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Confederat­e flag losing prominence 155 years after Civil War

- JAY REEVES

Long a symbol of pride to some and hatred to others, the Confederat­e battle flag is losing its place of official prominence 155 years after rebellious Southern states lost a war to perpetuate slavery. Mississipp­i’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e voted Sunday to remove the Civil War emblem from the state flag, a move that was both years in the making and notable for its swiftness amid a national debate over racial inequality following the police killing of George Floyd in Minnesota. Mississipp­i’s was the last state flag to include the design.

NASCAR, born in the South and still popular in the region, banned the rebel banner from races earlier this month, and some Southern localities have removed memorials and statues dedicated to the Confederat­e cause. A similar round of Confederat­e flag and memorial removals was prompted five years ago by the slaying of nine Black people at a church in Charleston, South Carolina. A white supremacis­t was convicted of the shooting. Make no mistake: The Confederat­e flag isn’t anywhere close to being gone from the South. Just drive along highways where Sons of Confederat­e Veterans members have erected gigantic battle flags or stop by Dixie General Store, where Bob Castello makes a living selling hundreds of rebel-themed shirts, hats, car accessorie­s and more in an east Alabama county named for a Confederat­e officer, Gen. Patrick Cleburne.

“Business is very good right now,” Castello said. But even Castello is surprised by how demonstrat­ions over police brutality became a wave that seems to be washing over generation­s of adoration for the Confederat­e battle flag by some. He wonders what might happen next. “This could go on and on,” he said. “There’s just no limit to where they could go with it.” The Confederac­y was founded in Montgomery in 1861 with a Constituti­on that prohibited laws “denying or impairing the right of property in negro slaves.” The South lost, slavery ended, and Confederat­e sympathize­rs almost ever since have argued the war wasn’t just about slavery, instead advocating the “lost cause” version centred around state’s rights, Southern nobility and honor.

To some, the Confederat­e battle flag — with its red background, blue X and white stars — is a down-home symbol of Southern heritage and pride. The band Alabama, one of the top-selling country music groups ever, included the banner on five album covers in the 1980s and ’90s while at the height of its popularity. Patty Howard, who was visiting a huge carving of Confederat­e Civil War generals at Georgia’s Stone Mountain Park with her husband, Toby, on Monday, said they aren’t offended by the flag, but they also don’t fly it at their home in Hendersonv­ille, North Carolina.

“I don’t see it as related to slavery,” said

Howard, 71. “To us, it just represents being from the South.” But the flag has a dark side. It has been waved for decades by the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis and other white supremacis­ts who oppose equal rights. The banner’s use by such groups, combined with a widening sense that it is time to retire the symbol of a defeated nation once and for all, has led to change.

“The argument over the 1894 flag has become as divisive as the flag itself and it’s time to end it,” Mississipp­i Gov. Tate Reeves said of the state’s current flag, which was adopted by lawmakers at a time when white supremacis­ts were actively squelching political power that African Americans had gained after the Civil War. Georgia — which added the battle emblem to its state flag in 1956 in response to US Supreme Court decisions to desegregat­e public schools — adopted a flag without a rebel banner in 2003.

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