities between North and South ever broke out. When asked
why he refused to free his slaves, Grant said: “Good help is hard to find these
days.”
The institution of slavery did not end
until the 13th Amendment was ratified on December 6, 1865.
Speaking of the 13th Amendment, did you
know that Lincoln authored his own 13th Amendment? It is the only amendment to
the Constitution ever proposed by a sitting U.S. President. Here is Lincoln’s
proposed amendment: “No amendment shall be made to the Constitution which will
authorize or give Congress the power to abolish or interfere within any state
with the domestic institutions thereof, including that a person’s held to labor
or service by laws of said State.”
You read it right. Lincoln proposed an
amendment to the U.S. Constitution PRESERVING the institution of slavery. This
proposed amendment was written in March of 1861, a month BEFORE the shots were
fired at Fort Sumter, South Carolina.
The State of South Carolina was
particularly incensed at the tariffs enacted in 1828 and 1832. The Tariff of
1828 was disdainfully called “The Tariff of Abominations” by the State of South
Carolina. Accordingly, the South Carolina legislature declared that the tariffs
of 1828 and 1832 were “unauthorized by the constitution of the United States.”
Think, folks: why would the southern
states secede from the Union over slavery when President Abraham Lincoln had
offered an amendment to the Constitution guaranteeing the PRESERVATION of
slavery? That makes no sense. If the issue was predominantly slavery, all the
South needed to do was to go along with Lincoln; and his proposed 13th
Amendment would have permanently preserved slavery among the southern (and
northern) states. Does that sound like a body of people who were willing to
lose hundreds of thousands of men on the battlefield over saving slavery? What
nonsense!
The problem was Lincoln wanted the
southern states to pay the Union a 40% tariff on their exports. The South
considered this outrageous and refused to pay. By the time hostilities broke
out in 1861, the South was paying up to, and perhaps exceeding, 70% of the
nation’s taxes. Before the war, the South was very prosperous and productive.
And Washington, D.C., kept raising the taxes and tariffs on them. You know, the
way Washington, D.C., keeps raising the taxes on prosperous American citizens
today.
This is much the same story of the way
the colonies refused to pay the demanded tariffs of the British Crown–albeit
the tariffs of the Crown were MUCH lower than those demanded by Lincoln.
Lincoln’s proposed 13th Amendment was an attempt to entice the South into
paying the tariffs by being willing to permanently ensconce the institution of
slavery into the Constitution. AND THE SOUTH SAID NO!
In addition, the Congressional Record
of the United States forever obliterates the notion that the North fought the
War Between the States over slavery. Read it for yourself. This resolution was
passed unanimously in the U.S. Congress on July 23, 1861: “The War is waged by
the government of the United States not in the spirit of conquest or
subjugation, nor for the purpose of overthrowing or interfering with the rights
or institutions of the states, but to defend and protect the Union.”
What could be clearer? The U.S.
Congress declared that the war against the South was NOT an attempt to
overthrow or interfere with the “institutions” of the states, but to keep the
Union intact (by force). The “institutions” implied most certainly included the
institution of slavery.
Hear it loudly and clearly: Lincoln’s
war against the South had NOTHING to do with ending slavery–so said the U.S.
Congress by unanimous resolution in 1861.
Abraham Lincoln, himself, said it was
NEVER his intention to end the institution of slavery. In a letter to Alexander
Stevens, who later became the Vice President of the Confederacy, Lincoln wrote
this: “Do the people of the South really entertain fears that a Republican
administration would directly, or indirectly, interfere with their slaves, or
with them, about their slaves? If they do, I wish to assure you, as once a
friend, and still, I hope, not an enemy, that there is no cause for such fears.
The South would be in no more danger in this respect than it was in the days of
Washington.”
Again, what could be clearer? Lincoln,
himself, said the southern states had nothing to fear from him in regard to
abolishing slavery.
Hear Lincoln again: “If I could save
the Union without freeing any slave I would do it.” He also said: “I have no
purpose, directly or indirectly, to interfere with the institution of slavery in
the states where it exists. I believe I have no lawful right to do so and I
have no inclination to do so.”
The idea that the Confederate flag
(actually, there were five of them) stood for racism, bigotry, hatred, and
slavery is just so much hogwash. In fact, if one truly wants to discover who
the racist was in 1861, just read the words of Mr. Lincoln.
On August 14, 1862, Abraham Lincoln
invited a group of black people to the White House. In his address to them, he
told them of his plans to colonize them all back to Africa. Listen to what he
told these folks: “Why should the people of your race be colonized and where?
Why should they leave this country? This is, perhaps, the first question for
proper consideration. You and we are different races. We have between us a
broader difference than exists between almost any other two races. Whether it
is right or wrong I need not discuss; but this physical difference is a great
disadvantage to us both, as I think. Your race suffers very greatly, many of
them, by living among us, while ours suffers from your presence. In a word, we
suffer on each side. If this is admitted, it affords a reason, at least, why we
should be separated. You here are freemen, I suppose? Perhaps you have been
long free, or all your lives. Your race is suffering, in my judgment, the
greatest wrong inflicted on any people. But even when you cease to be slaves,
you are yet far removed from being placed on an equality with the white race.
The aspiration of men is to enjoy equality with the best when free, but on this
broad continent not a single man of your race is made the equal of a single man
of our race.”
Did you hear what Lincoln said? He said
that black people would NEVER be equal with white people–even if they all
obtained their freedom from slavery. If that isn’t a racist statement, I’ve
never heard one.
Lincoln’s statement above is not
isolated. In Charleston, Illinois, in 1858, Lincoln said in a speech: “I am
not, nor have ever been, in favor of bringing about in any way the social and
political equality of the white and black races. I am not nor ever have been in
favor of making voters or jurors of negroes, nor of qualifying them to hold
office, nor to intermarry with white people; I will say in addition to this
that there is a physical difference between the white and black races which I
believe will forever forbid the two races from living together on social or
political equality. And inasmuch as they cannot so live, while they do remain
together there must be the position of superior and inferior, and I as much as
any other man am in favor of having the superior position assigned to the
white.”
Ladies and gentlemen, in his own words,
Abraham Lincoln declared himself to be a white supremacist. Why don’t our
history books and news media tell the American people the truth about Lincoln
and about the War Between the States?
It’s simple: if people would study the
meanings and history of the flag, symbols, and statues of the Confederacy and
Confederate leaders, they might begin to awaken to the tyrannical policies of
Washington, D.C., that precluded southern independence–policies that have only
escalated since the defeat of the Confederacy–and they might have a notion to
again resist.
By the time Lincoln penned his
Emancipation Proclamation, the war had been going on for two years without
resolution. In fact, the North was losing the war. Even though the South was
outmanned and out-equipped, the genius of the southern generals and fighting
acumen of the southern men had put the northern armies on their heels. Many
people in the North never saw the legitimacy of Lincoln’s war in the first
place, and many of them actively campaigned against it. These people were
affectionately called “Copperheads” by people in the South.
I urge you to watch Ron Maxwell’s
accurate depiction of those people in the North who favored the southern cause
as depicted in his motion picture, “Copperhead.” For that matter, I consider
his movie “Gods And Generals” to be the greatest “Civil War” movie ever made.
It is the most accurate and fairest depiction of Confederate General Thomas
Jonathan “Stonewall” Jackson ever produced. In my opinion, actor Stephen Lang
should have received an Oscar for his performance as General Jackson. But, can
you imagine?
That’s another thing: the war fought
from 1861 to 1865 was NOT a “civil war.” Civil war suggests two sides fighting
for control of the same capital and country. The South didn’t want to take over
Washington, D.C., no more than their forebears wanted to take over London. They
wanted to separate from Washington, D.C., just as America’s Founding Fathers
wanted to separate from Great Britain. The proper names for that war are
either, “The War Between the States” or, “The War of Southern Independence,”
or, more fittingly, “The War of Northern Aggression.”
Had the South wanted to take over
Washington, D.C., they could have done so with the very first battle of the
“Civil War.” When Lincoln ordered federal troops to invade Virginia in the
First Battle of Manassas(called the “First Battle of Bull Run” by the North),
Confederate troops sent the Yankees running for their lives all the way back to
Washington. Had the Confederates pursued them, they could have easily taken the
city of Washington, D.C., seized Abraham Lincoln, and perhaps ended the war
before it really began. But General Beauregard and the others had no intention
of fighting an aggressive war against the North. They merely wanted to defend
the South against the aggression of the North.
In order to rally people in the North,
Lincoln needed a moral crusade. That’s what his Emancipation Proclamation was
all about. This explains why his proclamation was not penned until 1863, after
two years of fruitless fighting. He was counting on people in the North to stop
resisting his war against the South if they thought it was some kind of “holy”
war. Plus, Lincoln was hoping that his proclamation would incite blacks in the
South to insurrect against southern whites. If thousands of blacks would begin
to wage war against their white neighbors, the fighting men of the southern
armies would have to leave the battlefields and go home to defend their
families. THIS NEVER HAPPENED.
Not only did blacks not riot against
the whites of the south; many black men volunteered to fight alongside their
white friends and neighbors in the Confederate army. Unlike the blacks in the
North, who were conscripted by Lincoln and forced to fight in segregated units,
thousands of blacks in the South fought of their own free will in a
fully-integrated southern army. I bet your history book never told you about
that.
If one wants to ban a racist flag, one
would have to ban the British flag. Ships bearing the Union Jack shipped over 5
million African slaves to countries all over the world, including the British
colonies in North America. Other slave ships flew the Dutch flag and the
Portuguese flag and the Spanish flag, and, yes, the U.S. flag. But not one
single slave ship flew the Confederate flag. NOT ONE!
By the time Lincoln launched his war
against the southern states, slavery was already a dying institution. The
entire country, including the South, recognized the moral evil of slavery and
wanted it to end. Only a small fraction of southerners even owned slaves. The
slave trade had ended in 1808, per the U.S. Constitution; and the practice of
slavery was quickly dying, too. In another few years, with the advent of
agricultural machinery, slavery would have ended peacefully–just like it had in
England. It didn’t take a national war and the deaths of over a half million men
to end slavery in Great Britain. America’s so-called “Civil War” was absolutely
unnecessary. The greed of Lincoln’s radical Republicans in the North, combined
with the cold, calloused heart of Lincoln himself, is responsible for the
tragedy of the “Civil War.”
And look at what is happening now: in
one instant–after one deranged young man allegedly killed nine black people and
ostensibly photo-shopped a picture of himself with a Confederate flag–the
entire political and media establishments in the country go on an all-out
crusade to remove all semblances of the Confederacy. The speed in which all of
this has happened suggests that this was a planned, orchestrated event by the
Powers That Be (PTB). And is it a mere coincidence that this took place at the
exact same time that the U.S. Supreme Court decided to legalize same-sex
marriage? I think not.
The Confederate Battle Flag flies the
Saint Andrews cross. Of course, Andrew was the first disciple of Jesus Christ,
brother of Simon Peter, and Christian martyr who was crucified on an X-shaped
cross at around the age of 90. Andrew is the patron saint of both Russia and
Scotland.
In the 1800s, up to 75% of people in
the South were either Scotch or Scotch-Irish. The Confederate Battle Flag is
predicated on the national flag of Scotland. It is a symbol of the Christian
faith and heritage of the Celtic race.
Pastor John Weaver rightly observed:
“Even the Confederate States motto, ‘Deovendickia,’ (The Lord is our
Vindicator), illustrates the sovereignty and the righteousness of God. The
Saint Andrews cross is also known as the Greek letter CHIA (KEE) and has
historically been used to represent Jesus Christ. Why do you think people write
Merry X-mas, just to give you an illustration? The ‘X’ is the Greek letter CHIA
and it has been historically used for Christ. Moreover, its importance was
understood by educated and uneducated people alike. When an uneducated man, one
that could not write, needed to sign his name please tell me what letter he
made? An ‘X,’ why? Because he was saying I am taking an oath under God. I am
recognizing the sovereignty of God, the providence of God and I am pledging my
faith. May I tell you the Confederate Flag is indeed a Christian flag because
it has the cross of Saint Andrew, who was a Christian martyr, and the letter
‘X’ has always been used to represent Christ, and to attack the flag is to deny
the sovereignty, the majesty, and the might of the Lord Jesus Christ and his
divine role in our history, culture, and life.”
Combine the current attacks against
Biblical and traditional marriage, the attacks against all things Confederate,
the attacks against all things Christian, and the attacks against all things
constitutional; and what we are witnessing is a heightened example of why the
Confederate Battle Flag was created to begin with. Virtually every act of
federal usurpation of liberty that we are witnessing today, and have been
witnessing for much of the twentieth century, is the result of Lincoln’s war
against the South. Truly, we are living in Lincoln’s America, not Washington
and Jefferson’s America. Washington and Jefferson’s America died at Appomattox
Court House in 1865.
Instead of lowering the Confederate
flag, we should be raising it.
by Megyn Kelly July 9, 2015
Posted on New Republican Leadership for
Principles above Politicians by Herman Talmadge III
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