Walking battlefields, can be a very inspiring event.
So many thoughts run through your mind. The courage of gallant men,
their sacrifices and honour. The impact of the ebb and flow of combat on
our current lives. This is particularly true for War of Southern
Independence or War of Northern Aggression battlefields. For these
battlefields were not only a mortal contest between courageous men, but
an intense battle over our form of government and the very foundations
of American Liberty.
On a recent trip to the Petersburg battlefield,
thoughts were racing through my mind as always. But unlike at other
famous battlefields, Manassas, Ft. Sumter, Chickamauga these were dark
thoughts, dark and gloomy. On this hallowed ground, I forever settled in
my mind, the proper name for this War. This thin Grey Line, was all that
stood between the defense of American Liberty and an indefinite period
of increasing darkness. On this ground was fought a War of invasion and
aggression, northern aggression. When this line crumbled, overrun by
literally thousands of invading northerners, sadly began the decline of
American Liberty created by Southern Men in 1776. This long thin line of
Grey was the last barrier between American Liberty and the darkness that
our country and the US have been slipping into ever since.
While walking along Harrison Creek, where the advance
from Ft. Stedman stalled in the face of overwhelming numbers, my
thoughts turned to what we have lost. American Liberty, the very
founding principles of the United States were following the advance and
retreat of this battle. The results are very sad. When this line of Grey
crumpled and began retreating, I am sure sadness was felt by men such as
Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry and George Mason, for their great
sacrifices and wisdom was what was at stake. Looking down upon the ebb
and tide of this battle, they would have known that their creation,
American Liberty, had lost.
Today there are US flags fluttering in the wind,
gloating over the blood and defeat of the defenders of American Liberty,
our Confederate forefathers. No where to be seen, was even one token
Flag in memory of the men who died in their effort to preserve American
Liberty for us, their future generations. Mind you, not a single Flag in
their honour, not one single Flag in honour of our country. Not a single
Flag to remind us of what our forefathers fought for and to show
respect.
I am very proud to state that before the end of the
day, our Flag of Honour and Distinction was very obvious on the National
Park Service Petersburg Battlefield. All around the “Keep Off” signs
at Fort Stedman, where one last effort was made against overwhelming
odds, flew our Battleflag. Across the very ground tread in the desperate
effort to break the line of the invaders of our country, around The
Crater, in the homestead of residents burned out in typical yankee
style, along the breastworks where our Confederate forefathers gallantly
made their stand. Briefly, perhaps very briefly, Confederate Flags
greatly outnumbered the US flag.
Walking along the march taken in the advance on Fort
Stedman, counting the 228 paces, I could not help but wonder what was
going through the minds of these men. Surely by this late in the War
they were aware of the odds they were facing. They knew they were
outnumbered, out gunned. But on they came, pace by pace. Taking Fort
Stedman, they marched on, facing even greater numbers, then slowly
falling back. The odds had just been too great to overcome. Walking
along the Confederate breastworks, where the retreat from Ft. Stedman
would have been visible, I could imagine how the soldiers felt standing
there, watching the failure of the attempted breakthrough and knowing
what it meant.
Leaving the US Park, which so plainly takes better
care of the union lines than the Confederate as would be expected of an
occupation government, I was eternally grateful for the likes of my
Confederate forefathers. Against such odds, during what must have been
very dark days they cared enough about their freedom and their
future generations to face such a formidable enemy.
Then following miles of works along the roads of
Petersburg, which have been ignored by the Park Service, we came upon
one of the finest tributes to the defenders of American Liberty that I
have ever seen. Standing alone in a large field, without fancy paths,
parking lots or signs to “Keep Off” was Fort Gregg. Here there were
no US flags - only Battleflags.
On this ground, a small contingent of Confederates
held thousands of invading infidels at bay for two hours allowing Lee to
evacuate the army from Petersburg. Imagine being assigned to Fort Gregg,
knowing that Lee was retreating and thousands of the invading horde were
descending upon you. But those Confederates ignored the terrible odds
and stood their ground, very firmly and stubbornly they held their
ground. As large numbers of yankees swarmed over the wall, a young
artillery corporal manning a piece, stood with lanyard taunt and ready.
The yankees yelled, “ Drop the lanyard or we will fire!”.
Instantly came the reply, “Fire and be damned!” as he pulled
the lanyard. Immediately the remaining “damned” yankees sent
this young Southern man to meet his Creator.
And therein lies a wealth of wisdom, for today we
face an approaching darkness that is gloomier than the dismal situation
these men were in. With Lee’s surrender, the defenders of American
Liberty have lost forever the opportunity to defend American Liberty by
force-of-arms. The odds that we face today are greater than those at
Fort Gregg and their Comrades-In-Arms throughout our War for
Independence.
The Men in Grey had the power of still sovereign
States behind them, and their State was their country. 132 years of
Reconstruction and ever increasing centralised government have reduced
the States to mere political subdivisions of the supreme central
government, strangely founded upon the principle of “limited
government”. On our watch, the states have continued to decline at
an ever increasing rate. No longer are the states capable of providing a
“check” on the central government.
The Men in Grey, came from a prosperous region, so
prosperous that it paid ¾ of all the main source of central government
revenue, tariffs. The much more heavily populated region to the north
only had the prosperity to pay ¼ and looked upon the wealth of the
South with greed. To satisfy this greed the north waged a war of
aggression and freely sacrificed large numbers of its citizens to
increase its material prosperity. During and in the aftermath of the War
the South was pillaged and plundered until it became one of the poorest
regions of the planet.
Today the South is again becoming a prosperous
region. But this is a type of prosperity that would have been foreign to
the defenders of American Liberty. The citizens of the South not only
pay close to 50% of their labour in tribute to an out of control
government, but despite the allusions of yankee materialistic prosperity
have accumulated their unwilling share of almost $6,000,000,000,000.00
of debt to be passed on to our future generations. Our unwilling share
of this occupation government debt is over $20,000.00 for each man,
woman and child in our country and for our annual tribute and share of
debt, we get a decaying society and culture.
In 1776, Southern Men created American Liberty. In
1860 Southern Men defended American Liberty. What will our future
generations read in their history books about us?
So many will ask, “But can anything be done?”
“When such great men failed, and we have so much less to support
our effort to restore American Liberty, what can we possibly do?”
A very, very tough question, but one that must be answered if we care as
much about our future generations as our forefathers did!
The answer may lie in the wisdom of the young
artillery corporal. “Fire and be damned.”
With the destruction of the South, these united
States lost the principles upon which they were founded and became the
United States, irrevocably changing the form of government. The United
States has used 132 years of Reconstruction in their effort to eliminate
the commitment of the South to American Liberty. But so far
Reconstruction has failed, for the ideas upon which our country and the
US were founded have not been forgotten. Although we have much less to
work with than our forefathers, the occupation government may have
larger problems than we do. Just as Thomas Jefferson predicted, it has
become corrupt, Godless and is hopelessly and irrevocably in debt from
the greed of the victors. The occupation government is “damned”
and sadly it will fall of its own accord.
Let us rebuild our country and without force-of-arms,
without great wealth, but with commitment and with the Will of God we can
rise above the “damned” as it slides into the darkness which
sadly is its destiny.
Let our future generations read that in 1776 Southern
Men created American Liberty, in the 1860’s they defended American
Liberty and in ???? Southern Men restored American Liberty to its
rightful place among the nations of mankind.