Posted by tecwrg on 12/8/2015 12:39:00 PM (view original):
Posted by bad_luck on 12/7/2015 6:26:00 PM (view original):
Posted by tecwrg on 12/7/2015 3:50:00 PM (view original):
Posted by tecwrg on 12/4/2015 1:55:00 PM (view original):
Posted by bad_luck on 12/4/2015 1:38:00 PM (view original):
Posted by tecwrg on 12/4/2015 12:26:00 PM (view original):
Where in the article does it say that he wishes anybody a "slavery filled holiday"?
In fact, where in the the article does it say that the person in question associates the Confederate flag with slavery?
"May your Christmas be filled with memories of a happier time when South Carolina’s leaders possessed morals, convictions and the principles to stand for what is right" - referring to the decision to remove the Confederate Flag.
Nope. Don't see ANY references to slavery there.
So WTF are you talking about?
Back to THIS.
Where in the article does it say anything about slavery? Or that the person in question associates the Confederate flag with slavery?
Because your subsequent post said flat-out that that's what was meant by his Christmas message. This, despite your subsequent claim that you "never said I get to decide what something means to someone else".
So which is it . . . do you or don't you get to decide what things mean to people other than yourself?
So, if a politician complained about a US state removing a swastika from its capitol building by wishing for a happier time when leaders stood up for what was right, you'd argue that the swastika means different things to different people and that he isn't in favor of nazis or an anti-semite?
Correct?
I guess I missed this in the news. Which state capitol is or was flying a swasika flag?
But that's besides the point. Back to my question: do you or don't you get to decide what things mean to people other than yourself? You said that you don't shortly after you did just that.
It's a hypothetical, dipshit.
As you pointed out earlier, a swastika doesn't always signal anti-semitism. Yet, if there were a politician arguing that it should be flown over the state capitol building, it would be fair to criticize that politician for being a ******* idiot because the swastika has a general symbolism that is offensive and completely inappropriate for a government building.
In the same way, yes, some people view the confederate flag as an inoffensive symbol of southern pride but, in general, it's a symbol of the south's fight to keep slavery legal.