Tag Archives: Confederacy

A pair of fascinating articles…

…both from Salon.com.

First up, Amanda Marcotte’s very amusing analysis of how…

Satanists are masters at trolling Conservatives

Ms. Marcotte offers three excellent points that analyze why “Satanists” (I’ll explain the quotes in a moment) have had such success in trolling Conservatives in various states over issues such as religious displays.

Why did I put the word Satanist in quotes?  Because like Ms. Marcotte I strongly suspect the following, which Ms. Marcotte points out in her article:

Let’s be clear: most Satanists do not actually worship Satan. The entire “religion” is very tongue-in-cheek, a way to espouse humanist values while also poking fun at religion.

Got to give it to these “Satanists”, they have figured out a way of boldly point out attempts by the very religious to blur the lines between their faith and government, something that should always, in my mind, remain separated.

Second article involves something of a hot topic today, and that is the Confederate Flag and, by extension, why it is that so many in the South have a romanticized view of the Civil War and the South’s role in it.  This is a very sobering article by Charles McCain, a gentleman who bought into those lies until he realized what they were:

Lies I Leared as a Southerner: Racism, The Confederate Flag, and Why So Many White Southerners Revere A Symbol of Hatred

The article effectively answers the one question I’ve always had regarding the (to my mind) puzzling mythologized view of the South and the Civil War, how a fight to retain an odious, barbaric practice, that of slavery, became softened to a gallant struggle for state’s rights against an aggressive invader.

As I noted before (you can read my thoughts here), until I started High School I knew very little concerning both the Civil War and the Southern views of it as I lived my entire life to that point abroad and in places where the Civil War was not a big enough issue to teach about.

Once I moved to Jacksonville, Florida, I got my first clear view of both the history of the Civil War and, for an outsider like me, the strange (to my mind) mythologizing of it by many of the Southerners around me.  I say “strange” because at that time and being as naive as I was I couldn’t understand how these people could on the one hand view the actions of their forefathers as noble while on the other hand ignoring the brutal accounts of what slavery was about as well as the very clear fact that that’s what the Civil War was all about!

Since that time long ago, of course, I’ve come to realize what this mythologizing is, though I couldn’t have put it in quite the terms that Mr. McCain did.

As I said before, I am certainly not without sympathy for the incredible, brutal losses of life by both sides during the Civil War, but perhaps after all these years it is finally time to see the Civil War for what it actually was about, rather than the myths that have been made since.