“The Texas state flag is a perfect representation of Texas, in that it looks just like the American flag without all the other states.”

Before anybody jumps to the conclusion that I believe the south should secede, I want to state categorically that this is not the point of view from where I am coming.

An interesting aspect of this interview is that the book’s author does not believe that Texas would even secede with the rest of the South. That Texas, in fact, is not even a Southern state. This is something I have actually said myself whenever one of my cousins or distant high school classmates begins going on about Texas seceding… never would do it. Too wrapped up in the status quo of the USA.

Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised that cultural friction between the North and South persists to this day. After all, we fought an incredibly brutal, ugly Civil War. The battlelines that were drawn then continued to divide us through the Reconstruction period and well into the middle of the 20th century, as federal troops were once again deployed to enforce the civil rights acts.

According to Chuck Thompson, a veteran travel writer who toured the American South, a degree of mutual enmity between Northerners and Southerners continues to be a source of cultural tension and political gridlock. We remain divided even as we have grown to become the world’s superpower. In his new book, Better Off Without ‘Em: A Northern Manifesto for Southern Secession, Thompson argues that it may be time for a divorce – to shake hands and go our separate ways.

via Should the South secede? – Salon.com.

Keith "Maggie" Brown Avatar

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