Anti Defense League wrote:Eahland wrote:That's a lot of projection there.
I've told you this before, and you'll certainly ignore it again, because facts are inconvenient to your narrative, but while the blue saltire on red with the white stars, which is commonly called the Confederate flag, was never a "national" flag of the uprising, it was, in actual fact, the battle flag of the Army of Northern Virginia, which was the primary combat formation of the Confederacy, and so the flag actually flown in battle by Lee's army of traitors. It was used from 1861 until Lee's surrender in 1865 (and has continued in use to this day as a symbol of racism), and so outlasted any of the various short-lived Confederate "national" flags. It's not "the" Confederate flag, but there isn't any "the" Confederate flag. It is one of several Confederate flags, the one that actually flew above many of the traitors who were actually shooting at American soldiers, and it is certainly the most widely recognized symbol of the Confederacy.
My only wish is said "traitors" had got the chance to shoot at more American soldiers; Robert Lewis Dabney was right.
Wasn't sure if this fell under "advocating death" since it's referring to events over 150 years ago, but still doesn't seem kosher.