THURSDAY, JUL 16, 2015 05:00 AM CDT
Wipe the Confederacy out now: Southern haters have a sick new lie designed to hold onto Confederate flags, memorials
It's actually the opposite of whitewashing history to finally be honest about slavery, the South and the Civil War
TOPICS: RACE, CONFEDERATE FLAG, THE SOUTH, CHARLESTON, CIVIL WAR, EDITOR'S PICKS, AMERICAN HISTORY,WHITEWASHING HISTORY, NEWS
With the Confederate Battle Standard finally removed from the South Carolina Capitol grounds, many conservative commentators have expressed concern that the battle may not be over, that the movement to abolish public symbols of the Confederacy may spread to other monuments—for instance, renaming streets and public schools that honor white supremacists, or reappropriating landmarks and dismantling memorials that commemorate slave owners and segregationists.
Of course, these fears are not unfounded: There is such a movement underway. But what is perplexing is why anyone would find this to be problematic. Conservative claims that these actions amount to “whitewashing history” or “cultural cleansing” are beyond ironic.
It is whitewashing history, on several levels, to celebrate and honor the Confederacy independent of its subjugation of blacks. The so-called states’ rights narrative about the origins and meanings of the war are falsified by Declarations of Secession from the Southern states, and the words of Confederate leaders themselves—who left no doubt that what they were fighting for was the continuation of slavery. In fact, had they won independence from the North, the vision was to build an empire byconquering and enslaving the denizens of Mexico and Central America as well.
While it is true that there were issues related to the proper collection and allocation of taxes and tariffs, representation in the Congress, and the extent of federal sovereignty—most of these problems also turned on questions about the legal status of blacks (especially given that slaves constituted the majority of the population in many Southern districts, and the economy was heavily dependent on slave labor).
The developments that provoked outright secession were principally the Northern states’ general refusal to enforce the Fugitive Slaves Act, along with concerns that Lincoln and the Republicans might ban slavery in any new states that joined the Union (even if they allowed existing slave states to continue the practice, for lack of viable alternatives).
That “Southern culture and way of life” the Confederates were so eager to preserve? It was entirely contingent upon the subjugation of blacks. Whites in slave states rightfully viewed emancipation as an existential threat to their livelihood, their culture and their very lives. They dreaded reprisals by newly freed slaves, be they political, economic or violent (they assumed the latter most often, given the “savage” constitution of blacks). For this reason, even those few Southerners who supported the abolition of slavery generally proposed dumping blacks back in Africa, rather than allowing them to live free and equal alongside their former oppressors.
Again, this is spelled out unambiguously by the very people who spearheaded the rebellion—so it is ahistorical to deny or minimize these realities. Conversely, the suppression of iconography romanticizing the failed revolt is not anti-historical, it is the way history works.
Who Writes History?
Most Confederate monuments were established after the Civil War—not during or before. The Confederate Battle Standard, for instance, did not gain prominence in the South until it was adopted by the Ku Klux Klan, and later, by segregationists(incidentally, segregation and Jim Crow were held up by Southerners as “states’ rights” in much the same way as slavery).
This is rather astonishing, if you think about it.
In the aftermath of a war, it is the prerogative of the victors to decide the legacy of the vanquished. And iconoclasm is almost always the order of the day. Some particularly marvelous vestiges may be allowed to survive—but it is virtually unheard of that the winner of a war would then allow widespread construction of new memorials paying tribute to those who just took up arms against them. It is beyond the pale that victorious forces would allow the rebels’ flag to fly at a state Capitol—the seat of government power.
There is not even an analogous model in U.S. history.
Where are the memorials to the large numbers of colonists who did not support breaking away from England? Where are the streets named after the Tories and the Redcoats who fought against Washington?
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