No, you're clearly ignorant of what Southerners actually believe it to signify today.
Not at all. I'm aware of what "Southerners" - black and white, supremacists and racists and others, think about it. I have to ask again: did you actually read that wikipedia article you linked?
You're stuck in the regionally obsolete meaning of the Civil War.
What's your regionally-approved interpretation of the American Civil War, Vociferous? Do tell.
What do you imagine you're correcting here?
Nobody. I was agreeing with you that the United States does not use the Confederate flag as a symbol of the nation. A civil war was fought. The Confederates lost.
And that's why you're completely ignorant of why a black man would fly a Confederate flag. You believe all these leftist dog whistle myths.
Thanks for letting me know what I believe, Vociferous! Your insight into my knowledge and beliefs is amazing. You know me better than I know myself.
In a national survey in 2015 across all races,
57% of Americans had the opinion that the Confederate flag represented Southern pride rather than racism. A similar poll in 2000 had a nearly identical result of 59%. However, poll results from only the South yielded a completely different result:
75% of Southern whites described the flag as a symbol of pride. Conversely, 75% of
Southern blacks said the flag symbolized racism.
So even 25% of Southern blacks didn't see the Confederate flag as a symbol of racism. Try reading more than what just confirms your bias.
It's telling that you select that one poll out of the four or five mentioned in that article you linked to.
Of course, you didn't get any information on "Southern blacks" from that poll, because it doesn't break down the data between "Southern" states and others.
The question asked was "Do you, yourself, see the Confederate flag more as a symbol of Southern pride or more as a symbol of racism?"
The black responses to that question were that
72% said it was a symbol of racism,
17% said it was a symbol of Southern pride,
7% said it was both,
4% said neither and
1% had no opinion.
In other words, over three times as many black people viewed the flag as a racist symbol as those who viewed it as a symbol of pride.
More telling is an actual poll of "Southern" views, taken in 2000 (see your wikipedia link). In that poll, 75% of black respondents said they viewed the flag as a symbol of racism, while
75% of white respondents said it was a symbol of pride (compared to 66% of white respondents in the national poll).
Now, you mentioned dog whistles, saying that I believe in "leftist dog whistle myths". The polls just mentioned suggest that when white Southerners wave the Confederate flag, 75% believe (if we are to take them at their word) that they are celebrating "Southern pride". On the other hand, when white Southerners wave the flag, 75% of
black Southerners believe that the white people are celebrating racism and white supremacy.
It seems to me that there is a disconnect there, and it is real, not a "leftist dog whistle".
Perhaps you believe that white Southerners are unaware of the racist history of the South. Is that it? Are they innocently waving the flag, obviously to the historical meaning of it? If that's what you're suggesting, then you're agreeing with what I said previously, even though you now describe that as a "leftist dog whistle". And if that's not what you're suggesting, then what? White Southerners wave the flag,
knowing that the message they are sending to black people is one of racism supremacy, but not caring about that one jot?
What are you saying, Vociferous?
It's been a symbol of the South for many generations, where significance has evolved over time. Again, like so many here, you seem completely out of touch with the reality. Just believing leftists because it suits your existing bias.
You briefly connected to reality with the poll you cited, but then you lost it in some fog of "leftist bias" imaginings that you decided to fall back on. It's an interesting kind of double-think.
And I'm not even a Southerner, nor have any affinity for the Confederate flag myself. But freedom of expression (even that of black people) includes things I don't personally favor. I defend the right nonetheless.
When did this become a discussion about freedom of expression? Why are you trying to change the topic?
You do indeed defend the Right, often to the point of inventing your own reality.