It can, yes. It really depends on the eye of the beholder. As Chris Rock hilariously said: “If you're black, you got to look at America a little bit different. You got to look at America like the uncle who paid for you to go to college... but who molested you.”Gandalf wrote:My concern is one of hypocrisy for the dialogue surrounding their flag but not the US one. Whether or not God King George Washington wanted slavery to be ongoing is irrelevant. The US presided over slavery until the Civil War forced the issue. It presided over genocidal westward expansion until land ran out. Can it not represent these things as well as the better parts?
And I'm sure the US flag isn't a symbol of freedom, democracy and a better tomorrow for the Cherokee people, or the Pakistani villagers who regularly tune in to the local weather channel for drone attack warnings.
But really, that's another discussion. There's very little room for debate in terms of what the Confederate Flag represents. There's really no valid argument that it represents anything good at all - it is exclusively symbolic of the old Southern slave economy. Whereas, the US flag at least can stand for some good things, like the Apollo program, the great cultural and ethnic diversity of US cities, the great American Universities like Harvard and Princeton, or just the land itself as a tourist destination or place to live/visit. Just like the national flag of any country. Likewise, the British flag could represent a century of brutality and colonialism in Africa, just as it can represent all the great literary, scientific and architectural accomplishments of the British people. I think the difference is one of exclusivity - it's why the Nazi flag, or like, the current black ISIS banner, doesn't have any positive aspects, but most national flags represent nations that have some significant positive qualities, even if it's just as simple as being happy with the place you live.