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I Wtk Who Is Your Hero Or Heroine and Why



Heather Heyer, 32, (left) was protesting hate-fueled white supremacist march in Charlottesville on Saturday when James Alex Fields Jr, (inset, and top right, circled at the protest) of Maumee, Ohio, plowed his vehicle into the crowd killing her and injuring 19 others. Fields Jr, who is being held at the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail, has since been charged with second-degree murder. '[b]She died doing what was right[/b]. My heart is broken, but I am forever proud of her,' Heyer's mother, who has not been named, wrote on a GoFundMe Page set up for the family.
sogdianrock · 61-69, M
hi dunpender


Proof That The Civil War Was Fought Over Slavery
By John A. Tures

As the 150th Anniversary of General Robert E. Lee’s surrender at Appomattox Court House in Virginia rolls around, some armchair historians and pundits are still battling over what the Civil War was about. It’s time to go beyond the rhetoric and read the evidence.

Back in 1997, Virginia Governor George Allen issued a proclamation, written by the Sons of Confederate Veterans, claiming that the Civil War was fought over independence and sovereign rights, but not slavery. The issue echoed just a few years ago when another Virginia Governor, Bob McDonnell, issued a similar proclamation, only adding a mention of slavery after national and state protests.

Conservative commentator Chuck Colson claimed that while slavery was not a good thing, “many Southerners of the time were honestly, conscientiously, and prudentially defending states’ rights.” Others are more convinced that the war was not about “state’s rights,” long used as a rationale by some Southerners for the Civil War. It even led to a sharp exchange at a recent meeting of the Alabama Political Science Association. Some are even concerned that a new U.S. Civil War may be coming back.

There’s actually a way to test whether or not the Civil War was about slavery. It involves reading the words that those Confederate leaders used when they wrote their reasons for leaving the United States. I was able to analyze four secession documents written by states: South Carolina, Mississippi, Georgia and Texas.

I tried to find the words “state’s rights” in any of them. I tried just about every spelling I could: “states rights,” “state rights,” “states’ rights” or “state’s rights.” Not a single secession declaration used these words.

Now the word “rights” can be found 14 times, and “right” appear 32 times in these four state secession declarations. But in reality, when the word “rights” or “right” is used, it tends to be “the right to own slaves.”

In fact, the word “slave” can be found 82 times in these four state declarations. At times, the states refer to themselves as “the slave-holding states.”

Colson also brings up the argument that both sides were sparring over tariffs, but a search of the word “tariff,” or any other spelling (“tarrif,” “tarif,” “tarriff”) cannot be found. Tax is mentioned once, and economics or “economy” are not noted.

This doesn’t mean that all Southerners approved of slavery. On the subject, General Robert E. Lee wrote of slavery as a moral and political evil, and called for its abolition by the Almighty.

best wishes
:)
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Unsatisfiedstace · 51-55, F
Ridiculous...senseless and sad.
People never cease to amaze me.
sogdianrock · 61-69, M
hi Unsatisfiedstace
Nazis have plans and they escalate their hate.
Heather Heyer stood up to say No. That makes her a hero/heroine in my book.
Best wishes
:)
She's a martyr, no less!! 😢 God bless her in heaven and may her soul RIP. 🌸
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sogdianrock · 61-69, M
hi dunpender
Maybe by The South as a moral sticking plaster to obscure slavery.
Not by The North who fought to end Slavery as an abomination.
Lee was at best naive - not the first soldier to be so.
Best wishes
:)
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suburbs · 22-25, F
I hope she knew in those last moments how much she is loved by people all around the world because of her actions. Rest in peace.
Ms. Heyer is this century's Viola Luizzo and her death, sadly may yet wake people up who consider white supremacy "not my problem" the same way Mrs. Luizzo's murder woke many people up during the Civil Rights era. It takes courage to fight back when the foot is on your neck, but it takes a special person to leave comfort and privilege and go stand up for what is right.

https://similarworlds.com/4906436-I-Like-To-Share-Profound-Thoughts-And-Quotes/705707-Were-going-to-change-the-world-this-is-everybodys
sogdianrock · 61-69, M
hi bijouxbroussard
it is true what you say.
I recall the murder of British Labour MP Jo Cox and thought the same things Such bright young women.
It is beholden on us all to do something.
Best wishes
:)
SW-User
She was a very brave young lady.

 
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