"The Ghosts of Bobby Lee"

Below is an excerpt from Ta-Nehisi Coates' latest effort on The Atlantic. Subject? The Confederacy and how the issue went slightly beyond states' rights Suggested Reading Were Black Folks Ever Woke, Answered Tyler Perry Accuser Christian Keyes Breaks His Silence, But It’s Not What You Think Why Beyoncรฉโ€™s Bag Placement Crossed a Southern American Superstition…

Below is an excerpt from Ta-Nehisi Coates' latest effort on The Atlantic. Subject? The Confederacy and how the issue went slightly beyond states' rights

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Why Black-Owned Businesses Face Bigger Risks in a Global Trade War
Why Black-Owned Businesses Face Bigger Risks in a Global Trade War

Ken Burns' Civil War documentary makes note of the fact that General Lee was opposed to slavery. I basically took that as true, untilโ€”in all honestyโ€”some of my commenters informed me that it, in fact, was not. One of the saddest, and yet telling, aspects of the War, for me personally, is that on the twoย occasionsย when Confederate troops headed North, they kidnapped free blacks and sold them into slavery. Ditto for black soldiers who were captured and "lucky" enough not to be killed.ย Anyway, if you have a moment check out this lecture a reader was kind enough to send to me. At about the 55:00 mark, Elizabeth Brown Pryor talks about Lee's relationship to slavery, and more interestingly, how the myth that he was somehow anti-slavery came to be.

It was sad to hear frankly. If the war actually weren't about slavery, I think all our lives would be a lot easier. But as I thought on it, my sadness was stupid. What undergirds all of this alleged honoring of the Confederacy, is a kind of ancestor-worship that isn't. The Lost Cause is necromancyโ€”it summons the dead and enslaves them to the need of their vainglorious, self-styled descendants. Its greatest crime is how it denies, even in death, the humanity of the very people it claims to venerate. This isn't about "honoring" the pastโ€”it's about an inability to cope with the present.

Continue reading at The Atlantic

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