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Miss. Plate Proposal Would Feature Civil War Icon, KKK Leader

Gatorubet

Loathing All Things Georgia
http://www.wdsu.com/news/26821386/detail.html


JACKSON, Miss. -- A fight is brewing in Mississippi over a proposal
to issue specialty license plates honoring Confederate Gen. Nathan
Bedford Forrest, who was an early leader of the Ku Klux Klan.

The Mississippi Division of Sons of Confederate Veterans wants to sponsor
a series of state-issued license plates to mark the 150th anniversary of
the Civil War, which it calls the "War Between the States." The group
proposes a different design each year between now and 2015, with
Forrest slated for 2014.

"Seriously?" state NAACP president Derrick Johnson said when he was told
about the Forrest plate. "Wow."

General Forrest finished the war "a horse ahead" as I recall.

God Bless Mississippi....the only place that makes Louisiana look good by comparison. :biggrin:
 
Maybe 15 years ago, Ken Burns, did a PBS production of the Civil War. The historians who did the commentary, all raved about Forrest, as a military leader. Forrest was the only man on either side who entered the army as a private, and finished the war as a general. I guess if your a wealthy slave trader, which he was, you could finance your own army.

What struck me as funny is, he was one of the few generals on either side who had not attended West Point. At West Point, you were taught to draw your saber, and charge the enemy on horse back. Since Forrest only had a 4th grade education, he never learned these finer points, and relied on common sense.

Forrest equipped his cavalry with 2 revolvers, and a carbine strapped to their bodies. They were to fire the carbine, drop it, produce the revolvers, and shoot the West Point grads. After the Civil War, both the US, and British Armies, redid their cavalry manuals based on Forrest's tactics.

As far as a license plate goes, I'm guessing that was someone's idea of a bad joke. In addition to being a slave trader, and the first head of the KKK, Forrest did not accept the surrender of Black Union Solders. One would think, the state of Mississippi, would let the legend quietly die.
 
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Did someone say Mississippi? :biggrin:

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EfBObq9Z4uo"]YouTube - Mr. Burgess - Prank Call 6 - NASCAR Phone Survey[/ame]
 
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OCBuckWife;1873792; said:
While a special issue plate may not be a good place for it, the idea of preserving history, especially bad history, is a sound one. Those who do not remember history being doomed to repeat it or some such.

Let me guess, your real name is Mrs. Karl Marx:biggrin:
 
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Plate sounds like a bad idea to me, being from the south, we don't need to do anything else to further stereotypes with those northern folk.

side story, I grew up in Alabama, and there was a middle school named after Forest. When I was growing up, in the 80s/90s, it was 95% black. Irony can be a bitch
 
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