• @thesporkeffect
    link
    English
    533 months ago

    Those middle 2 flags are, purely from an aesthetic/design point of view, somewhere between amateur hour and war crime.

    • @Benjaben
      link
      English
      10
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      I felt the same, just flat out terrible looking. Just completely foolish, juvenile.

      But an almost instant second thought was about how impossible it’d be, in that time and place especially, to keep those big white…stretches…continuing to look anything close to white. Civil War being the messy thing it was, Confederacy in particular not exactly known for their sharp discipline and order, lol…

      Bet those things* looked like total ass, flown.

      Almost makes for a funny metaphor, somewhere. Can’t quite get there myself, but something to do with their big, badly designed white spaces getting browner all the time 🤷‍♂️

      • andrew_bidlaw
        link
        fedilink
        English
        43 months ago

        The flag of ‘We drove a full cart of toilet paper in the March of 2020’.

    • @dohpaz42
      link
      English
      83 months ago

      Imma go with lazy and talentless.

    • @mkwt
      link
      English
      43 months ago

      And like the text says they really were useless in a practical sense because of the white surrender-and-truce flag tradition.

  • @Zachariah
    link
    English
    263 months ago

    The Confederacy was, purely from an ethics/history point of view, somewhere between amateur hour and war crime.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    153 months ago

    CGPGrey has a video on this. He also points out the battle flag had a different color blue than the lags used today, so the Confederate flag everyone uses was never a flag if you include color accuracy.

  • @saltesc
    link
    English
    14
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    Funnily enough, this flag …

    …is used by anti-government “cookers” and sovereign citizens.

    Why? Dunno. It’s for a ship registered as part of the Australian merchant navy. Cargo ships, cruise liners, etc.

    • @PugJesusOPM
      link
      English
      123 months ago

      Sovereign citizens have a weird obsession with archaic naval law (or their envisioning of it)

      • @FireTower
        link
        English
        53 months ago

        Admiralty law, and it stems from it being one the few areas of jurisdictions covered by federal courts per Art 3 sec 2 of the US Constitution.

    • @Donkter
      link
      English
      93 months ago

      Probably because sovereign citizens beliefs are defined by believing the very first piece of info they come across and then blocking out all other conflicting info for the rest of their life.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    103 months ago

    Oh man, all the history buffs in my neighborhood with this thing in their yard are going to be so dissapointed!

  • @acosmichippo
    link
    English
    23 months ago

    I’m don’t think that last part is true. My understanding is the Battle Flag was actually popular during the civil war, that’s why it was made part of the national flag design.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      I linked it in another comment, but it depends on how pedantic you are. This video does agree the battle flag had growing popularity, but it isn’t technically the same as the currently used Confederate flag (nor was the Navy Jack). The battle flag was more square and not as wide, the Navy Jack had a different blue.

      Though if you say “close enough” I wouldn’t fight it.

      Edit on second read through, your statement was only on the battle flags popularity affecting the fi al design, which does make your statement correct.

  • @shalafi
    link
    English
    -8
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    represented the superiority of the white race

    …sounds like some childish, revisionist bullshit.

    so niche… only became popular…

    I’m listening, but I need some sources on that.

    Anyway, I’ve always said, if you want to fly your heritage accurately, why not the stars and bars?

    And yes, it’s now a racist symbol. A few decades back, no one gave a shit. I can’t say it’s exactly been “hijacked”, but kinda? In any case, as of 2024, if you’re sporting that shit, you want me to know where you stand. And I know exactly where you stand.

    EDIT: One other thing I think sucks about the battle flag, we lost it in Pensacola. We were known as the City of Five Flags owing to who ruled us in the past. Spanish, French, British, Confederates and the United States. Had to ditch the Confederate flag because the racists own it now. Sucks.