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Monday, May 10, 2021

In name only.....

A multiracial lawsuit demanding the removal of a Confederate monument in Iredell County offers a historic family twist. 

One of the residents supporting the move is a descendant of Robert E. Lee.

9 comments:

  1. Billy Bob in TexasMay 10, 2021 at 11:18 AM

    What utter BS. UDC should tell them to pound sand and that descendant cuck should be removed from the Lee family tree. So pathetic.

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  2. looks like a pedo, but he's a member of the clergy (ha, see what I did there?) - and a circuituitously-routed very distant somehow relative of a great General - a general who epitomized morals, values, and traditions - that Reverend Soyboi "Rob" Wokethinker knows very little about. As a son of the South, I hate his smarmy,self righteous smile. Dear Lord, what is happening in Dixie...
    as much as it pains me to admit it, I can't hardly wait for the fight.
    - Grandpa

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  3. Calm down. I have seen a bunch of Confederate statues, but not one time after seeing one did I want to go lynch anybody or tell somebody, "You shouldn't have the right to vote." White folks see a Confederate statue, usually it's just part of town that's always been there. Nothing more.

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  4. Kinda funny that the cosmic dicksucker, George Takei, has a commercial out not saying that we shouldn't forget the past treatment of the Japs in America in WWII lest we repeat it. Does he remember what the Japs did in Pearl Harbor on 12/7/41, or is that another part of history to be swept under the rug?
    Ain't it strange that we shouldn't remember the southern democrats slavery and their Jim Crow/KKK treatment of slaves and blacks?
    Must be nice to be so high and mighty that they can unilaterally decide which history gets to be remembered and which gets erased.

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    Replies
    1. What does George have to say about the Japanese treatment of POWs or Korean "Comfort Women"?

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    2. Japanese-Americans had no vote in Japan, and no influence on the Japanese government and military that attacked Pearl Harbor, massacred civilians and POWs nearly everywhere they invaded, and forced women into prostitution. Blaming people who emigrated from Japan long before the war - and their American-born children - makes no more sense than blaming my German-American grandparents for the Nazi death camps.

      Actually, it makes less sense. Hundreds of German-Americans (out of tens of millions) did attempt to spy on and sabotage the war effort; most of these attempts didn't get far, but that was because the FBI used a lot of manpower to watch them. There were only two instances through the whole war of Japanese-Americans living in the USA aiding the enemy, and neither of them did any significant damage. But with the German-Americans, only a few percent were sent to internment camps, all of them individually suspected by the FBI. That's a huge difference from the Japanese-Americans, including 2nd and 3rd generations, who were sent to camps based solely on their ancestry and where they lived. Also note that the largest Japanese-American population was in Hawaii, where it would have been much easier to stay in contact with Japan, but they were not locked up - they couldn't afford to remove so many workers from the economy.

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  5. What a loser. OG

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  6. Gee. Back in the 50's Congress passed a national law saying Confederate cemeteries and memorials are equivalent to regular old US military cemeteries and memorials.

    So, well, tough nuggies, bitches.

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