Friday, April 9, 2010

The Confederacy: Kill the Myth Once and For All

Just returning from a trip to the South, and planning a move back to the South, I've recently been thinking about this odd notion of Confederate pride. Even born and raised as a Southerner, I never understood the need some Southerners feel to fly the Confederate flag or display bumper stickers that say "The South Will Rise Again." After the governor of Virginia proclaimed April "Confederate History Month," Jeff Schweitzer wrote this article for the Huffington Post. It pretty much sums up how I feel about the whole issue, so I thought I'd reprint it here.

The Confederacy: Kill the Myth Once and For All
by Jeff Schweitzer

On April 3, 1865, Richmond, Virginia, fell to Union soldiers as Confederate troops retreated to the West, exhausted, weak, and low on supplies. The end would come soon thereafter. On April 5, Generals Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant started an exchange of notes that would lead to Lee's surrender at Appomattox on April 9. As we approach this important anniversary, the time is upon us to consider, and ultimately reject, the sterilized myths of the Confederacy.

Southerners who claim a deep national pride celebrate their ancestors' efforts to dissolve the very union of states whose flag they now so proudly fly. They honor a campaign to destroy our country but claim the mantle of patriot. That makes no sense. The contradiction is always swept under the rug, but that must stop. Next year will mark the 150th anniversary of the war's first battle; that is a good time to close this chapter of hypocrisy and inconsistency. A southern loyalist cannot be a patriot; the two ideals are mutually incompatible. You cannot simultaneously love the United States and love the idea of destroying the United States. To claim both is insane, the equivalent of declaring that you love all Mexican food but hate enchiladas. The claims are each exclusive of the other and therefore by definition both cannot be true.

Let us take one issue off the table immediately. Certainly one can rightly honor the bravery of fallen soldiers no matter whether they wore blue or grey. We can appreciate the rare military genius of Robert E. Lee, and the loyalty and dedication of Stonewall Jackson, George Pickett and Nathan Forrest. These generals and the men they led fought valiantly, with integrity, with honor, for a cause in which they believed passionately. For this we owe them our deepest respect.

But honoring the man is not equivalent to honoring the cause for which he fought. The cause championed by the South should cover every American with shame. Have no doubt that the South was at war to dismantle our nation, to destroy our Constitution. For this goal of secession, of which nobody should be proud, more than 630,000 soldiers (some claim up to 700,000) were killed or wounded in four years of hellish war. To put this in perspective consider that the entire population of the United States at war's end was 35 million, putting war casualties at nearly 2% of the total populace. Equivalent rates of casualties today would result in 5 million dead or wounded, dwarfing our losses in World War II, or any other war.

Why did 2% of our population suffer death or maiming? Over the issue of state sovereignty and the interpretation of the Tenth Amendment (ratified in 1791). The text is simple enough: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people." But we also have the Supremacy Clause of Article VI of the Constitution, which say, "This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding."

Simply put, 11 southern states seceded from the Union in protest against federal legislation that limited the expansion of slavery claiming that such legislation violated the tenth amendment, which they argued trumped the Supremacy Clause. The war was indeed about protecting the institution of slavery, but only as a specific case of a state's right to declare a federal law null and void.

The inherent tension between Article VI and the Tenth Amendment of the Constitution has kept lawyers busy and wealthy since our founding, and the argument goes on today. But the South went a significant step further than arguing a case. In seceding from the Union those states declared the U.S. Constitution dead. The president of the United States, sworn to uphold the Constitution, had no choice but to take whatever measures were necessary to fulfill his commitment. So war came.

So what exactly about that history would lead one to fly a Confederate flag over a state capitol building, or paste one on a F150 bumper or wear one on a T-shirt? Is the South proud of its efforts to protect slavery? Or attempting to destroy the United States through dissolution? For starting a war in which 2% of the population died? For losing the war? These are odd banners to carry around for nearly 150 years.

Perhaps the pride comes from the fact that the South stood up to a greater power, at least checking or slowing the pace of an expanding federalism. But even that does not pass the smell test; by starting but then losing the war the South created the exact opposite effect, solidifying federal power like never before.

But damn if the South does not hold on to the war as if they never actually lost, fighting incongruously for a hopeless cause of questionable value while simultaneously wrapping themselves in the American flag! So we get oddities like Virginia Governor Robert McDonnell proclaiming April "Confederate History Month" without ever mentioning slavery. When questioned about this curious oversight, McDonnell lamely explained that "there were any number of aspects to that conflict between the states. Obviously, it involved slavery. It involved other issues. But I focused on the ones I thought were most significant for Virginia." Really? If slavery was not among the most "significant" issues for Virginia, exactly what other state right was being violated by federal law leading to the Civil War? Does McDonnell even know the history of the war? Sadly, McDonnell is the not the first governor of his state to explicitly omit slavery from lofty declarations. Former Republican Virginia Governor Republican George Allen also failed to recognize slavery when making a similar proclamation. Seems to be a disease of Republican governors, a historic irony given the role of the young Republican Party in the war.

The South started and lost a war that nearly destroyed the United States in pursuit of a terrible cause. Let it go. Let. It. Go. You fought well but lost decisively. Your cause was unjust. Your actions were treasonous. There is no part of the Confederate cause of which to be proud. There is no moral high ground here. Waving the American flag while fiercely defending the effort to tear that flag down is untenable. Make a choice; be a proud American or a proud Confederate. You cannot possibly be both.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

I had learned in college that it was all about MONEY. The South was making it and the North wanted it.

"It's a very complicated issue. The civil war was really a battle over state's rights and the economy. The north had it's abolitionists who were against slavery on moral grounds. But most people were not so much against slavery itself, but against it spreading west as territories entered the Union. Slavery had been abolished in the north in the late 1700's. There was little need for slaves. The north was full of small farms which could be run by the family and perhaps one or two hired hands. Unlike the south with cotton and sugar cane plantations that required many workers to make a profit.

Shortly after the turn of the century, into the 1800's, the north was full of new immigrants who obtained jobs in factories due to the industrial revolution. Since factories required many workers, the northerners feared that allowing slavery again in the north would mean that slaves would replace the precious low paying jobs that immigrants now held. As the country moved westward, the north feared that if too many of the western states became slave states, this would upset the balance in Congress and eventually mean a vote to allow slavery once again in the north, thus taking jobs from poor people.

So the north wasn't in general so much against slavery as they were against having slavery spread to the north. Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation was met with much anger from the north. Many soldiers wrote home that they would not have joined up if they knew Lincoln's aim was to "free the *******.""

* 2 years ago by PDY

Another point of view - http://www.factasy.com/civil_war/2008/02/29/was_war_fought_over_slavery

WNC mountain gal said...

"Anonymous" has missed the point entirely......IMO. Pity. Get your head ot of the sand.

Anonymous said...

I just reread the article and your right that I didn't address the main point directly. I just think that some people in the South think differently about the Civil War than our popular culture and I was trying to point that out. I don't mind them being proud of their heritage, it doesn't offend me. I think you can be both a Southern and an American and be proud of both. I don't think anyone in the south really thinks the south will rise again and destroy the constitution. I don't think anyone is trying to do that. Being a southern means different things to different people and I have no desire to shame anyone over where they came from.

Instead of pitying me and putting me down, I would have rather been enlightened with wise words. Lord knows I don't know everything. I was just moved to present something else that might make someone see a little of where some of the southerns might be coming from.

When I was young, I admired clever people. Now that I am old, I admire kind people. ~Abraham Joshua Heschel

Wayne said...

Anonymous, I appreciate your thoughtfulness. I agree that there's nothing wrong with Southern pride. The South is much more than racism and bigotry, even if that's what many non-southerners first think of when they think of the South. That's just a by-product from the Civil War we have to live with everyday and refute in the way we live our lives. I'm proud to be a Southerner. After living in Phoenix for 6 years, I have a renewed sense of respect for the civility and courtesy that is more common in the South. And you're also right that most people that fly their Dixie flags and put "The South Will Rise Again" on the back of their trucks are not consciously wishing for another break from the Union or civil war. But when something as devastating as the Civil War is part of your history, something that killed and affected so many people on both sides, you have to be sensitive to that. There are other ways to show pride in the South than to cling to vestiges of the Civil War. I wish Southerners would stop predominantly using the Civil War as a means of identifying themselves. The South is so much more than that. But these things, these signifiers, become tradition and lose their meaning, or rather the meaning evolves. Joe flies a Dixie flag because his dad flew one, and his dad's dad, etc. His grandfather may have flown one because he wanted all the blacks to know they weren't welcome. His father may have flown one because he and his friends did Civil War reenactment as a hobby. And Joe flies one because, to him, it's a simple way of representing who he is: someone who likes NASCAR and sweet tea and fishing. But unfortunately, some people see the flag and think "racist." We've got to be more conscious of how we communicate to the world who we are. Not everyone who flies the Dixie flag is racist, but I can almost guarantee that no one who is truly open and loving towards all races would fly that flag. Because they understand the connotations.

I think I've gotten off on a tangent. Great topic for dialogue though!

Lynn said...

"We've got to be more conscious of how we communicate to the world who we are." That is very well said, brother.

Lynn said...

Oh, and anonymous, regarding "all about MONEY. The South was making it and the North wanted it." Who in the south was making all the money? Not the slaves. No wonder the south was making money. They weren't paying their workers. When humans put material wealth (the "economy") over some humans' rights, it just ain't right. State's rights or not.

WNC mountain gal said...

anonymous, I apologize. I was not meaning I pitied you but that it is a pity that you seemed to miss the point. Please don't think me unkind. Like my son (whose blog we are talking about), I feel we need to raise our consciousness to get over the horrors of the civil war. Time is precious and we need to all love each other as one human race no matter where we or our ancestors are from. Smile, God loves you. :)

Anonymous said...

AND so my thoughts spiraled away from the initial posts and comments to...

"We've got to be more conscious of how we communicate to the world who we are."

And thank you all for doing a little thinking about who you actually are. I'm not sure many people have enough "time" to devote to who they are, much less what they put out there... I think about who I am and who I want to be. I think about how my parents did things and why, what do I want to keep and what do I want to change... (I always make the mistake of answering people with thought, when they say "how are you?" Then I realize most just wanted to hear me say the words "fine and you...")

Wayne, Cristina, Thank you for raising your children "on purpose," knowing who you are, (at least within a range), and being willing to influence others, giving real answers to questions and putting yourself out there. The world is a better place because of it.