Canadian Truckers Convoy 2022 - The Leaf calls you a Nazi as he gasses you

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I can't think of any realistic reason (except the bullshit media narrative) for there to ever be CSA flags in fucking Canada of all places. I mean, I've seen a ton in upstate New York because actual human beings live there, but Canada?
 
I had one on my wall as a kid on account of I really liked Pantera, and Dimebag had a Confederate flag guitar. I didn't really know about the American Civil War all that much; I just liked Pantera
Ok, I can buy that. I meant more for political purposes. What was Canada even doing during the 1860s?
 
I had one on my wall as a kid on account of I really liked Pantera, and Dimebag had a Confederate flag guitar. I didn't really know about the American Civil War all that much; I just liked Pantera
I remember them flying at a Lynrd Skynrd concert years ago and I didn't think of it as anything other than pride in the South. To be honest, I'm not even convinced today that it's a racist flag. There are certainly people who fly it that aren't racist.

EDIT: If we're talking music, btw, I just posted this in the supply chain thread but as I've just found out Corb Lund is Canadian it might be better here:
 
I can't think of any realistic reason (except the bullshit media narrative) for there to ever be CSA flags in fucking Canada of all places.
In some of the more rural parts of both Canada and the northeastern US, people identity the Confederate flag in their minds as being 'country' and representative of living a rural lifestyle and they're more than happy to wave it. It has nothing to do with race for them. IIRC some Canadian military formations liked to associate themselves with the flag back in the 80s and 90s.
 
I can't think of any realistic reason (except the bullshit media narrative) for there to ever be CSA flags in fucking Canada of all places. I mean, I've seen a ton in upstate New York because actual human beings live there, but Canada?
IMO, the Confederate Battleflag has been pretty unfairly besmirched. It was the Army flag for a defeated country and after the Civil War it was less about "muh slavery" and more about a statement of saying "we will still resist".

In its modern context it was a combination regional heritage and resistance to centralized authority (i.e, the Feds). The idea that it means anything specifically racist or revolutionary has only cropped up in the last few years after the Charlottesville Riot.

Flying it at a "Fuck Trudeau, fuck national mandates" rally is entirely appropriate, though I do agree its probably an agent provocateur in this case. The fact the Stars and Bars makes all the right people fly into a seething rage however kinda makes me want to get one.
 
In some of the more rural parts of both Canada and the northeastern US, people identity the Confederate flag in their minds as being 'country' and representative of living a rural lifestyle and they're more than happy to wave it. It has nothing to do with race for them. IIRC some Canadian military formations liked to associate themselves with the flag back in the 80s and 90s.
I know that about the US. PL: im a native New Yorker to my great shame and I know why a lot in the NE fly it. It just baffles me that Canadians do too.
 
Ok, I can buy that. I meant more for political purposes. What was Canada even doing during the 1860s?
Giving refuge to traitors like Clement Vallandingham (although tbf really it was the US government that exiled him and asked Canada to take him, the leafs said yeah sure)

Canada was a free for all for Confederate agents and Copperhead traitors to plot against the United States during the war
 
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got the photo if anyone cares 4BF7D363-DD45-4057-9D6A-3AC004952CA5.jpeg
 
Such a traitor that he won his election in absentia because of the tyrant in the White House.
Don't make us march to the sea again, Johnny Reb.

He also got btfo in the Ohio gubernatorial election of 1863 that he ran in from Canada, don't forget that. And he was so exceptional he died from shooting himself in the stomach, in court, trying to show how his client couldn't possibly have shot someone in a barroom brawl. What an hero, let's just say he would have had his own megathread in anh for sure
 
I can't think of any realistic reason (except the bullshit media narrative) for there to ever be CSA flags in fucking Canada of all places. I mean, I've seen a ton in upstate New York because actual human beings live there, but Canada?
Ok, I can buy that. I meant more for political purposes. What was Canada even doing during the 1860s?
Proto-Canada (because this was shortly before confederation and dominion status etc.) was actually pretty involved in the US Civil War, at least for a party not officially in the war, and proto-Canada sided with the Confederacy. I think the main reason was basically just that the British Empire wanted the USA to split in two, as a divide and conquer tactic. In terms of proto-Canadian involvement, it was both on land and at sea. Some CSA ships were allowed to conduct raids out of Eastern Canadian ports, using them to restock and avoid Union vessels, and there were also land raids launched out of Central Canada. See:

This is very much a little known fact even within Canada, because the Canadian neolib elite find it deeply embarrassing. Proto-Canada's allegiance to the CSA seems to have gone beyond mere geopolitical jockeying, however. Canada's most important founding father, Sir John A. MacDonald (whose statues have been getting torn down due to cultural revolution, as of late), is said to have so named Canada's confederation as an homage to the CSA, out of his deep admiration for the Confederacy. Additionally, I have heard it said that he partly modelled Canada's division of powers on the CSA's system. Canada indeed has more of what Americans would call a "states' rights" ethos than the United States.
 
It just baffles me that Canadians do too.
Canada's identity is "not America," and Confederate stuff is a low-class version of that. Nobody thought of those symbols as race signaling until recently. To people whose minds live outside the bluecheck bubble, a Confederate flag still means Fuck you, the Man.
 
IMO, the Confederate Battleflag has been pretty unfairly besmirched. It was the Army flag for a defeated country and after the Civil War it was less about "muh slavery" and more about a statement of saying "we will still resist".

In its modern context it was a combination regional heritage and resistance to centralized authority (i.e, the Feds). The idea that it means anything specifically racist or revolutionary has only cropped up in the last few years after the Charlottesville Riot.

Flying it at a "Fuck Trudeau, fuck national mandates" rally is entirely appropriate, though I do agree its probably an agent provocateur in this case. The fact the Stars and Bars makes all the right people fly into a seething rage however kinda makes me want to get one.
Just going to leave this here, don't mind me...
hot_confederates.jpg
 
Proto-Canada (because this was shortly before confederation and dominion status etc.) was actually pretty involved in the US Civil War, at least for a party not officially in the war, and proto-Canada sided with the Confederacy. I think the main reason was basically just that the British Empire wanted the USA to split in two, as a divide and conquer tactic. In terms of proto-Canadian involvement, it was both on land and at sea. Some CSA ships were allowed to conduct raids out of Eastern Canadian ports, using them to restock and avoid Union vessels, and there were also land raids launched out of Central Canada. See:

This is very much a little known fact even within Canada, because the Canadian neolib elite find it deeply embarrassing. Proto-Canada's allegiance to the CSA seems to have gone beyond mere geopolitical jockeying, however. Canada's most important founding father, Sir John A. MacDonald (whose statues have been getting torn down due to cultural revolution, as of late), is said to have so named Canada's confederation as an homage to the CSA, out of his deep admiration for the Confederacy. Additionally, I have heard it said that he partly modelled Canada's division of powers on the CSA's system. Canada indeed has more of what Americans would call a "states' rights" ethos than the United States.
The British elite were butthurt over their former colony succeeding, they felt a kinship to the planter aristocracy of the South, but most of all they feared the rise of the USA as a rival that would soon surpass the UK in wealth and power despite being made up of low class scum always braying about freedumb. They saw the war as a chance for the USA to be knocked down a peg and become a less serious future threat to British commercial and military hegemony. But Albert and to a lesser degree Victoria liked the north, both hated slavery, and both wanted the UK to be strictly neutral. Without that Palmerston probably would have lended the South the Royal Navy to fuck over the North.
 
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