4/11/2010 8:05:08 PM
Who is saying this?
4/11/2010 8:08:04 PM
I scalped this commentary regarding the article
4/11/2010 8:09:30 PM
sorry forgot linkhttp://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/04/11/martin.confederate.extremist/index.html?hpt=C2Roland Martin
4/11/2010 8:17:41 PM
HUR, I think you are misinformed. Above you state that the confederate states formed a legitimate and sovereign government, but this is simply not the case. Article 1 Section 10 specifies why this is not permitted. I do agree that the Revolutionaries from our war of independence would traditionally be considered rebels or terrorists, and England considers this to be the case. We only justify their actions due to the outcome, not as a matter of the actions committed. The confederacy wasn't without their merit but don't dress them up as something they weren't and disingenuously suggest that Northern actions were unprovoked governmental tyranny.
4/11/2010 8:31:12 PM
So you agree with Roland Martin, that Farmer Joe who picked up his musket rallying to the local county militia to fight invading armies from the norther, irregardless of the legitimacy of the federal forces in their attempt to keep the nation unified and outlaw slavery; these confederate soldiers though are akin to Muslim teorrorists who stuff explosives into their underwear in order to blow up 100 civilians....
4/11/2010 8:36:36 PM
just curious, what terroristic acts did the confederacy take part in? i mean other than allowing their cities to get burned down... oh wait, does this mean we if we burn down Baghdad - Mission Complete?
4/11/2010 8:41:29 PM
^^^Rebellions are never "permitted".The terrorists have a better strategy. More bang for the buck, so to speak.[Edited on April 11, 2010 at 8:42 PM. Reason : .]
4/11/2010 8:41:51 PM
When you say irregardless[sic] of the legitimacy are you implying that I should support the southerners without regard for their lack of legitimacy? I didn't think that you were, but since the Federal government absolutely had legitimacy and contractual justification to keep the nation unified that is all I could imagine you would mean without being entirely off basevolex are you talking to me? because i never made that claim.[Edited on April 11, 2010 at 8:49 PM. Reason : volex]
4/11/2010 8:45:59 PM
lolWell only had Jefferson Davis had read Article 1 Section 10. I could see the conversation like...
4/11/2010 8:48:47 PM
Rednecks and slavery aside, I'd probably favor the Confederacy in regards to the moral high ground. The country was designed as a loosely bound group of states. The states chose to enter into the union, it's only logical that they could remove themselves from it.[Edited on April 11, 2010 at 8:52 PM. Reason : and I see nothing in section 10 that says they can't secede first, then confederate]
4/11/2010 8:50:16 PM
^^So you're saying states should only uphold the constitution when it is convenient for them, while fully expecting the federal government to keep up with their end of the contract? Hardly seems consistent.^Unfortunately there is no formal means for making that transition. I fully agreed to go into my mortgage and receive the benefits that homeownership provides, but I cannot stop paying my dues and just as easily remove myself. It isn't a perfect analogy, but you get my point. It is common place for contracts to be easily entered and not so easily exited, hence why it is a contract. When states decided they wanted to inherit the benefits and safety of nationhood they were in a contract.[Edited on April 11, 2010 at 8:54 PM. Reason : adam]
4/11/2010 8:51:09 PM
I see it more as a "club of states" than a simple business transaction like a mortgage. If you don't like the way the club operates, and you're a founding member, I see no reason why you can't leave the club without threat of execution. Must be one hell of a club.If the confederates had known the expansion and abuses of federal power that were to occur in the coming century they would have turned to suicide bombing as well.[Edited on April 11, 2010 at 8:57 PM. Reason : .]
4/11/2010 8:54:47 PM
smc well they did not, so a preemptive strike based on no traceable history is hardly justification. we should stick to grounds the southern nation actually would have had.per edit: When there is a clause saying that you cannot leave and you have signed into agreement then one cannot exit without permission of the governing body.That isn't to say I agree with full expansion of government power. But call a spade a spade. The confederates were not mere farmers defending their freedoms. The confederacy was started by a large collection of aristocrats who decided they wanted to protect their financial interests.[Edited on April 11, 2010 at 9:02 PM. Reason : edits]
4/11/2010 8:57:32 PM
what exactly makes them terrorists though
4/11/2010 9:00:46 PM
who are you talking to, because i have as of yet to see anyone say they agree they are terrorists
4/11/2010 9:04:16 PM
The north certainly did a fine job of stealing property, killing and raping civilians as a wartime strategy. Any southerner who lived through that must have certainly thought they'd fallen victim to a great satan. Well, any white southerner, haha.
4/11/2010 9:05:32 PM
smc have you entirely snapped? Do you think that southerns were pure moral defenders of liberty who acted with nothing other than their own altruism?Southern activities were not without their indiscretions as well.
4/11/2010 9:09:30 PM
Is it really liberty if you can't leave? I'm sure the fact that much of the war was fought on southern soil ensured the majority of atrocities were committed by the northern armies instead of the reverse.
4/11/2010 9:12:13 PM
4/11/2010 9:15:10 PM
So we're judging a moral conscience based on quantity and geographical circumstance? The fact is that the same atrocities were committed on both sides, meaning there are no innocents in this equation.Regarding their inability to leave, what is your take on people who sign into loans they cannot reasonably afford? Should they be granted easy outs or should they be held to the accountability of their decisions?^Way to exaggerate and extend a comment beyond its clear context. I suppose when there isn't hard rooted fact to support your claim you must resort to such ad hominem. I did not say all southerners were slave-owning aristocrats. My statement was that the war was started by such groups, which is the case for the majority of revolutionary uprisings and is largely indisputable. Simple poor farmers did participate, but largely through manipulations, a need for financial means, and based on propaganda. Muslim terrorist extremist are often recruited the same way. [Edited on April 11, 2010 at 9:20 PM. Reason : added]
4/11/2010 9:17:05 PM
4/11/2010 9:17:47 PM
apparently the people who signed contract with the federal government represented everyone as well hey I just signed you up to pay the mortgage on my house, but since its a contract you can't just walk away
4/11/2010 9:18:25 PM
IRSeriousCat we are straying from the OP and purpose of this thread.Regardless of the plight of the south and the causes of the succession of the southern states...the issue at hand is if Roland Martin is correctConfederate Soldiers (regardless of background, class, # of slaves owned, reason for joining the cause) = Islamic Extremist Terrorist (recklessly and unmercifully committing atrocities against civilian non-combatants as a means of asymmetric warfare for political/religious motives)In my opinion the soldiers of the confederacy were conducting a pretty "conventional" war.[Edited on April 11, 2010 at 9:23 PM. Reason : l]
4/11/2010 9:22:06 PM
...More like your father's elected representatives(a tiny percentage of overall population and whom he may not have voted for or had the opportunity to vote for) signed us all up for the mortgage. [Edited on April 11, 2010 at 9:29 PM. Reason : who or whom, hmmm]
4/11/2010 9:22:08 PM
I always wished Martin would get his own TV show so him and Beck could come up with these retard scenarios until they found true love in one another and the world exploded
4/11/2010 9:26:54 PM
IMHO whenever an issue related to slavery (much like issues regarding drunk driving, illegal drugs, or Jesus) get brought up, some individuals are so blinded by idealistic or a hatred fervor that they can not have a rational discussion on such topics.Roland Smith is one of these individuals. With the issue of the slavery of his ancestors, Roland goes into a mental "bloodlust" where rational argument or thought can not exist. In his mind anyone associated with a system that condoned "slavery" regardless of true connections or alternative rationale, is automatically reduced to the lowest common denominator. This then causes such individuals to receive blanket stereotypes that equate such people to terrorists in his mind. Ironically this pattern of thought is accepted and even published by the media (CNN in this case) since condemning the confederacy is PC, irregardless of how out of sync such condemnations become. On the flip side though if some white author, discussing the actions/history of the Black Panthers, equated these individuals to Islamic terrorists; shit would have absolutely hit the fan.[Edited on April 11, 2010 at 9:31 PM. Reason : l][Edited on April 11, 2010 at 9:31 PM. Reason : l][Edited on April 11, 2010 at 9:32 PM. Reason : l]
4/11/2010 9:30:49 PM
4/11/2010 9:30:55 PM
4/11/2010 9:40:29 PM
^i take it that is your subtle way of saying there is none, which is exactly what I said. Given the agreement to not exit it would seem the only party who crossed a line was those who joined the confederacy.AdditionallyWhen making accusations I understand it is easy to get on a roll and make associations and connections for the group you oppose that you would consider unacceptable when addressing the group you defend. I assure you during the era of the civil war southerners did commit atrocities against united states civilians. Most notably the black segment of the union population. The terror infused campaign and behavior forced upon these citizens of the united states is unacceptable, and is the same sort of terror we're defending against in regards to islamo-terrorist. There is no excuse for glorifying either party.
4/11/2010 9:43:02 PM
The US dropped two atomic bombs on millions of innocent victims in Japan which was the ultimate act of terror and we glorify WWII vets. Why can't we honor Confederate soldiers?
4/11/2010 9:58:01 PM
4/12/2010 12:22:43 PM
When you're firebombing entire cities into ashes with conventional incendiaries, killing millions in an organized genocide, fighting all the way down to the last dozen or so men to hold islands, and some countries have death tolls of 20,000,000...blowing up a city with a nuclear weapon isn't the stretch that it would be in any scenario we've seen in our lifetimes.
4/12/2010 12:54:06 PM
Just trying to keep things in perspective. I don't see anything wrong with remembering WW2 vets on either side just like I don't see anything wrong with remembering Civil War vets on either side. Many were brave men who stood up and fought for what they thought was right. They should be remembered.
4/12/2010 12:58:21 PM
Except according to Roland who says every local yokel with his musket and pitch fork were the islamic terrorists of the 1860's.
4/12/2010 4:51:39 PM
^^Not everyone that fought for the Confederacy supported slavery, not that you're saying they did. Most just didn't want those laws to be made on a federal level, because they knew it would open the flood gates to other federal laws, which of course it did. The civil war caused a lot of unnecessary death and guaranteed over a century of bitterness between races, and regions of the country for that matter.[Edited on April 12, 2010 at 5:24 PM. Reason : ]
4/12/2010 5:23:08 PM
4/12/2010 6:32:48 PM
4/12/2010 6:48:49 PM
HURYou have entirely misrepresented what Roland stated in his article. At no point does Roland make racism a central topic of his piece. The primary focus is on discussing how the supporting comments for islamic extremist and those of the confederacy. Even in the OP you address statements made in the article only by redirecting a question instead of breaking down Roland's point and establishing why his point is untrue. The entire OP is nothing more than tu quoque.Here I'll provide you with the opportunity to address this in a proper fashion
4/12/2010 7:01:20 PM
who here said that the South was "angry with the north for invading them?" No one. That would be what we call a "strawman."moreover, to say that it was just "the South being angry" is a gross misrepresentation of the facts. The South was actually being attacked, for one. Whereas, regardless of what Osama says, the US is NOT attacking Saudi Arabia. Second, the Confederate troops were uniformed troops of a specific nation/state. The Taliban is NOT. Wow, that was fucking hard.]
4/12/2010 7:07:21 PM
4/12/2010 8:02:14 PM
^i hit on that exact notion above.^^
4/12/2010 11:53:45 PM
Taliban not = Terrorists.Unless Evangelist Church ='s Right Wing Terrorist nutjobs like Timothy McVeigh.
4/13/2010 8:04:08 AM
4/13/2010 9:15:03 AM
^^ the taliban comment was directed towards aaronburro since he explicitly stated 1. that the taliban was not a specific nation or state and 2. juxtaposed them to the soldiers of the confederacy. Please follow along.^in this case their = arabs. this was clearly established in the article, comments and many quotes in this thread. Next time practice a little restraint for your sophomoric commentary, lest you desire to present yourself as a fool.
4/13/2010 10:01:30 AM
lol
4/13/2010 10:27:12 AM
4/13/2010 6:15:21 PM
4/13/2010 7:24:22 PM
4/13/2010 7:56:59 PM
4/13/2010 8:20:05 PM