Confederate Flag

 Do you find it offensive that the American government put a Judeo-Christian symbol outside of its embassy? Doesn’t that violate the first amendment?

Matthew Bates (on Quora)


“But wait,” your’e thinking, “that’s not a Judeo-Christian symbol. It means something else.”

The rainbow has long been a sign of God’s covenant with humanity, specifically to never flood the Earth again. At least, it’s been a symbol of that to people who believe in the God of the Bible.

The fact that a different group came along and attached a different meaning to the rainbow doesn’t matter. The meaning of a flag, or any other symbol, comes from the person who put the symbol there in the first place. Just because someone may see that rainbow flag and assume that it’s a symbol of God’s promise to Noah doesn’t mean that the person putting that flag up meant for it to mean that.

So it is with the Confederate battle flag. If someone sees it and thinks it’s a symbol of racism, that’s their prerogative. But perhaps the person putting the flag up was doing so for it’s other connotations: rebellion, Southern pride, or just good old fashioned spite.

Honestly, that’s why a lot of people in rural areas, not just in the South, but rural areas all over, put up the Confederate battle flag: just for spite. To spite the urban elites that they feel are trying to force their world view on the provincials.





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