Despite recent events and public outrage, some NASCAR fans are refusing to take down their Confederate flags that they fly at races.
Here is more from Yahoo!:
”They’d have to come and get it,” Rebenstorf said Saturday, pointing out that his American flag purposely flies a few inches higher than the rest.
Rebenstorf and others staunchly defended their Confederate flags at NASCAR’s first race in the South since the racing series and its tracks urged fans to no longer wave the banner. Dozens were scattered throughout the vast infield all weekend leading to Sunday’s race.
”It kills me that NASCAR is jumping on the bandwagon,” said 55-year-old Paul Stevens of nearby Port Orange. ”They should just let it pass, let everything die down. But NASCAR is too quick to try to be politically correct like everybody else.”
NASCAR took a stance on the Confederate flag after last month’s South Carolina church massacre. It backed Gov. Nikki Haley’s call to remove it from the Statehouse grounds and noted it doesn’t allow the flag on anything it sanctions. The series stopped short of banning fans from displaying the flag at its events, but Daytona and 29 other tracks asked fans to refrain from flying them.
Not everyone obliged. Daytona also offered to exchange Confederate flags for American flags this weekend, and track officials said a few made the swap Sunday morning.
”I think the voluntary exchange program for us right now was appropriate with the limited window that we had coming into this event weekend,” track president Joie Chitwood said. ”And more importantly, I think it’s important to trust our fans, asking our fans to display a flag that we should all be proud of. Everybody should be proud of the American flag.”
I find it very interesting that folks defending the flag continue to downplay the significance of what the flag stands for and what it doesn’t stand for.
Larry Reeves of Jacksonville Beach has a tattered Confederate flag on top of his motorhome. He initially thought NASCAR was banning the banner and didn’t display it this week. But once he saw some flying around him and asked a few questions, he realized it was voluntary and quickly sent his back up the pole.
”It’s just a Southern pride thing,” the 66-year-old Reeves said. ”It’s nothing racist or anything. I’ve been doing this for 30 years. My family is from Alabama and we’ve been going to Talladega forever. It isn’t a Confederate thing so much as it is a NASCAR thing. That’s why I fly it.”
Like others at Daytona, Reeves believes the flag flap is much ado about nothing.
”It’s not a big deal one way or the other,” Reeves said. ”If I can’t fly it, I won’t. But if I don’t have to take it down, I’m just going to leave it up.”
”The Confederate flag has absolutely nothing to do with slavery. It has nothing to do with divisiveness. It has nothing to do with any of that,” Rebenstorf said, pausing for a few minutes to pull off his floppy hat, stand at attention and salute during the national anthem Saturday. ”It was just a battle banner until the Ku Klux Klan draped it around themselves. Now, all of a sudden, it represents slavery and that’s not at all true.”
Here’s the point you are absolutely missing Mr. Rebenstorf. An ENTIRE race of people not only are offended by what the Confederate flag stands for (whether you want to acknowledge that or not), but they fear and don’t feel welcome by anyone who flies this flag.
Downplaying the significance of the flag in your mind will not change people’s opinions or views of the flag. In their minds the flag will always represent a symbol from a very violent point in our country’s history that was not kind to African Americans.
Maybe it’s because you didn’t grow up black and therefore don’t understand what is like to like to live in fear because of the color of your skin, or just want to remain ignorant of the facts so you can continue to fly your stupid flag. Regardless, I wish people would stop trying to downplay the entire situation when it comes to the Confederate Flag.