The South shall Rise again :marseysaluteconfederacy:

https://x.com/SecDef/status/1889119135759585562

https://i.rdrama.net/images/1739271564Mqf_KjD_ZWKPoA.webp

https://i.rdrama.net/images/1739271564ftvpQF6wKmYLGQ.webp

:#platysalute:

Oh well. It'll trigger reddit BLM types anyway.

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They should change it to Fort Benedict Arnold, because at least he was loyal in the end, unlike Bragg.

D E A T H

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  • Grue : Honoring a libertarian male feminist would anger the libs greatly :marseyagree:

If you want loyal to bitter end. Edmund Ruffin

In the three decades before the American Civil War he published polemics in support of states' rights and the protection of chattel slavery, earning notoriety as one of the so-called Fire-Eaters. Ruffin was present at the Battle of Fort Sumter in April 1861 and fired one cannon shot at the fort. This gave rise to the legend that Ruffin fired the first shot of the Civil War. Ruffin did enlist as a Confederate soldier despite his advanced age. When the war ended in defeat in 1865, he committed suicide rather than accept what he called "Yankee rule."

Or States Rights Gist becouse it would be funny

States Rights Gist (September 3, 1831 – November 30, 1864) was a lawyer and militia general in South Carolina, and later a Confederate Army brigadier general during the American Civil War. He gained prominence during the war but was killed at the Battle of Franklin on November 30, 1864. Gist was named after the Southern states' rights doctrine of nullification, reflecting the political beliefs of his father, Nathaniel Gist, a follower of John C. Calhoun.

Or James H. Hammond to own the libs

James Henry Hammond (November 15, 1807 – November 13, 1864) was an American attorney, politician, and planter. He served as a United States representative from 1835 to 1836, the 60th Governor of South Carolina from 1842 to 1844, and a United States senator from 1857 to 1860. An enslaver, Hammond was one of the most ardent supporters of slavery in the years before the American Civil War

Acquiring property through marriage, Hammond ultimately owned 22 square miles, several plantations and houses, and enslaved more than 300 people.[1][2] Through his wife's family, he was a brother-in-law of Wade Hampton II and uncle to his children, including Wade Hampton III. When the senior Hampton learned that Hammond had r*ped his four Hampton nieces as teenagers, he made the scandal public. The publicizing of his crimes nearly derailed Hammond's career, but he later was elected to the United States Senate.

Hammond rejected any government regulation of slavery, even in wartime. When the South Carolina government requisitioned 16 of the people Hammond enslaved to improve fortifications for Charleston, he refused, calling it "wrong every way and odious." Also, when a Confederate army officer stopped by to requisition some grain, Hammond tore up the requisition order, tossed it out a window, and wrote about it, that it compensated him too little and that it was like "branding on my forehead: 'Slave'".

He also r*ped one of his slaves. That slave later on had child. Possibly his child. Eventually he ended up raping that girl.

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Eventually he ended up raping that girl.

:marseynerd3:

It was a different slave of the same mother. 12 years old at the time so not much better.

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