Showing posts with label Sons of Confederate Veterans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sons of Confederate Veterans. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

The War For Southern Independence Began Today – 150 years ago.


The War For Southern Independence Began Today – 150 years ago.
Fort Sumter Fired On!  It’s War!

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The predawn darkness of an early spring morning, 150 years ago today, bore witness to the birth of a conflict which would tear this nation apart, bring death and destruction, on a scale never before seen nor even dreamed of in the worst nightmares of the leaders of the two nations who, at this precise moment, committed themselves to a life and death struggle to preserve what each believed was a just cause, a righteous cause, a cause for which Providence had appointed each of them to prosecute and see through to the bitter end.

The result of that conflict finds Southerners, today, brimming with pride while we still wrestle with the sorrow, pain, and tears, that war wrought. 

Even though the South lost the war we still hold those southern cavaliers in honor and awe.  We respect them, not only for their prowess in battle, but because they are our ancestors, our family.  The blood of those “Southern Knights” still flows in our veins to this very day.   

In the early morning darkness of April 12th, 1861, at precisely 4:29 AM, the restless waves of the Atlantic lapped gently and peacefully against the sandy shoreline of Charleston Harbor. 

The first hint of daylight could be seen at the eastern horizon where the demarcation line between sea and sky could just be made out as the upper half took on a lighter hue of velvety purple.  Boats rocked sluggishly in the gently swells as their lines stretched and loosened, stretched and loosened, as the waters surface rose and fell.

An uneasy silence lay like a heavy blanket all along the waterfront and the battery as one of the oldest and most beautiful cities on the continent waited… waited on history.

The long minute hand of the clock in one of the tallest church steeples in the city ratcheted one more notch and then… dropped into it’s notch at the bottom of the clock’s face.

It was 4:30 AM.

For one more second the uneasy silence continued.  Then the Angel of Death spread her wings and leapt silently from her perch to glide quietly over the men huddled in clumps of blue and gray in a semi-circle around that beautiful harbor and charming city.  It would be 4 years before that beautiful Dark Angel regained her perch.

Suddenly, the quiet was ripped apart by the ‘BOOM’ and ‘CRASH’ and ‘WHISTLE’ of no less than 43 big guns placed in a ring around the harbor. 

The hot barrels of those guns were all turned to a single spot just a little darker than the surrounding water.  It was a man-made island near the middle of the harbor upon which a fort had been built to provide protection for the harbor and city of Charleston, South Carolina.  It was Fort Sumter.

The unfinished fort was named for South Carolina Revolutionary War patriot Thomas Sumter.  Eighty-five Union soldiers, and their Commander Major Robert Anderson, held their collective breathes as the cannon balls began their iron hailstorm upon their fortress.  With only ten casement guns on the fort they would return fire only occasionally. 
 

The Boom of the big guns soon became a ROAR, and then a RUMBLE, and finally one long unceasing MOAN of shot and shell as the muzzle flashes of the big guns created a “false dawn” around the harbor and vibrated the cobbles in the streets and rattled the glass in the windows of the gracious homes lining the streets of the old city. 

Smoke from the spent gunpowder would hang low on the water in the early morning dampness.  The stink of the sulfur and saltpeter would burden the air with a rank odor and foul taste.  It was the taste, and odor, of Hell. 

Those guns would continue to lob destruction onto that fort for 34 hours before the order to “Cease Fire” was given. 

The Dogs of War had been loosed, slipping their bonds and snarling into history.

Four years later, 700,000 American men would be dead!  Consumed by the scythe of the Grim Reaper, the constant companion of the Dark Angel.  Their work would become legend. 

Families all over this land would be touched by the agony of that conflict.

The cream of an entire generation of Americans was wiped from the face of the earth.  Gone from this world.  Gone from their families.  Gone from a society, which needed them so much.

Who knows what accomplishments were lost to the shot and shell and cold steel of the bayonet.  How can we know that one of these men could not have advanced medicine to find a cure for the diseases that ravage us today?  How can we know that one of those young men wouldn’t have written the Great American novel, or preached the sermon that would change the lives of murderous convicts, or painted the next Mona Lisa, or become the greatest President to ever lead this nation, and on and on?

We can’t know.  We will never know.  Any chance of that happening died with those men on some bloody battlefield as two great nations, the United States of America and the Confederate States of America, tore each other apart.

The firing on Fort Sumter took place only after numerous warnings for Major Anderson to remove his troops under a flag of truce.  He chose instead, to notify Washington, and was ordered not to give up the fort and, he was told, that Union reinforcements were on the way. 

Before those reinforcements arrived the South’s warning and patience ran out.  Lincoln, himself, denied an audience to a peace delegation sent to him from the Southern Government.  He would not see them, nor hear them.   He would rather, it seems have war.  That is what he got.

Beginning today, and for the next four years, the Sons of Confederate Veterans and many of the southern states of America will memorialize the “War for Southern Independence.” We will attempt to correct much of the revisionist history of the war and we will celebrate the men who went to war wearing the southern gray.

We expect much opposition.  In fact, it has already begun.  But we WILL press forward. 

Over the next four years the American public and, indeed, the world, will be afforded an opportunity to learn the truth behind the war that still stokes bitterness, discord, and even rage in the hearts of Americans -- both North and South.

The scars of that war remain sensitive to the southern people who feel their Confederate ancestors have been maligned by historians with an agenda less about the truth and more about political correctness and politics.

It is time the truth was told – past time – and we intend to tell it over the next four years.

J. D. Longstreet     

Thursday, May 06, 2010

U.S. Marines Reject Recruits with Confederate Flag Tattoos!


U.S. Marines Reject Recruits with Confederate Flag Tattoos!
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"A widely regarded Southern symbol of pride and states' rights is standing in the way of would-be Marines in their quest to serve their country – a Confederate battle flag.

Straight out of high school, one 18-year-old Tennessee man was determined to serve his country as a Marine. His friend said he passed the pre-enlistment tests and physical exams and looked forward with excitement to the day he would ship out to boot camp.

Shortly before he was scheduled to leave Nashville for boot camp, the Marine Corps rejected him.

Now, the young man, who wishes to remain unnamed and declined to be interviewed, has chosen to return to school and is no longer an aspiring Marine.

"I think he just wants to let it go," said former Marine 1st Lt. Gene Andrews, a friend of the man and patriotic Southerner who served in Vietnam from 1968 through 1971. Andrews is a member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, a group of male descendents of Confederate soldiers. He counseled the young man when he decided to become a Marine.

"He had been talking to me, and he was all fired up about joining," he told WND. "He asked my opinion of it, and I just tried to tell him the truth, good points and bad points."

When the young recruit didn't go to boot camp, Andrews learned of his rejection based on his tattoo of the Confederate battle flag on his shoulder."

Read the entire article HERE.
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Below is a statement from former Marine 1st Lt. Gene Andrews, a friend of the man and patriotic Southerner and a member of The Sons of Confederate Veterans:


A Southerner Speaks ... SOURCE

“I have always been proud of my time spent as an officer in the United States Marine Corps. I served in the Republic of Vietnam in 1969 and, while I was certainly no “John Wayne” type, I tried to do my duty to the best of my ability and I did bring all of my platoon out of Vietnam alive.

This past summer, the son of a friend of mine was very ‘gung ho’ about joining the Marines and asked my opinion, which I tried to give as honestly as possible, warts and all. I don’t know if my discussions had any influence on him, but he enlisted, completed all of the pre-enlistment tests and physical exams, and went to all of the pre-enlistment meetings. To say the least, he was very excited about serving his country in the Corps.

Shortly before he left Nashville for boot camp, he was told he could not serve his country because he had a Confederate Battle Flag tattooed on his shoulder in an area that would be completely covered by a t-shirt, and certainly by his uniform.

When informed of this, I went to the local recruiting station that had processed this young man to see if I were getting the entire story. The recruiter, a staff sergeant, told me, “Yes, sir. The Marine Corps considers the Confederate Flag a ‘hate symbol,’ but if the young man in question had a state or U.S. flag tattoo, that would be acceptable.”

I informed the young sergeant that my family had defended the State of Tennessee (also his home state) against a sadistic invasion under that flag and to call our sacred flag of honor a ‘hate symbol was an insult to ALL southerners, but especially to those southerners who had risked or even given their lives in service to the Marine Corps. Southerners had served at Belleau Woods, at Taraw and Iwo Jima, at Inchon and the Chosin Reservoir, and at Khe Sahn and Hue City, but now we are no longer wanted in the politically-correct don’t-offend-any-minorities military? (This was just prior to the Fort Hood massacre)

He was polite, even sympathetic, but said the flag policy was a Marine Corps policy from Headquarters Marine Corps and not a local decision.

After informing the sergeant that it seemed to me that our military was building a mercenary force of illegal aliens while rejecting native-born Americans in order to have a ready force to turn, without question, on American citizens, I asked the sergeant if he had taken out the trash yet. He replied that he hadn’t. I then said, “Please add these to the day’s garbage,” and returned my lieutenant’s bars, my gold and silver Marine Corps emblem from my dress blues, my shooting badges and my Vietnam ribbons.

I, like many of you, have always been told, “Once a Marine, always a Marine,” and “There are no ex-Marines, only former Marines,” but for me that is no longer true.

I was born in the South. I was raised here. I raised my family in the South and some day, God-willing, I hope to be buried in the native soil of our Southern homeland. I have always considered myself a Southerner first, and will remain so, despite any other organization that I may temporarily join.

I will never make a critical remark about a veteran, from any branch of the service, but from now on, I will do everything in my power to discourage any Southern young man, or lady, from becoming a future veteran. I am now an ex-Marine.”

Gene Andrews
ex-Marine,
1st Lieutenant
3rd Marine division
Vietnam
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As a veteran, a member of the American Legion, AND a member of The Sons of Confederate Veterans, I am outraged at this discriminatory policy by the US Marines. All Southerners should be outraged at this treatment of a fine southern young man who had the courage to offer his life in the service of his country in the Marine Corp!.

Look, in my opinion, if America had a “Warrior-Class” it would be, indisputably, the Southern male! The US military cannot afford to spit in the face of so many southern warriors in its ranks today. Add to this the rescinding of the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy to allow homosexuals to serve OPENLY in the US military, and the recruitment is going to drop like a stone.

What is next? You KNOW what’s next…the return of the draft and a mediocre military.

Oh, well. Maybe we can make a deal with Israel to lease the IDF to defend the USA. Do you suppose?

J. D. Longstreet
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