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God: No, there is not more than one answer.
Sign reads: A. Good Times
B. Regional Charm
C. Racism
Caption: The better-late-than-never education system.
If answer âD. Treasonâ, was included, there WOULD have been more than one correct answer. Because the Stars and Bars was the symbol of an act of treason, a rebellion against the United States.
I just heard a story from a coworker whoâs father flew the Nazi flag for a while. He was made to take it down, too. She was proud of her father for flying the flag and didnât see anything wrong with it.
That is incorrect. The Stars and Bars is now the flag of tolerance and unity. All of the racists and haters have abandoned it and adopted the Earth First Flag.I read it on the internet, so I know it must be true.
Actually there is allways more than one answer, because things aren´t black and white. And people who think there is only one answer are completely devoid of a sense of reality.Also this comic ignores the obvious answer, that it was the representing flag but used for other things â I think it was the battleflag âŚ
You donât have to believe that displaying the Beauregard battle flag (to employ itâs seldom used proper name) on public grounds was a good idea to wince about how some people carried on about it. I personally didnât support the displays. âHeritageâ was just a later utilized smoke screen; a symbolic show of defiance to Federal mandates, particularly civil rights judgments, was the real motivation, as any serious Civil War enthusiast knows. However, the spectacle of people fearlessly attacking a straw man while ignoring the real issues which lead to the Charleston murders â the proliferation of firearms into the hands of known wackos and criminals being one â was, to me, simply a display of basic cowardliness and grandstanding. But the flag thing was safer â those NRA-types tend to argue back more forcefully than flag advocates.
I find all of this pretty stupid when consideration of everything else that is going on around the world. Just pay attention to the news but foreign and domestic. The world is headed for some bad times and this is what commands attention?SAD
In my experience, people who claim âsouthern heritageâ as their reason for displaying the flag, cannot name 5 civil war battles, the principal generals involved on each side, or who won.
Back in the middle 1800s there was still a lot of allegiance to your state. Often, more than to the Federal government. A vast majority of the people in the south never owned slaves and never would. They didnât fight for slavery; they fought for their State. My family was Yankee Unionists, as am I, but I can understand the allegiances people had back them. I donât share them but I understand them. It caused many officers to resign their commissions to the US Army and go fight for their State. As the Federal government keeps growing in influence and reaching ever deeper into our lives, and as Congress keeps abrogating more and more functions to the Federal behemoth, and as the Executive branch and their minions keep assuming more and more control over our lives (aided and abetted by the SCOTUS), the States Rights movement becomes a distant memory for those with sufficient education to have ever heard of it. The Rebel flag seems to be more of a symbol of those bygone days (and no, I have never flown one).
that lead him to get radicalized.A piece of cloth drove him crazy? Amazing.Typical. Blame the tool not the user.Too many things have had their original meaning usurped by assorted groups.I wonder, since Ben Affleckâs family history includes slave ownership, will Wallyworld remove all his merchandise from their stores?
Seems to me a lot of criminal offenders wear Harley Davidson shirts or have H-D tattoos. I think itâs about time to outlaw all symbols and products of the motorcycle company. It just follows rules of logicâŚâŚabove all we must be politically correct and forget about freedom of speech.
âViva la guns. When all guns are outlawed, then only outlaws will have guns. And I will be one of themâŚâ
No country that i know of outlaw gunsâŚâŚ.and in every modern country that strictly regulate access to them they are rarely used in crimes and as a result they have per capita murder rates 1/4 of oursâŚâŚâŚ
The biggest irony is that the extremeism of the NRA and the GOP will likely result in a backlash that will result in far harsher anti gun laws than would have resulted through sensible compromise.
Congrats Wiley . You summed up the issue very concisely. Its racist or it isnâtâŚyou canât be a little bit pregnant. Whatever the flagâs history may be is irrelevant. It has become THE symbol of the Confederacy and, by extension, slavery. Period..
Symbols, icons, colors often begin as positive expressions of faith or belief and are adopted or perverted by others over time.Most people donât know, for example that the dreaded Nazi swastika was a symbol of faith and good luck for thousands of years in many cultures. It was only recently, when the Nazi Party, following Alfred Rosenbergâs theories of a master aryan race, adopted it as their standard.The average St. Patrickâs Day reveler has no idea that the three leafed green shamrock was, according to legend, used by St. Patrick to teach about the Holy Trinity. It was adopted by the Irish Volunteers as a symbol of Irish rebellion against the British ( who believed that the Irish were so much like cattle that they ate the three leafed clover ).The St. Andrewâs Cross, from which the Stars and Bars and many other banners have derived their design, has itâs history deep in medieval history. Like all banners, flags, and heraldic symbols, it has gained different interpretations by different people.I believe that given the current tensions and hatreds in the United States that this symbol of Southern rebellion be gracefully retired. It serves no purpose other than to inflame passions and divide the country.For those who still believe:: " Save your Confederate Money, Honey. The South Will Rise Again " , I say get over a war that was lost 150 years ago !
Unfortunately we can not claim that the âsilly piece of clothâ caused him to be radicalized. If Hitler taught us anything itâs, when an individual is a loser with no hope of improvement, they look to blame others for their problem. This boy was and is definitely a big loser projecting his problems onto someone else. The flag was just a prop.
The discourse over this issue demonstrates the depth of the divisions that have come to characterize our country. Rhetoric and exaggeration now pass for truth, and rob us of the respect and tolerance we should have for each other. Clinging to empty, man-made symbols doesnât help.
Once again, Wiley and âSaint Peterâ are wrong! It is more than one answer. This flag was the battle flag of the Civil war. First there was Bonnie Blue, but the South didnât decide all together. Then came this flag that resembled like our current American flag, but both sides were confused and were shot at. This third one as alright, but the hate groups like the KKK abused it. I know, Iâm a history buff, but I donât know it all.Now, since Dylan Roof did this horrible crime, he waved an Confederate flag. Dylan also BURNED an American flag, but why is anybody complaining about that? Itâs because the liberal media (Like Wiley here) donât always tell the truth!\
It was a SC Democrat named Ernest âFritzâ Hollings wanted to put the stars and bars on the SC capital. The Columbia NAACP didnât complain at the time in 1960. Then in 2000, it was moved in front of the gate toward the SC Capital. I felt like the flag should be moved in front of the gate and the Civil Memorial because I felt it would give visitors a wrong view of SC because I feel like everybody else would think of the people here as stupid rednecks (And we arenât)
Now, since Dylan Roof did his sick work, everybody like Amazon.com, WB, etc. want to get rid of this âsilly ragâ. Right now, I like it because all of these people like yourselves are brainwashed in this âstupid rag.â Even the WB wonât sell âDukes of Hazardâ Merchandise just because of the stars and bars on the General Lee. No Duke character ever lynched a black person, they were the good guys and Rosco and Boss Hogg never did such a hideous act! Oh yeah, there was a sheriff that sometimes appeared on the show in which he was from another county and HE WAS BLACK! He was a tough sheriff that wore gear for a riot and I believe a motorcycle helmet. He this cop LOVED tearing down perpsâ cars piece by piece! I am white, but I also am part Cherokee Indian too.
Like I said to one reader before in the past, you need take advice from a Country singer named Aaron Tippon. You need to stand for something, or YOU WILL FALL FOR ANYTHING! Youâve got to be OWN MAN not a puppet on a string. NEVER COMPROMISE WHATâS RIGHT, AND UPHOLD YOUR FAMILY NAME, YOUâVE GOT TO STAND FOR SOMETHING OR YOU WILL FALL FOR ANYTHING. My family have always had plenty by following this advice. And remember, whatever you do, you will have to sleep with tonight!
Actually, those âbrave soldiers who didnât even own slavesâ were happy to fight for those who did, so nothing to be proud of there. And no one has mentioned that the South fought to extend slavery, as far as California. They knew the institution was at a dead end if they couldnât extend it across the continent.
There are ALWAYS more answers! To think otherwise is part of todayâs problems â âIâd rather have questions that canât be answered then answers that canât be questioned.â â Richard P. Feynman
D: Treason â Only represents treason to those of the North
E: Freedom â from oppression and tyranny. And yes, slave owners oppressed and tyrannized their slaves; itâs called cognitive dissonance. Even if the entire basis of the war was about slavery, it was still a group of northern states dictating the deprivation of property without just compensation from the southern states, denial of their source of income, and tyranny by the majority. The South was in the wrong because they took to violent insurrection before attempting legal means of secession (which would have been, and still is, the reverse actions by which a state joins the United States.)
@ Varnes â Iâm afraid you have a very superficial and erroneous conception of the NRA. The NRA isnât anti-government, nor is it anti-Constitutional for that matter. Nobody in the NRA âletâ the S.C. killer have a gun. You are 100% wrong about nobody else but the NRA blocking gun laws. There are dozens of pro-gun organizations fighting to protect peopleâs 2nd Amendment rights in the U.S.; and many of them are far less cooperative and compromising than the NRA. Nobody in the NRA wants âcrazy peopleâ to have guns. And the NRA supports gun ownership and use for protection from far more than just âcrazy people.â The NRA does support responsible ownership and use of guns by anyone who wants one.
As for the 3 day waiting period before automatically granting permission to obtain the gun, thatâs absolutely necessary to get the government off their dead lazy buttocks. I wish more laws had the same required response time!
So many miss the point about the Confederate flag and other symbols of the Confederacy. Is there any other nation on earth that allows the names of treasonous traitors who waged a civil war against the nation to be placed on buildings (public or institutional), monuments, mountainsides (Stone Mountain, GA), or streets? The leaders of the Confederacy engaged in treason and were the very definition of traitors to the United States of America. Naming buildings, streets, etc. after these traitors is an insult to every American who died to save the Union and to the nationâs African Americans whose slavery these treasonous beings sought to maintain. There is no place for their names on public property.
This country is being run and ruined by a bunch of Paranoid Politically Correct Jerks. Go Redskins! My parents would have been jailed for child neglect.
âNobody but them block every and all gun registry and any kind of regulationâŚâ.Hitlerâs Nazi Germany required Jews to register their guns, then they took the guns away and tried to eradicate them from the face of the earth. Curse the NRA for not ignoring historyâŚ
Unfortunately, we have all seen how the Federal government can use delaying tactics to further their own aims. Consider just the IRS delays (ignoring the other wrong-doing) in granting NFP status to certain groups whose aims were disliked. By the way, what time period do YOU think would be appropriate? A week? A month? A year?
And the answer is B. It was about states rights, not slavery. There were northern states with slaves. Even US Grant had slaves. Read your history people.
1. âA piece of cloth canât inflameâ , what about the flag of ISIL, and Americaâs CURRENT feeling about that one? The âbattle flagâ didnât fly over state buildings until desegregation was on the table, and the southern states again rebelled against the United States government in the 1960âs, it WAS an act of rebellion against law. (and social justice)
2. Roof got his gun because LOCAL law enforcement screwed up and didnât properly forward his arrest record into the system. Yes, the geographic screwup by the FBI database played a role, but it was still LOCAL aspects of the law that allows many to âslip through the cracks", and those faults are there to accommodate the NRA âtypesâ in Congress and their corporate constituancies.
3. Flying the âbattle flagâ as a regional thing may be culutural, but when itâs flown by folks outside the south, itâs rebellion, not culture. It should never have been flown over state offices, or federal: BUT- still flying it over significant Civil War sites managed by the NPS, or federal cemetaries with Confederate history, should be allowed. History should be on display, to expose errors, as well as âsuccessâ.
Interesting that any mention of the most popular of the Confederate battle flags always somehow winds up being about guns. Iâm tempted to suggest itâs Freudian, but itâs more likely an indication that the Civil War never really ended, it just became an underground guerrilla conflict waged, for the better part of a century, by terrorist organizations like the KKK. Today the weapons are more legal, including various tactics for voter suppression, but the threat of violence is never far away. We need to remember that.
Last I checked, a flag couldnât hold a gun and kill people. Only a psychopath can do that. I wish that freak would have been carrying an American flag insteadâŚ. if only to have avoided all this ignorant nonsense. I wonder what people would have done then??
Varnes, Rady_B, Exoticdoc2, Alabama_Al, BrockOlee, DourScotsman, Rarely28, Gaijinrabbit, Dr_Zinj, Greenearthma, dtroutman, RepprâŚI read your comments and it appears that regardless of which side of the gun issue youâre on, you and SCOTUS either do not understand or have chosen to ignore the term ââŚshall not be infringed.â Maybe itâs time to amend the U. S. Constitution adding the caveat ââŚshall not be infringed UNLESS there is someone that some bureaucrat or private citizen thinks should not be allowed to bear arms, in which case the right to bear arms shall be governed by whatever law, rule, regulation or ordinance any legislative body at any level wishes to impose.â
If a Native American found the US flag to be asymbol of hate, forced removal and theft of land , genocide and racism (and they could do so) would some of you agree it should not be flown from a government building? Just curiousâŚ
Regardless of what the revisionists, Leftists and uneducated try to Force the current populace to believe, the Correct answer is this Flag Represents The Heritage of My Ancestors that Served with Honor and I am Proud to Hold Them in the Highest Esteem!!!
The piece of cloth didnât radicalize him. What he saw on the internet (people preaching hatred) radicalized him, exactly the same as ISIS is teaching hatred.
We need to find out why so many young guys around the world are so vulnerable to these hate messages on the internetâŚ
Night-Gaunt, the British almost entered the Civil War on the side of the Confederacy. If the US had not won some decisive battles, the outcome could have been very differentâŚ
âDid the flag pull the trigger? NO!â-âStart with the stupid question posed that no one asked or said or implied.â-Well, we definitely should outlaw any of the outward symbols of aberrant thinking. That way, the whackos can blend in until they pop and have a better chance of taking out more of whatever sworn enemies, TEA Party folks or blacks or Christians or whomever falls within their crazed Venn Diagram of hate.Look at the men we admire and for whom we vote. They know how to present a normal and decent face and keep their evil hidden until they have the opportunity to inflict the harm they believe is necessary to the people they find inferior.Duplicity should be mandatory, I thinkâŚ
I would point out that this is a controversy precisely BECAUSE there is more than one ârightâ answer. Symbols by their very nature are personal, and can have different meanings to different people or groups of people. For example, try asking a Bible Belt conservative Christian and a gay rights activist to explain the symbolism of a rainbow. Pretty sure you would get answers that are nothing alike. That doesnât mean either one is âwrongâ, just different situations and experiences lead to different interpretations of a symbol.
Iâm not so sure Peter intends to kick him out altogether for not choosing just C. His answer doesnât automatically make the guy a racist. Everyoneâs experience is subject to the circumstances surrounding them. If the Duke boys had been real people, they probably would have had little knowledge of the exact motivations that brought back the flagâs popularity when they painted it on their car (though their choice of name is a bit more telling). Still, even someone who âinnocentlyâ gives the wrong answer would probably earn a slap upside the head for living their entire life ignorant of the flagâs entire history and symbolism, as well as the greater context of its use in the last few generations.
The Democrat party is responsible for that flag, and while Iâm at it, for the KKK also. Iâm getting pretty sick of all of this sanctimonious âracistâ this and âracistâ that thrown around so freely by the left. You made it, youâre responsible for it and most of us know who the racists were/are. The South locked in segragation was a south owned by the Democrat party. The ax handle weilding goveroner of Arkansas, keeping kids from school was a Democrat.
lets rewrite history, instead of facing it head on. While the flag was used by many that were against forced intergration, it really was never about slavery. Is was about forming their own country because the people in power were trying to force them to pay more for their products and sell their raw materials for a low rate. The same reason the 13 colonies declared their independance from England.
Lincoln only freed the slaves in the states that rebelled. the slaves in the north and in the terratories were not freed. Lincoln actually wanted to ship them all to Africa or South America even when most were 3rd to 8th generation Americans. read some history. you will find that blacks fought on the southâs side and some rode against the yankee carpet baggers with southern whites.
this isnât the stars and bars. thatâs a different flag. it is a silly piece of cloth. it doesnât stand for slavery or racism. it does stand for the right of a state to secede from the union. which was treated as rebellion and crushed. The fact of secession as an experiment was crushed. the idea that it ought to be a right of the several states is still alive.
Heritage can be extremely subjective, and no one can be blamed for the unique circumstances of their upbringing. But in this day and age it is a choice to be ignorant of the full spectrum of a symbolâs history, or to know it and insist the parts of it you dislike shouldnât matter.
Varnes over 9 years ago
Yup. Slavery certainly was sillyâŚ.
Argythree over 9 years ago
If answer âD. Treasonâ, was included, there WOULD have been more than one correct answer. Because the Stars and Bars was the symbol of an act of treason, a rebellion against the United States.
Bilan over 9 years ago
Is the German flag a symbol of Nazism?Is the Chinese flag a symbol of Maoism?etc, etc âŚ
TMO1 Premium Member over 9 years ago
Itâs not just racism. Itâs also a refusal to admit the Civil War is over and the south lost.
Defective over 9 years ago
I just heard a story from a coworker whoâs father flew the Nazi flag for a while. He was made to take it down, too. She was proud of her father for flying the flag and didnât see anything wrong with it.
Brass Orchid Premium Member over 9 years ago
That is incorrect. The Stars and Bars is now the flag of tolerance and unity. All of the racists and haters have abandoned it and adopted the Earth First Flag.I read it on the internet, so I know it must be true.
loudmouthbass over 9 years ago
any flag flying in the USA other than the United States of America flag, e.g., Mexicoâs flag, ISIL flag, Rainbow flag, etc
=
A. Good TimesB. Regional CharmC. Racism
Tue Elung-Jensen over 9 years ago
Actually there is allways more than one answer, because things aren´t black and white. And people who think there is only one answer are completely devoid of a sense of reality.Also this comic ignores the obvious answer, that it was the representing flag but used for other things â I think it was the battleflag âŚ
Alabama Al over 9 years ago
You donât have to believe that displaying the Beauregard battle flag (to employ itâs seldom used proper name) on public grounds was a good idea to wince about how some people carried on about it. I personally didnât support the displays. âHeritageâ was just a later utilized smoke screen; a symbolic show of defiance to Federal mandates, particularly civil rights judgments, was the real motivation, as any serious Civil War enthusiast knows. However, the spectacle of people fearlessly attacking a straw man while ignoring the real issues which lead to the Charleston murders â the proliferation of firearms into the hands of known wackos and criminals being one â was, to me, simply a display of basic cowardliness and grandstanding. But the flag thing was safer â those NRA-types tend to argue back more forcefully than flag advocates.
forterrionly over 9 years ago
I find all of this pretty stupid when consideration of everything else that is going on around the world. Just pay attention to the news but foreign and domestic. The world is headed for some bad times and this is what commands attention?SAD
loudmouthbass over 9 years ago
First they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak outâ Because I was not a Socialist.
Then they came for the Trade Unionists, and I did not speak outâ Because I was not a Trade Unionist.
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak outâ Because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for meâ and there was no one left to speak for me.
Plumbob Wilson over 9 years ago
In my experience, people who claim âsouthern heritageâ as their reason for displaying the flag, cannot name 5 civil war battles, the principal generals involved on each side, or who won.
Reppr Premium Member over 9 years ago
Back in the middle 1800s there was still a lot of allegiance to your state. Often, more than to the Federal government. A vast majority of the people in the south never owned slaves and never would. They didnât fight for slavery; they fought for their State. My family was Yankee Unionists, as am I, but I can understand the allegiances people had back them. I donât share them but I understand them. It caused many officers to resign their commissions to the US Army and go fight for their State. As the Federal government keeps growing in influence and reaching ever deeper into our lives, and as Congress keeps abrogating more and more functions to the Federal behemoth, and as the Executive branch and their minions keep assuming more and more control over our lives (aided and abetted by the SCOTUS), the States Rights movement becomes a distant memory for those with sufficient education to have ever heard of it. The Rebel flag seems to be more of a symbol of those bygone days (and no, I have never flown one).
Douglas Haire over 9 years ago
What power that symbol has that it stirs up so many emotions⌠especially the hate.
JanBic Premium Member over 9 years ago
Taking down this flag from government buildings is correct as it was never an official flag.
Removing it from all historical context is denying history an WRONG.
Denying this flags historical context is also a slap In the face to the ~20,000 BLACK troops who willingly fought for the C.S.A.
Output over 9 years ago
you just donât know your history
whiteheron over 9 years ago
that lead him to get radicalized.A piece of cloth drove him crazy? Amazing.Typical. Blame the tool not the user.Too many things have had their original meaning usurped by assorted groups.I wonder, since Ben Affleckâs family history includes slave ownership, will Wallyworld remove all his merchandise from their stores?
derdave969 over 9 years ago
Well this little rant proves youâll never pass the background check.
Egrayjames over 9 years ago
Seems to me a lot of criminal offenders wear Harley Davidson shirts or have H-D tattoos. I think itâs about time to outlaw all symbols and products of the motorcycle company. It just follows rules of logicâŚâŚabove all we must be politically correct and forget about freedom of speech.
mr_sherman Premium Member over 9 years ago
Wileyâs done good by creating a comic that brings out where the readers stand.
gargoils over 9 years ago
This type of cartoon is for the editorial page. Not for something we read to make us laugh.
Kaputnik over 9 years ago
For the left there is never more than one (politically) correct answer.
s.l over 9 years ago
excuse me, the real answer is none of the above
Dour Scotsman over 9 years ago
âViva la guns. When all guns are outlawed, then only outlaws will have guns. And I will be one of themâŚâ
No country that i know of outlaw gunsâŚâŚ.and in every modern country that strictly regulate access to them they are rarely used in crimes and as a result they have per capita murder rates 1/4 of oursâŚâŚâŚ
The biggest irony is that the extremeism of the NRA and the GOP will likely result in a backlash that will result in far harsher anti gun laws than would have resulted through sensible compromise.
morningglory73 Premium Member over 9 years ago
Guns arenât the problem. Itâs the unstable idiots that can get one.
NoCents over 9 years ago
Yep â another nail in the coffin of free speech â that will fix the problem for sure.
tedunn5453 over 9 years ago
The correct answer is B
sonnygreen over 9 years ago
No! Flying the points down is upside down. Damn Yankees.
dabugger over 9 years ago
If âCâ is not obvious; somebody is missing more than just da point. Will it be another century and a half before sanity comes?
Rarely528 over 9 years ago
Congrats Wiley . You summed up the issue very concisely. Its racist or it isnâtâŚyou canât be a little bit pregnant. Whatever the flagâs history may be is irrelevant. It has become THE symbol of the Confederacy and, by extension, slavery. Period..
pdeason2 over 9 years ago
the answer is B. It was never for C at all as for a nope.
More or Less over 9 years ago
Golly, the wacko factor is pretty high in here.
Linguist over 9 years ago
Symbols, icons, colors often begin as positive expressions of faith or belief and are adopted or perverted by others over time.Most people donât know, for example that the dreaded Nazi swastika was a symbol of faith and good luck for thousands of years in many cultures. It was only recently, when the Nazi Party, following Alfred Rosenbergâs theories of a master aryan race, adopted it as their standard.The average St. Patrickâs Day reveler has no idea that the three leafed green shamrock was, according to legend, used by St. Patrick to teach about the Holy Trinity. It was adopted by the Irish Volunteers as a symbol of Irish rebellion against the British ( who believed that the Irish were so much like cattle that they ate the three leafed clover ).The St. Andrewâs Cross, from which the Stars and Bars and many other banners have derived their design, has itâs history deep in medieval history. Like all banners, flags, and heraldic symbols, it has gained different interpretations by different people.I believe that given the current tensions and hatreds in the United States that this symbol of Southern rebellion be gracefully retired. It serves no purpose other than to inflame passions and divide the country.For those who still believe:: " Save your Confederate Money, Honey. The South Will Rise Again " , I say get over a war that was lost 150 years ago !
Bob. over 9 years ago
He never owned a slave. A Tennessee farm boy.
BeniHanna6 Premium Member over 9 years ago
Unfortunately we can not claim that the âsilly piece of clothâ caused him to be radicalized. If Hitler taught us anything itâs, when an individual is a loser with no hope of improvement, they look to blame others for their problem. This boy was and is definitely a big loser projecting his problems onto someone else. The flag was just a prop.
yimhere over 9 years ago
The discourse over this issue demonstrates the depth of the divisions that have come to characterize our country. Rhetoric and exaggeration now pass for truth, and rob us of the respect and tolerance we should have for each other. Clinging to empty, man-made symbols doesnât help.
GasHouseGorilla over 9 years ago
Once again, Wiley and âSaint Peterâ are wrong! It is more than one answer. This flag was the battle flag of the Civil war. First there was Bonnie Blue, but the South didnât decide all together. Then came this flag that resembled like our current American flag, but both sides were confused and were shot at. This third one as alright, but the hate groups like the KKK abused it. I know, Iâm a history buff, but I donât know it all.Now, since Dylan Roof did this horrible crime, he waved an Confederate flag. Dylan also BURNED an American flag, but why is anybody complaining about that? Itâs because the liberal media (Like Wiley here) donât always tell the truth!\
It was a SC Democrat named Ernest âFritzâ Hollings wanted to put the stars and bars on the SC capital. The Columbia NAACP didnât complain at the time in 1960. Then in 2000, it was moved in front of the gate toward the SC Capital. I felt like the flag should be moved in front of the gate and the Civil Memorial because I felt it would give visitors a wrong view of SC because I feel like everybody else would think of the people here as stupid rednecks (And we arenât)
Now, since Dylan Roof did his sick work, everybody like Amazon.com, WB, etc. want to get rid of this âsilly ragâ. Right now, I like it because all of these people like yourselves are brainwashed in this âstupid rag.â Even the WB wonât sell âDukes of Hazardâ Merchandise just because of the stars and bars on the General Lee. No Duke character ever lynched a black person, they were the good guys and Rosco and Boss Hogg never did such a hideous act! Oh yeah, there was a sheriff that sometimes appeared on the show in which he was from another county and HE WAS BLACK! He was a tough sheriff that wore gear for a riot and I believe a motorcycle helmet. He this cop LOVED tearing down perpsâ cars piece by piece! I am white, but I also am part Cherokee Indian too.
Like I said to one reader before in the past, you need take advice from a Country singer named Aaron Tippon. You need to stand for something, or YOU WILL FALL FOR ANYTHING! Youâve got to be OWN MAN not a puppet on a string. NEVER COMPROMISE WHATâS RIGHT, AND UPHOLD YOUR FAMILY NAME, YOUâVE GOT TO STAND FOR SOMETHING OR YOU WILL FALL FOR ANYTHING. My family have always had plenty by following this advice. And remember, whatever you do, you will have to sleep with tonight!
I Quit over 9 years ago
Yes there is more than one answer. Thereâs always more than one answer.
David Griffies over 9 years ago
Political commentary doesnât belong in the comics but on the editorial page. Put up another and I, for one, am finished with this strip.
moepatches2000 over 9 years ago
FYIâŚthatâs not the stars and bars
tem01 over 9 years ago
Not funny
kaffekup over 9 years ago
Actually, those âbrave soldiers who didnât even own slavesâ were happy to fight for those who did, so nothing to be proud of there. And no one has mentioned that the South fought to extend slavery, as far as California. They knew the institution was at a dead end if they couldnât extend it across the continent.
Whimsical Cats over 9 years ago
There are ALWAYS more answers! To think otherwise is part of todayâs problems â âIâd rather have questions that canât be answered then answers that canât be questioned.â â Richard P. Feynman
Dr_Zinj over 9 years ago
D: Treason â Only represents treason to those of the North
E: Freedom â from oppression and tyranny. And yes, slave owners oppressed and tyrannized their slaves; itâs called cognitive dissonance. Even if the entire basis of the war was about slavery, it was still a group of northern states dictating the deprivation of property without just compensation from the southern states, denial of their source of income, and tyranny by the majority. The South was in the wrong because they took to violent insurrection before attempting legal means of secession (which would have been, and still is, the reverse actions by which a state joins the United States.)
@ Varnes â Iâm afraid you have a very superficial and erroneous conception of the NRA. The NRA isnât anti-government, nor is it anti-Constitutional for that matter. Nobody in the NRA âletâ the S.C. killer have a gun. You are 100% wrong about nobody else but the NRA blocking gun laws. There are dozens of pro-gun organizations fighting to protect peopleâs 2nd Amendment rights in the U.S.; and many of them are far less cooperative and compromising than the NRA. Nobody in the NRA wants âcrazy peopleâ to have guns. And the NRA supports gun ownership and use for protection from far more than just âcrazy people.â The NRA does support responsible ownership and use of guns by anyone who wants one.
caligula over 9 years ago
Fascinating, I didnât know they did revisionist history in Heaven . . . or is that Hell doing a false flag operation?
Godfreydaniel over 9 years ago
You know, if my ancestors were traitors, Iâd be inclined to try to hide the factâŚâŚâŚ
Dr_Zinj over 9 years ago
As for the 3 day waiting period before automatically granting permission to obtain the gun, thatâs absolutely necessary to get the government off their dead lazy buttocks. I wish more laws had the same required response time!
kaffekup over 9 years ago
But that was not the swastika the Nazis used. They reversed it. So it stands for tyranny and mass murder. You donât think so?
jimguess over 9 years ago
Now, this confederate flag obsession is totally absurd.
Did the flag pull the trigger? NO!
How totally stupid the lamestream media and the comics are getting âŚ
dlauber Premium Member over 9 years ago
So many miss the point about the Confederate flag and other symbols of the Confederacy. Is there any other nation on earth that allows the names of treasonous traitors who waged a civil war against the nation to be placed on buildings (public or institutional), monuments, mountainsides (Stone Mountain, GA), or streets? The leaders of the Confederacy engaged in treason and were the very definition of traitors to the United States of America. Naming buildings, streets, etc. after these traitors is an insult to every American who died to save the Union and to the nationâs African Americans whose slavery these treasonous beings sought to maintain. There is no place for their names on public property.
mike75035 over 9 years ago
Answer âDâ . Leave the Damn thing alone. It is a symbol, not the problem.
charliedawg over 9 years ago
ITâS NOT UPSIDE DOWN! the stars point up.
Dr_Fogg over 9 years ago
This country is being run and ruined by a bunch of Paranoid Politically Correct Jerks. Go Redskins! My parents would have been jailed for child neglect.
http://www.arcamax.com/thefunnies/mallardfillmore/s-1688075
Bob. over 9 years ago
That âpoor boyâ was my wifeâs great grandfather. He survived the war.
echoraven over 9 years ago
âNobody but them block every and all gun registry and any kind of regulationâŚâ.Hitlerâs Nazi Germany required Jews to register their guns, then they took the guns away and tried to eradicate them from the face of the earth. Curse the NRA for not ignoring historyâŚ
Reppr Premium Member over 9 years ago
Unfortunately, we have all seen how the Federal government can use delaying tactics to further their own aims. Consider just the IRS delays (ignoring the other wrong-doing) in granting NFP status to certain groups whose aims were disliked. By the way, what time period do YOU think would be appropriate? A week? A month? A year?
mnd0829 over 9 years ago
And the answer is B. It was about states rights, not slavery. There were northern states with slaves. Even US Grant had slaves. Read your history people.
Dungy over 9 years ago
All people with shaved heads ought to be imprisonedâŚ.theyâre nothing but racist skinheads!
Dtroutma over 9 years ago
1. âA piece of cloth canât inflameâ , what about the flag of ISIL, and Americaâs CURRENT feeling about that one? The âbattle flagâ didnât fly over state buildings until desegregation was on the table, and the southern states again rebelled against the United States government in the 1960âs, it WAS an act of rebellion against law. (and social justice)
2. Roof got his gun because LOCAL law enforcement screwed up and didnât properly forward his arrest record into the system. Yes, the geographic screwup by the FBI database played a role, but it was still LOCAL aspects of the law that allows many to âslip through the cracks", and those faults are there to accommodate the NRA âtypesâ in Congress and their corporate constituancies.
3. Flying the âbattle flagâ as a regional thing may be culutural, but when itâs flown by folks outside the south, itâs rebellion, not culture. It should never have been flown over state offices, or federal: BUT- still flying it over significant Civil War sites managed by the NPS, or federal cemetaries with Confederate history, should be allowed. History should be on display, to expose errors, as well as âsuccessâ.
BeBadenov Premium Member over 9 years ago
Interesting that any mention of the most popular of the Confederate battle flags always somehow winds up being about guns. Iâm tempted to suggest itâs Freudian, but itâs more likely an indication that the Civil War never really ended, it just became an underground guerrilla conflict waged, for the better part of a century, by terrorist organizations like the KKK. Today the weapons are more legal, including various tactics for voter suppression, but the threat of violence is never far away. We need to remember that.
tracybsmith over 9 years ago
Last I checked, a flag couldnât hold a gun and kill people. Only a psychopath can do that. I wish that freak would have been carrying an American flag insteadâŚ. if only to have avoided all this ignorant nonsense. I wonder what people would have done then??
Happy, happy, happy!!! Premium Member over 9 years ago
Straight to my Facebook page.Just to irritate my red-neck family members.
gorillazilla over 9 years ago
It seems that you donât know much about the NRA beyond what the media and the anti-gun/anti-rights crowd want you to know
duplin over 9 years ago
Removed from page.
Reppr Premium Member over 9 years ago
Well, just found out that the FBI cleared Roof to get that firearm. He passed. He should not have passed, but he did.
Lawrence Davis Premium Member over 9 years ago
There are some subjects that a cartoonist should keep his bigoted, biased nose out of⌠this is one.
Bob. over 9 years ago
Linguist over 9 years ago
Great cartoon today, Wiley ! I think youâve set a record for the number of posts .
I must say, that for the most part, the discussion was lively, but not snarky.
No matter what side of the coin ( or flag, in this case ) your on, thank Wiley for creating a lively debate forum ( as well as a good chuckle ).
Brass Orchid Premium Member over 9 years ago
People on a mission from god are immune to humor. Ever see a teenage kid wearing a suicide bomb vest smile?No. You havenât.
ThumperMcDuff over 9 years ago
Varnes, Rady_B, Exoticdoc2, Alabama_Al, BrockOlee, DourScotsman, Rarely28, Gaijinrabbit, Dr_Zinj, Greenearthma, dtroutman, RepprâŚI read your comments and it appears that regardless of which side of the gun issue youâre on, you and SCOTUS either do not understand or have chosen to ignore the term ââŚshall not be infringed.â Maybe itâs time to amend the U. S. Constitution adding the caveat ââŚshall not be infringed UNLESS there is someone that some bureaucrat or private citizen thinks should not be allowed to bear arms, in which case the right to bear arms shall be governed by whatever law, rule, regulation or ordinance any legislative body at any level wishes to impose.â
wherehaveallthetalentedartistsgone over 9 years ago
Gotta love revisionist history. Wanna burn some books next?
Tarredandfeathered over 9 years ago
Find the Music Group âCoyote Runâ and get their song âThe Coyote Polkaâ.Itâs the best commentary on the confederate Rag ever written..
Pointspread over 9 years ago
If a Native American found the US flag to be asymbol of hate, forced removal and theft of land , genocide and racism (and they could do so) would some of you agree it should not be flown from a government building? Just curiousâŚ
jblessington Premium Member over 9 years ago
I choose B.Regional charm. Since I am not a racist and there is only one answer, that must be the only answer. Thanks, Wiley, for clearing that up.
tommymd1 over 9 years ago
Regardless of what the revisionists, Leftists and uneducated try to Force the current populace to believe, the Correct answer is this Flag Represents The Heritage of My Ancestors that Served with Honor and I am Proud to Hold Them in the Highest Esteem!!!
RonBerg13 Premium Member over 9 years ago
The democrat party flag flew in the southern states during slavery.Why isnât the call out for taking that flag down?
Argythree over 9 years ago
The piece of cloth didnât radicalize him. What he saw on the internet (people preaching hatred) radicalized him, exactly the same as ISIS is teaching hatred.
We need to find out why so many young guys around the world are so vulnerable to these hate messages on the internetâŚ
Argythree over 9 years ago
Actually, the FBI admitted that their guy made a mistake and checked with the wrong local police force.
Pointspread over 9 years ago
Their state government.
Argythree over 9 years ago
Night-Gaunt, the British almost entered the Civil War on the side of the Confederacy. If the US had not won some decisive battles, the outcome could have been very differentâŚ
Brass Orchid Premium Member over 9 years ago
âDid the flag pull the trigger? NO!â-âStart with the stupid question posed that no one asked or said or implied.â-Well, we definitely should outlaw any of the outward symbols of aberrant thinking. That way, the whackos can blend in until they pop and have a better chance of taking out more of whatever sworn enemies, TEA Party folks or blacks or Christians or whomever falls within their crazed Venn Diagram of hate.Look at the men we admire and for whom we vote. They know how to present a normal and decent face and keep their evil hidden until they have the opportunity to inflict the harm they believe is necessary to the people they find inferior.Duplicity should be mandatory, I thinkâŚ
Say What? Premium Member over 9 years ago
Just commenting to break the 200th mark.
Karen L Weatherbee Premium Member over 9 years ago
I would point out that this is a controversy precisely BECAUSE there is more than one ârightâ answer. Symbols by their very nature are personal, and can have different meanings to different people or groups of people. For example, try asking a Bible Belt conservative Christian and a gay rights activist to explain the symbolism of a rainbow. Pretty sure you would get answers that are nothing alike. That doesnât mean either one is âwrongâ, just different situations and experiences lead to different interpretations of a symbol.
Seeker149 Premium Member over 9 years ago
Iâm not so sure Peter intends to kick him out altogether for not choosing just C. His answer doesnât automatically make the guy a racist. Everyoneâs experience is subject to the circumstances surrounding them. If the Duke boys had been real people, they probably would have had little knowledge of the exact motivations that brought back the flagâs popularity when they painted it on their car (though their choice of name is a bit more telling). Still, even someone who âinnocentlyâ gives the wrong answer would probably earn a slap upside the head for living their entire life ignorant of the flagâs entire history and symbolism, as well as the greater context of its use in the last few generations.
doris sloan over 9 years ago
The Democrat party is responsible for that flag, and while Iâm at it, for the KKK also. Iâm getting pretty sick of all of this sanctimonious âracistâ this and âracistâ that thrown around so freely by the left. You made it, youâre responsible for it and most of us know who the racists were/are. The South locked in segragation was a south owned by the Democrat party. The ax handle weilding goveroner of Arkansas, keeping kids from school was a Democrat.
route66paul over 9 years ago
lets rewrite history, instead of facing it head on. While the flag was used by many that were against forced intergration, it really was never about slavery. Is was about forming their own country because the people in power were trying to force them to pay more for their products and sell their raw materials for a low rate. The same reason the 13 colonies declared their independance from England.
Lincoln only freed the slaves in the states that rebelled. the slaves in the north and in the terratories were not freed. Lincoln actually wanted to ship them all to Africa or South America even when most were 3rd to 8th generation Americans. read some history. you will find that blacks fought on the southâs side and some rode against the yankee carpet baggers with southern whites.
pjskss over 9 years ago
this isnât the stars and bars. thatâs a different flag. it is a silly piece of cloth. it doesnât stand for slavery or racism. it does stand for the right of a state to secede from the union. which was treated as rebellion and crushed. The fact of secession as an experiment was crushed. the idea that it ought to be a right of the several states is still alive.
Seeker149 Premium Member over 9 years ago
Heritage can be extremely subjective, and no one can be blamed for the unique circumstances of their upbringing. But in this day and age it is a choice to be ignorant of the full spectrum of a symbolâs history, or to know it and insist the parts of it you dislike shouldnât matter.