Big Orange wrote:When I visited the hospital a couple of days ago to get my leg plaster changed, I struck up a conversation with the male nurse who was looking at my mending ankle and putting on the new caste. He told me he was a war reenactor as a US Army paratrooper and turned up in Band of Brothers and various history documentary reconstructions as an extra.
And of course he is a Civil War reenactor playing (you guessed it) a Confederate. Despite being British and Jewish, he dislikes the Union and made a feeble excuse about the Deep South's slavery by mentioning that Abraham Lincoln had slave holding relatives, while the Union allowed indentured servants (which sounds more like a harsher form of community service instead of owning humans as livestock for an indefinite amount of time in most cases).
He seemed a nice guy and was a NHS employer that helped people, but his opinions seemed at odds with his actions (but he hates the Wonder Chimp, who will be booted out any month now, so he's not completely out of it).
It's the kewl uniform, nothing more.
Kanastrous wrote:I have friends who were into Civil War re-enacting, Confederate artillery in Southern California.
It's pretty simple; some people like the romanticizable bits of the Confederacy (Southern Honor, mint juleps, colonial architecture, gingham dresses) and so as to not feel bad about wearing gray, they dimly arm's-length rationalize away the unromanticizable stuff (Southern Honor, racism, mosquitoes, slavery, the Klan).
While I don't have much patience for it, I can understand why many southerners would want to paint their ancestors in a more favorable light. Why on earth people with no family ties whatsoever to the CSA would jerk off over the Confederacy is beyond me.
Sidewinder wrote:
By "Southern honor," are you referring to the racists' tendency to lynch any and all black men who even look at a white woman in a "suggestive" way?
It's more than that. Many upper-class rebels fancied themselves as the descendants of the Cavaliers from the English Civil War, complete with dueling, plumes in their hats, and all that other horseshit. In a way they were right: Like the Cavaliers, they got their asses kicked by an enemy who were more interested in modern, practical uses of force than trying to recreate fictional heroics described by bad novelists like Walter Scott. The difference is, Cromwell had the good sense to chop Charles I's head off, while Jefferson Davis only did a little jail time.
PeZook wrote:I think that this is usually the bit that gets ignored.
I refer you to people who claim warfare was more honorable in the distant past than now. Because, ya know - knights!
Knight = chivalry = honor = cool. The bits with peasants being forcibly drafted into armies and ground beneath the hooves or charging knights, and burning villages and town and mass rapes don't matter.
My ancestors must have been among the "peasants" since they were enlisted men, and everyone else in the Confederate Army was at least a major, to hear it from CSA fanwhores.