• Happy Robert E. Lee Day!

    From KWILLS@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jan 16 12:07:22 2023
    XPost: alt.atheism, alt.checkmate, alt.food.fast-food
    XPost: alt.survival, talk.politics.guns

    Robert E. Lee?s birthday, also known as Robert E. Lee Day, is a state holiday in
    some parts of the United States. In some states it is an annual shared state holiday
    with mlk?s birthday on the third Monday of January. IMO this was done to downplay
    white heroes and shift to focus to socialist/communist traitors like mlk.

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  • From Ronny Koch@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 16 04:35:43 2024
    XPost: alt.politics.conservative, alt.politics.democrats, alt.business
    XPost: dc.politics

    Every state celebrates Martin Luther King Jr. Day, but not every
    state celebrates it the same way. In New Hampshire, King’s
    birthday is “Martin Luther King Jr. Civil Rights Day,” an
    explicit celebration of the entire civil rights movement (and a
    compromise with lawmakers who didn’t want a day devoted to King
    alone). In Idaho, it’s “Martin Luther King, Jr.–Idaho Human
    Rights Day,” a celebration of justice writ large. And in three
    states—Alabama, Arkansas, and Mississippi—MLK Day is also Robert
    E. Lee Day.

    This isn’t a different Robert E. Lee—some forgotten crusader for
    human equality. No, this is the Gen. Robert E. Lee who led
    Confederate armies in war against the United States, who
    defended a nation built on the “great truth” that the “negro is
    not equal to the white man,” and whose armies kidnapped and sold
    free black Americans whenever they had the opportunity.

    Despite his betrayal of the Union (a stark contrast to fellow
    Virginian Winfield Scott, who refused to join the Confederacy)
    and his treatment of enslaved black Americans—as a slavedriver,
    he sold children and oversaw brutal punishments, including
    sewing brine into the wounds of returned fugitives—Lee’s popular
    image is of an honorable and decent man who fought well and
    loathed slavery. (The former is debatable and the latter is
    true, in that Lee thought slaveholding a burdensome occupation.)

    There are three other states that commemorate the life of Lee:
    Georgia, Florida, and Virginia. The difference is that their
    celebrations are all separate from MLK Day, if only by a few
    days: Virginia’s Robert E. Lee Day was this past Friday.

    In fairness, Lee Day isn’t a recent invention. The general’s
    birthday falls on Jan. 19, and the first official commemoration
    was marked by the Virginia legislature in 1889, a decade after
    the end of Reconstruction and well into the period of racial
    regression, when Southern state legislatures dismantled efforts
    at biracial education, imposed Jim Crow, and turned a blind eye
    to anti-black terrorism. And in 1904, Robert E. Lee Day became
    “Lee-Jackson Day” after Virginia added Confederate Gen. Thomas
    “Stonewall” Jackson to the holiday.

    All of this raises an obvious question: How did Lee get tangled
    up in our national commemoration of Martin Luther King Jr. and
    the civil rights movement? The best answer is convenience. In
    states that commemorated Lee, lawmakers who approved of MLK Day
    didn’t want to create two holidays in January. Instead, they
    combined the two days. As a concept, it was a poor pairing. As a
    bureaucratic solution, it worked.

    But over the next two decades, under pressure from civil rights
    groups, several states would either end their Lee commemorations
    or move them to a different day. In 2000, pushed by Republican
    Gov. Jim Gilmore, Virginia would end the state’s “Lee-Jackson-
    King Day” and reserve the third Monday of January for the civil
    rights leader.

    It should be said that the “Lee” part of “Lee-King Day” is
    mostly downplayed in states that have the holiday. Outside of a
    few towns and counties, there aren’t any public events in honor
    of Lee’s memory. The general, a symbol of the white South—or at
    least, a version of it—exists in quiet tension with King, a
    symbol of a more modern, integrated South. Still, it’s not hard
    to find some commemoration of Lee, who continues to capture
    Southern imaginations. “If the image of Lee changes in history,
    the man himself did not, even in the face of the greatest
    provocations,” writes Paul Greenberg for the Arkansas-Democrat
    Gazette in its annual editorial on the life of Lee, “His
    victories were great, but his honor greater.”

    As a Virginian, I understand the drive to praise Lee. His honor
    is an undeniable and worthy quality. But we shouldn’t forget
    what Lee fought for. Not for freedom or for liberty, but for
    perpetual bondage and a South that forever held its black
    citizens as slaves and servants. And while Lee spent the post-
    war period as an advocate for reconciliation, he also opposed
    the nascent moves toward racial egalitarianism, condemning black
    suffrage, even as many black leaders favored voting rights for
    former Confederates and the education for their children.

    Indeed, if anyone should want an end to official celebrations of
    Lee and the Confederacy, it’s the white Southerners who hold on
    to this memory. The general isn’t just a totem of the
    Confederacy or an avatar for abstract qualities of honor and
    service; he’s a symbol of destructive white resistance to the
    opportunities of Reconstruction. If the white South had moved in
    a direction that opposed Lee’s values—if it had embraced the
    great potential that came with the end of slavery—we would have
    a different, and likely better, America than the one we live in.
    '
    http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/politics/2015/01 /robert_e_lee_day_some_southern_states_still_celebrate_the_confe derate_general.html


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