Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Was the Confederacy Guilty of Treason?

By Nicholas Stix

Well, that’s certainly the black supremacist view, and black supremacists are our masters, so how could a White possibly challenge them?

In 2002, a AAAA black supremacist “math” professor at the old Southern university Vanderbilt, demanded that the school change the name of a building named after the United Daughters of the Confederacy (AAAA: affirmative action african-American). The fake mathematician, Jonathan Farley, insisted that every supporter of the confederacy was a “traitor” who should have been executed, and his property turned over to blacks.

“In 2002, Vanderbilt University tried to change the name of Confederate Memorial Hall and remove a plaque that honored the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) for contributing to building costs. The UDC was understandably opposed to this, and sued. Jonathan Farley, a black professor of mathematics, responded with a column for a Nashville newspaper claiming that the ‘UDC honors traitors.’ He wrote that ‘every Confederate soldier, by the mores of his age and ours, deserved not a hallowed resting place at the end of his days but a reservation at the end of the gallows,’ and went on to suggest that America’s racial problems are rooted in the fact that ‘the Confederacy was not thoroughly destroyed, its leaders and soldiers executed and their lands given to the landless freed slaves.’…

“Approximately 1.2 million Confederate soldiers survived the war, and so what Prof. Farley called for was nothing less than the extermination of virtually the entire white male population of the South, along with a land distribution program that makes Robert Mugabe look timid. Even Joseph Stalin killed only Polish army officers at Katyn. In his column, Prof. Farley went on to compare Confederate apologists to “Holocaust revisionists,” while at the same time advocating a holocaust of his own. Prof. Farley is a professor of mathematics, so politics and history are not in his areas of expertise — although his faculty web page pictured him next to an image of Che Guevara. During the whole controversy, the university that was once home to the Nashville Agrarians felt no need to apologize to the Confederate descendants whose ancestors the professor thought should have been executed. It consistently defended his right to speak his mind, and never questioned whether a mathematics professor should write about history.” [“Hypocrisy 101,” by Alexander Hart, American Renaissance, November 2005.]

Vanishing American II has a different think on this “treason” issue.

 

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Black math. One, two, three, many.

Get rid of whitey. A minor consideration at one time but a major consideration now. In their minds and in their hearts.