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/confederate/ - Confederate

Southern Nationalism

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File: 1418778075607.jpg (153.64 KB, 785x578, 785:578, e3648.jpg)

 No.13

Nearly 100 years before the concentration camps of Germany and Poland, the Unionists had their own extermination camp in Chicago.

http://joewheeler863scv.tripod.com/80%20Acres%20of%20Hell%20-%20Camp%20Douglas.htm

The Unionists have whitewashed it from history, allowing the land to be commercially developed in an attempt to hide egregious war crimes against Southern Patriots fighting the waves of Lincolnite tyranny.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzCS5PPgfiI

The entire movie is available on DVD. It's not one that is aired on TV often because it makes the Yankees look bad.

Educate yourselves. I write my congressmen at least once a year pushing for legislative action for a formal apology of the camp and to have some kind of monument and museum erected at the cost of the Chicago taxpayers whose ancestors not only condoned the existence of the camp, but some even paid money to throw rotten food and other objects at the prisoners of war.

One last fun fact: any soldiers that stayed loyal to the cause were forced to walk home at the end of the war. They were not compensated. These men were malnourished but told to fuck off and waved away.

At Camp Sumter, we did all but beg for prisoner swaps. We offered to release them if the Unionists would send ships to pick them up. On the other hand, those at Douglas who stayed loyal to the Southern cause had to walk home after the war. They were not compensated or assisted in any way. Just a wave of the hand and a fuck you.

 No.16

They don't teach students about this at all. But they do spend a week watching videos about Camp Sumter.

 No.19

>>16

Of course not. None of the Union commanders of the camp were ever punished. Some even went on to have successful careers in government and military.

>On December 5, 1864, prisoners from Confederate General John Bell Hood's army, which had been shattered at the Battle of Franklin and the Battle of Nashville, began to arrive at Camp Douglas.[204] These "weak and destitute" prisoners[205] were made to undress and stand outside for a long period of time in ice and snow while guards robbed them of any valuables.

 No.20

You will also never hear a word about Elmira Prison where people could pay to watch the captives walk around the camp. Or Point Lookout.

Fort Delaware was a bit different, but it was often the landing spot of officers who enjoyed special privileges while their enlisted men struggled to stay healthy.

 No.21

>>19
I noticed the union whitewashing back in 8th grade, but back then i didn't know what to make of it. I think what their goal is is to destroy any nationalistic urge that might emerge in their minds before they are old enough to really think.

 No.28

File: 1418788573991.jpg (861.83 KB, 2027x3456, 2027:3456, Andersonvillesurvivor.jpg)

Pic related, it's a unionist from Andersonville.

Lets not act like we didn't kill 13,000/45,000 admitted in Andersonville. Camp Douglas was definitely bad, but Andersonville was worse.

The Union got a trial against the Andersonville administrators, while we got jack shit from Elmira and Camp Douglas. It would have been nice to get some condolences.

To the victors go the spoils…

 No.29

>>28

It wasn't that bad. The death percentage at Andersonville was only a few points higher than at Elmira (I think 29% to 25%). Now, consider that the North had virtually infinite resources while we had to scrap by with whatever we could get.

And there's no concrete evidence that the individual in your picture was at Andersonville. How can you verify that he was at the camp? For all you know, that's a Confederate prisoner photographed for propaganda purposes or it was a Union prisoner at another camp. It's also impossible to tell if the individual in the picture is even alive, and if he is dead, how did he die? Illness or maltreatment or a combination of both?

Henry Wirz was a patsy.

 No.42

This is awful, partly due to what they did and partly that the nation will never hear about it. There will be nothing taught on it, scrapped in favor of more teaching about slavery, there will be no talking about it without looking like a despised, racist redneck and there will be no mentioning it to anyone that it would have an effect on.

 No.382

>>13

Care to explain why the confederate government refused to authorize prisoner swaps because the union wanted their black soldiers back as well and didn't want them shot immediately upon capture or reenslaved?




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