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2017-04-20 Home Front: Culture Wars
This is How You Do it, Berkeley
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Posted by Deacon Blues 2017-04-20 00:00|| || Front Page|| [5 views ]  Top

#1 I've been wondering for some time just how these stalwart representatives of "free speech" manage to travel from place to place to attend their schedule of events, er, I mean protests. Daddies credit card maybe.
Posted by Cheaderhead 2017-04-20 05:51||   2017-04-20 05:51|| Front Page Top

#2 This was done to counter the KKK.

Of which the AntiFa is just another version of 'shut the man down' tyranny. Fitting and yet amusing that people who demand "self reflection" are incapable of doing it themselves.
Posted by Procopius2k 2017-04-20 09:18||   2017-04-20 09:18|| Front Page Top

#3 So they're bitching about the no-mask rule? What this tells me is that the Antifas didn't spot the Alabama state police snipers.
Posted by Matt 2017-04-20 10:05||   2017-04-20 10:05|| Front Page Top

#4 The term 'rednecks' originates in one side (union members, I believe) wearing red bandanas so the head bashers would know who to avoid in a melee.
Posted by Bobby 2017-04-20 13:02||   2017-04-20 13:02|| Front Page Top

#5 Thought it was because we spent so much time in the sun tending crops.
Posted by Skidmark 2017-04-20 13:09||   2017-04-20 13:09|| Front Page Top

#6 The origins of this term Redneck are Scottish and refer to supporters of the National Covenant and The Solemn League and Covenant, or "Covenanters", largely Lowland Presbyterians, many of whom would flee Scotland for Ulster (Northern Ireland) during persecutions by the British Crown. The Covenanters of 1638 and 1641 signed the documents that stated that Scotland desired the Presbyterian form of church government and would not accept the Church of England as its official state church.

Many Covenanters signed in their own blood and wore red pieces of cloth around their necks as distinctive insignia; hence the term "Red neck", (rednecks) which became slang for a Scottish dissenter*. One Scottish immigrant, interviewed by the author, remembered a Presbyterian minister, one Dr. Coulter, in Glasgow in the 1940's wearing a red clerical collar -- is this symbolic of the "rednecks"?

Since many Ulster-Scottish settlers in America (especially the South) were Presbyterian, the term was applied to them, and then, later, their Southern descendants. One of the earliest examples of its use comes from 1830, when an author noted that "red-neck" was a "name bestowed upon the Presbyterians." It makes you wonder if the originators of the ever-present "redneck" joke are aware of the term’s origins - Rednecks?
Posted by Deacon Blues 2017-04-20 15:09||   2017-04-20 15:09|| Front Page Top

#7 And now we know. Thank you, Deacon Blues.
Posted by trailing wife 2017-04-20 19:28||   2017-04-20 19:28|| Front Page Top

22:14 gorb
22:09 trailing wife
21:39 trailing wife
21:22 Frank G
21:20 Frank G
21:03 Frank G
20:53 Skidmark
20:50 lord garth
20:29 Hupeart Thaitch2372
20:22 Frank G
20:12 Frank G
20:08 Skidmark
19:37 charger
19:37 phil_b
19:35 charger
19:34 phil_b
19:33 Crusader
19:31 Voldemort Phusogum4973
19:28 AlanC
19:28 trailing wife
19:23 AlanC
19:22 DarthVader
19:06 Nero White 3083
18:59 Seeking cure for ignorance









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