hands11 wrote:Gotta love this country.
Things might not happen when people want, but they do eventually happen.
If people had pushed to hard for the Confederate Flag to come down to soon, it wouldn't have happened and it would have only build more opposition.
Some things just take time. The old need to die off with their old ways. Change is like dripping water. Eventually it finds a way to slowly chip away at the old ridge establishment.
Then the timing becomes right and change happens.
The Confederate Flag is not Southern heritage. Southern heritage is hospitality, a friendly hey yall, fried chicken, BBQ, greens, corn bread, yams, stopping to help a stranger, sweet tea and loving God, they neighbor and country.
I am proud of this country and Proud to be an American. I didn't feel that way during the Bush years but I do again.
That flag really does belong in museum.
And ... great to see we are finally taking care of our veterans better their the VA.
Hello Hands. The old ways are certainly dying. Just as the old Roman ways died and were replaced with "Bread and Circus" , thus condemning that civilization to defeat, humiliation and poverty. We are, for all intents and purposes, a bankrupt nation, that won't enforce our borders, spends well beyond our means, and is no longer a nation of laws. It's not difficult to understand why the sale of firearms continues at a record pace. We can deceive ourselves, brainwash our kids into thinking this will work (when history and mathematics prove it can't) but the piper will eventually be paid and reality will intervene to humble a once great nation.
"Bread and circuses" (or bread and games; from Latin: panem et circenses) is metonymic for a superficial means of appeasement. In the case of politics, the phrase is used to describe the generation of public approval, not through exemplary or excellent public service or public policy, but through diversion; distraction; or the mere satisfaction of the immediate, shallow requirements of a populace,[1] as an offered "palliative." Its originator, Juvenal, used the phrase to decry the selfishness of common people and their neglect of wider concerns.[2][3][4] The phrase also implies the erosion or ignorance of civic duty amongst the concerns of the commoner.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bread_and_circuses