shanek said:
I don't know about the others, but that really wasn't what I was complaining about; I was complaining about your assertion that these actions made the perpetrators widely popular among the people. As I showed by providing more of the historical background behind them, that just wasn't the case.
I took down the photos so that there would be no question of impropriety.
As for the reasons I posted them and even mentioning lynchings, I was attempting to bring some perspective on the issue of freedom in America.
The statements I made about winning votes by posing with corpses was meant to be sarcastic and satirical. I assumed this was self-evident. I still stand by the spirit of my intent, which was to say that our nation has come a long, long way on civil liberties and personal freedoms. In a very positive direction. Yet we still have a long way to go.
Although Wallace had already been elected Governor when he stood on the schoolhouse steps in 1963, he was elected for another three terms afterwards. And he even felt popular enough to run for President. His racial position changed with the popular opinions of the time. A real politician.
My son lives in Alabama. He lives with my first wife's mother most of the time since the schools are better in that town. And she won't allow him to bring home a black friend from school.
This kind of crap bothers me way more than not being allowed to carry a gun on an airplane. While there is racism everywhere, living in the South for five years revealed a rather naked face of racism to me I have not seen elsewhere. But I also met many a Southerner who was embarassed by all of it.
Despite how I might sound, I am actually very optimistic and believe time is on our side. Otherwise, I would have to agree with the White Nationalists (and George Wallace) that we would all be better off living separately.
I wish I knew how Ben Franklin would have felt about mass air transportation and guns and hijackings in the modern world. I don't think any of us could really know for sure.
There is nothing to stop a person from placing their gun in their luggage is there?
I think even Franklin would see there is no wisdom in a shootout at 28,000 feet. And there is no way of knowing if he would agree that the potential existence of pistol packing passenger serves as a deterrent to a madman or madmen.
I'm sure there is a quote by somebody a lot better known and a lot smarter than me about the difference between freedom and abusing the right to be a fool to counter Ben, but I will instead say that I see carrying a gun on a plane not so much a freedom or a right but as a privilege.