NOVANEWS
by Jim W. Dean
Over the next four years Americans will be able to remember and teach our children the tragic events of the War Between the States, the War of Southern Independence, or Civil War as it is called. Southerners don’t like the term civil war as they were not attempting to take over the country or DC in 1861 any more than George Washington and the Continental Army sought to take over England in the 1770′s. They were seceding, physically, politically, and legally, as I will have Thomas Jefferson kindly review with us in a few minutes.
The Sons of Confederate Veterans are heading up most of the Sesqui events in their respective states. This weekend I am off to Montgomery for the parade and reenactment of Jefferson Davis’ inauguration at the Alabama capitol. BBC international radio is coming in, along with a Swiss TV station doing a documentary. Anyone in driving distance is welcome to attend this Saturday the 19th…parade at 11:00am and the capitol event at noon.
Some might ask why are were going to cover this extensively on Veterans Today. Good question.
Southerners have fought in disproportionate numbers in all of America’s wars, at times up to 70% of the ranks. Confederates were officially made American veterans by Act of Congress in the 1958, and their headstones come from the VA.
There are American soldiers on the various front lines now whose families at home are being smeared as the offspring of traitors, by ignorant and malicious individuals and groups like the NAACP and SPLC and their minions. Have you ever heard of a Confederate heritage club in a public high school? No, despite so-called multiculturalism, they are not allowed. When it comes to abuse of history, carjacking it for political or ideological purposes, our Civil War is a target rich environment.
The United Confederate Veterans passed their flag to the Sons of Confederate Veterans with the pledge to defend the good name of the Confederate soldier. Sadly, the United States is the only country where it has to be defended. Military academies all over the world routinely study the campaigns of the South’s great generals in their doomed struggle. All of Europe was aghast at the Northern scorched earth war of war on civilians, shocked that such warfare would be conducted in America, of all places.
The modern concept of total war, where civilians and their property were deemed fair game for destruction, is a dark stain on American history as it was copied for a hundred years at horrendous cost in innocent lives. There is correspondence between Generals Grant and Sherman where they discuss and agree that should the North lose the war they would be justly hanged as war criminals.
Harry Truman – WWI
Gen. Nathan Bedfort Forrest, III
And lastly, sixty to eighty million Americans are Confederate descendants. Harry Truman was a grandson. Few know that General Nathan Bedford Forrest, III died over the skies of German in 1943 during a bombing mission. His body was recovered and is buried in Arlington. Sgt. Alvin York, WWI medal of honor recipient had his grandfather dragged to death behind a horse down a mountainside, by Yankee sympathizers.
But this does not prevent a never ending supply of airheads referring to Confederates as Nazis when it suites them, the result of a long running dumbing down of America, and just plain old fashioned hatred by some.
Sgt. Alvin York
Gen. George S. Patton
One real bad bunch was General George Patton’s family. Great uncle Waller Patton died in Pickett’s charge at Gettysburg. Grandfather Col. George S. Patton was killed at the battle of Opequon (Winchester, VA). Uncles John M. and Isaac Patton were Confederate Colonels. George Patton’s father knew Gen. John Singleton Mosby the cavalryman who fought under J.E.B. Stuart.
Jim Dean
And worst of all that rebel Jim Dean…he comes from the Culpepper bunch in Co. C, 30th Alabama Infantry, every male relative between 15 and 45…Vicksburg, Look Out Mountain, Resaca, and Battle of Atlanta. Yup. You can just look in the eyes of all the above and just tell the whole bunch are traitors. Patton and Jim Dean’s ancestors fought in the Rev War, too, where all that secessionist bad blood came from.
Civil war veteran soldier footage, captured between 1913 and 1938
“I remember hearing the chargers braying on the left as the men went up the slope, the Southerners among them yip-yipping their rebel yells…Meissner’s company went up the hill with 240 men and came back with 2″… “Bubba Yates, Ole ‘Bama ’45 and a divinity student, spent his last night of combat on the forward slope of Half Moon (Okinawa). He fired his BAR bursts at the enemy till dawn. Six Nip bodies were found around him. He was bleeding from four gunshot wounds; corpsman carried him back to a field hospital. All the way he muttered, “Vicksburg, Vicksburg”… from Goodbye Darkness, William Manchester, WWII Marine…1979, (Manchester was platoon leader)
What Manchester did not realize is that when Sons of Confederate Veterans go into battle, there are ghosts that go with them. Vicksburg, Mississippi suffered a long siege and bombardment from Grant’s legions while awaiting reinforcements which never came…finally surrendering on July 4th, 1863 just as Gettysburg was winding down. The city did not celebrate July 4th for the next 80 years.
Now on to our mini history lesson today on the rebel traitor myth. All West Point serving officers from the period had used the same constitutional law text book by scholar William Rawle, where they were taught all states having the right to secede.
“The States, then, may wholly withdraw from the Union, but while they continue, they must retain the character of representative republics…If a majority of the people deliberately and peaceably resolve to relinquish the republican form of government, they cease to be members of the Union…the secession of as state from the Union depends on the will of the people if such state.”…William Rawle, from A View of the Constitution, Chapter XXXII, Of the Permanence of the Union. http://www.constitution.org/wr/rawle_32.htm











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