An Open Letter to the President: Stop Recognizing the Sons of Confederate Veterans

May 5, 2010
Edward H. Sebesta
President Barack H. Obama
 The White House
 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
 Washington, DC 20500
Dear President Obama:
I am a researcher of the neo-Confederate movement and one of the editors of Neo-Confederacy: A Critical Introduction (Univ. of Texas Press, 2008). Neo-Confederacy is a movement that has a broad spectrum of prejudices against African Americans, Unitarians, Muslims, Hispanics, gays and lesbians and others. It opposes civil rights. It supports the subordination of women. Beyond that it is against the very ideas that are the foundation of a democratic society; is hostile to egalitarianism; and advocates a hierarchical society which they call “ordered liberty,” which is largely the liberty to order others around.
Included in this letter are several examples of how the federal government itself, and through its associated agencies, continues to support and enable neo-Confederacy. The Office of the President has the opportunity to end federal government support for, and enablement of, neo-Confederacy.
Unfortunately, to date the Office of the Presidency has actively enabled neo-Confederacy. Besides sending a wreath to a monument of neo-Confederate ideology in Arlington Memorial Park, presidents have attended parties celebrating the birthday of Robert E. Lee, thus normalizing the Confederacy, and former president Bill Clinton wrote three letters of congratulations to the United Daughters of the Confederacy undermining former Illinois U.S. Senator Carol Moseley-Braun’s historic 1993 victory over the UDC and Lost Cause nostalgia.
I ask you to end the federal government’s support and enablement of neo-Confederacy starting by not sending a wreath to the Arlington Confederate monument on Memorial Day or any other day this year or years to come.
Rather than celebrating the Confederacy, the United States of America needs instead a national conversation on the Confederacy, the Civil War, the overthrow of Reconstruction and neo-Confederacy. With the approach of the Sesquicentennial of the start of The Civil War, 2010 would be an ideal time to begin such a discussion to acknowledge the historical truth about these issues. With a false understanding of the historical past we poison the future. Or, as the great W.E.B. Du Bois explained angrily in regards to the upcoming Civil War Centennial celebrations in 1960:
Thus we train generations of men who do not know the past, or believe a false picture of the past, to have no trustworthy guide for living and to stumble doggedly on, through mistake after mistake, to fatal ends. Our history becomes “lies agreed upon” and stark ignorance guides our future.
The neo-Confederate organization the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV) is enabled by the federal government in the following ways:
- They are allowed participation in the Combined Federal Campaign as a recognized charity.
 - The SCV is permitted to host events for the United States Army.
 - The SCV is allowed to get involved with the Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps (JROTC) programs in the high schools.
 
One of the more notable means whereby the neo-Confederate movement is supported is the designation of the SCV as an eligible charity for the Combined Federal Campaign (CFC) since 2003. As you know, the CFC is the rough equivalent of the United Way for federal government employees. Through the CFC the SCV is enabled to raise funds from federal employees.
Involvement in the activities of the United States Army is shown in a 2006 issue of the Confederate Veteran, an official publication of the SCV, which has the following photo caption referring to an activity of a local SCV camp:
The Colonel James J. Searcy Camp 1923, Columbia, MO, hosted a visit by the US. Army Staff Ride Class to the Centralia, MO, Battlefield and massacre site in connection with their class instruction. More than 40 active NCO members participated. They were all Iraq and Afghanistan veterans.
Above the caption you can see the officers, many of them African American, standing around a Confederate monument with the Confederate battle flag marked on it. Hence, an American that enlists in the U.S. Army might end up attending a neo-Confederate event organized by the SCV. The SCV’s prestige is enhanced by its status as a host of the U.S. Army, the SCV gets to be involved in the class instruction of Army officers, and the SCV is thereby legitimatized with US Army officers.
The SCV seeks to be involved in the Junior Reserve Officer’s Training Corps (JROTC). In the Nov./Dec. 2009 issue of Confederate Veterans the SCV announces in an article that it is going to expand the awarding of the South Carolina Division SCV’s H.L. Hunley JROTC award nation wide so as to reach, as Program Chairman Trip Wilson explains, “…500,000 cadets serving in 3,500 JROTC units…” The purpose of this award is to advance the goals of the SCV as Chairman Wilson explains:
If each year we are able to recognize 500 to 1,000 cadets nationwide and get Sons of Confederate Veterans’ compatriots into high schools presenting the awards, then there is unlimited potential the good it can do in educating our young people and changing the perception of them and their parents have of our organization.
The SCV does have an educational foundation, the Foundation for the Preservation of American Culture, which published a magazine, Southern Mercury, from 2003 to 2008, which ceased publication due to the lack of funds. From this magazine we can assess what type of “educating” and “instruction” the SCV might attempt and see what CFC contributions would help fund.
In an article in a 2003 issue of the Southern Mercury, SCV member Frank Conner argued that the modern civil rights movement was an attack on the South. He also asserted that African Americans have lower IQs than whites and that this fact was covered up by a conspiracy of liberals. In a section of the article titled, “The Liberals Create a False Public Image of the Blacks,” Conner wrote:
Early in the 20th century, the liberals took control of the humanities departments in the colleges and universities of America. Previously, anthropologists had routinely recorded the notable differences in IQ among the races; but at Columbia, a liberal cultural anthropologist named Franz Boas now changed all of that. He decreed that there were no differences in IQ among the races, and the only biological differences between the blacks and whites were of superficial nature. The liberals swiftly made it academically suicidal to challenge Boas’ flat assertion. … The liberals were creating a false image of the blacks in America as a highly competent people who were being held back by the prejudiced white Southerners.
In another section of this same article titled, “The Liberals Destroy the Old South in the Name of Black Civil Rights,” Conner asserts that the white South was unfairly vilified by the media during the Civil Rights Era, resulting in “the patently unconstitutional Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965” being passed by which he asserts, “The Old South was destroyed, and its belief system and way of life were discredited outside the South.”
Conner’s article is a summary of a section from his book, The South Under Siege (2002). In this section in the book, however, Conner focuses his attacks on Jews, pointing out that Boas was Jewish, and tells his readers that the civil rights movement was a Jewish plot against the South. He concludes that “Northern Jewish intellectuals/activists” are the “deadliest” enemies of the South. The book is reviewed in the same issue as Conner’s article with reviewer Ann Rives Zappa recommending it, writing, “The South Under Siege is a masterful volume of work painstakingly researched by author Frank Conner.”
This article by Frank Conner isn’t one outlandish essay that accidentally got published in the Southern Mercury. Rather, it is broadly representative of the contents of the issues of this magazine. Conner’s four other articles in the magazine, including the cover article for the first issue, along with the contributions of other authors, form a collection of similar hysterical and extremist articles.
Another example of the SCV’s extremism is an article in a 2008 issue titled, “Republican Party: Red From the Start,” by Alan Stang. This essay argues that the Republican party was a Marxist conspiracy from its inception. Stang writes:
In retrospect, it appears because nothing so atrocious had ever happened here, Lee and Jackson did not fully comprehend what they were fighting. Had this really been a “Civil War,” rather than a secession, they would and could have easily seized Washington after Manassas and hanged our first Communist President and the other war criminals.
Another activity of the Southern Mercury, Confederate Veteran and the SCV online store is the promotion and sale of books that defend or whitewash slavery. The very first issue of Southern Mercury in 2003 has a review praising the John C. Perry’s book, Myths & Realities of American Slavery: The True History of Slavery in America (2002) in which the enormity of the whipping of slaves is trivialized by book author John C. Perry, who writes:
Even in my youth, in the middle of the twentieth century, I was whipped, by a switching from my mother and a belt from my father. The old adage, “spare the rod and spoil the child,” was taken seriously in my home as I was growing up.
The reviewer, Ann Rives Zappa, writes “In this masterful treatment of the subject, the author uses historical data, personal accounts, and statistics to establish facts and debunk myths.”
A 2003 issue of Southern Mercury had a short story titled, “Choosing Slavery in Mississippi Over Freedom in Pennsylvania,” about a slave who preferred to be a slave. Later in the same issue, a book reviewer recommends yet another pro-slavery book, The Myths of American Slavery by Walter D. Kennedy (2003). The book has a whole chapter titled “Abolitionism Versus Christianity,” in which the abolitionists are held to be anti-Christian heretics and in which Kennedy condemns the Southern Baptist apology for supporting slavery, the Racial Reconciliation Resolution, at their 1995 annual convention, saying “The resolution is nothing more than liberal double-speak for an act of cultural genocide against the South.”
The SCV also sells these two defenses of slavery in its Confederate Veteran magazine, as well as reprints of nineteenth century defenses of slavery as “Confederate Gifts” and “Classic Southern Gifts.” The SCV also sells these books in their annual merchandise catalogues, and in their online bookstore (https://scv.secure-sites.us/store.php).
This includes one book titled Antebellum Slavery: An Orthodox Christian View (2008) by Gary Lee Roper which claims an orthodox Christian defense of slavery. The foreword of the book explains that antebellum slavery was God’s providential plan to uplift Africans. This book was also promoted by the SCV’s Chaplain Corps in their publication, Chaplain’s Corps Chronicles of the Sons of ConfederateVeterans, in which reviewer Michael Andrew Grissom tells the reader “THIS IS A MUST READ!” and “The book makes the point it is ludicrous to apologize (as several states have done recently) to a black population for legal slavery that occurred years ago when presently illegal slavery exists in at least twenty countries of the world, including the USA.” Further documentation of SCV extremism can be found on the internet site: http://arlingtonconfederatemonument.blogspot.com/.
In summary, the SCV promotes a neo-Confederate perspective that challenges American democratic practices, praises and sells extremist and racist books, and offers defenses of slavery. Consequently, in addition to ending the practice of sending a Presidential wreath to the Confederate memorial in Arlington Cemetery on Memorial Day, I ask you to revoke the SCV’s participation as a recognized charity in the Combined Federal Campaign, deny the SCV permission to host events for the United States Army, and prevent the SCV’s future involvement Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps (JROTC) programs in America’s high schools.
Sincerely Yours,
Edward H. Sebesta
Co-Signers
Alexander, 	Leslie M. 	
The Ohio State University	
Associate Professor of History
Bacon,	Jacqueline
 		Author of"Freedoms Journal:  The First African American Newspaper," co-editor,"African Americans and the Haitian Revolution." author of"The Humblest May Stand Forth: Rhetoric, Empowerment, and Abolition." 
Barr,	John	
Lone Star College - Kingwood
	Assistant Professor of History
Bartoy,	Kevin		
Ph.D. Anthropology, Univ. of California -- Berkeley. 
Blight,	David W. 	
Yale University
	Professor of American History.
 Author of"Frederick Douglass's 
Civil War: Keeping Faith in Jubilee,""Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory," and numerous other books. 
Blum, 	Edward J.
	San Diego State University
	Associate Professor of History. 
 Author of Reforging the White Republic (2005), W. E. B. Du Bois, American Prophet (2007), and co-editor of Vale of Tears: New Essays on Religion and Reconstruction. 
Blumenthal,	Max	Nation 
Magazine	Journalist
Calderson,	Robert	
University of North Texas
	Associate Professor of History
Clark,	Christine	
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
	Professor & Senior Scholar in Multicultural Education, and Founding Vice-President for Diversity and Inclusion
Cook, 	Robert Jr. 	
University of Sussex	
Professor in American Studies, U.S. Historian, Author of"Troubled Commemoration: The American Civil War Centennial, 1961-1965."
Cornbleth,	Catherine	
University at Buffalo - SUNY	
Professor of Education
DeCaro,	Rev. Louis, Jr.	
Nyack College and Alliance Theological Seminary
	Assistant Professor of Church History. 
Author of"Fire from the Midst of ou: A Religious Life of John Brown." 
DeSchweinitz,	Rebecca	
Brigham Young University
	Assistant Professor of History
Doss,	Erika	
University of Notre Dame	
Professor, Dept. of American Studies
Dulaney,	William Marvin	
University of Texas Arlington 	
Associate Professor of History 
Eaton,	Susan
	Harvard Law School	
Research Director, Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice
Gonzalez,	Rafael Jesus	
Laney College	
Professor emeritus of English, Laney College, Oakland
Hague,	Euan
	DePaul University, Chicago	
Professor of Cultural Geography, co-editor of"Neo-Confederacy: A Critical Introduction."
Harris, 	David
	Harvard Law School	
Managing Director, Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice
Hettle,	Wallace
	University of Northern Iowa	
Associate Professor History
MacLean,	Nancy	
Northwestern University
	Professor of History and African American Studies
Jackson,	Maurice	
Georgetown University
	Assistant Professor of History
Kahn,	Richard
	University of North Dakota	
Assistant Professor of Educational Foundations and Research
Knapp,	Peter	
Villanova University
	Author of"The Assault on Equality," Professor of Sociology
Lawrence,	Larry	
The John Brown Society
	Chairman of The John Brown Society
Lieb,	Jonathan	
Old Dominion University
	Associate Professor and Director of the Georgraphy Program. 
Litwack,	Leon F.	
University of California -- Berkeley
	Alexander F. and May T. Morrison Professor of History Emeritus
Lubetsky,	Robert  	
Fordham University	
Graduate School of Education, Division of Educational Leadership, Adjunct Faculty
Mason,	Matthew
	Brigham Young University	
Associate Professor of History
Manning,	Chandra	
Georgetown University	
Associate Professor of History
Mechem,	Kirke	
	Composer of the Operas"John Brown,""Tartuffe," and numerous other musical works. 
Meyer,	Paula L. 	
Sweetwater UHSD, Chula Vista, CA	
Ph.D./Bilingual Instructor
Moreno,	Dorinda	Fuerza 
Mundial/ FM Global	
Munoz,	Carlos	
Univ. of Calif. - Berkeley	
Professor emeritus, Dept. of Ethnic Studies
Parenti,	Michael	
	On advisory boards of Independent Progressive Politics Network, Education Without Borders, the Jasenovic Foundation, New Political Science, and Nature, Society and Thought. Author of many books in political science.
Paxman,	Andrew
	Millsaps College
	Assistant Professor of History
Phillip,
	Michael	Collin College	
Professor of History  
Ramos,	Frances	
University of South Florida
	Professor of History
Reyna,	Jose R.	
California State University Bakersfield	
Chair and Professor of Spanish
Roediger,	David  	
University of Illinois
	Babcock Professor of History
Roisman,	Florence Wagman
	Indiana University School of Law
	William F. Harvey Professor of Law
Sebesta,	Edward H.	
Independent researcher. 	
co-editor of"Neo-Confederacy: A Critical 
Introduction," University of Texas Press.  
Sinha,	Manisha	
University of Massachusetts at Amherst
	Associate Professor of Afro-American Studies and History
Sleeter,	Christine	
California State UniversityMonterey Bay
	Professor Emerita, www.christinesleeter.org 
Smith,	Alonzo N. 	
Montgomery College, 
	Professor History
Tatum,	Kyev	
President of the Fort Worth Southern Christian Leadership Conference	President of the Fort Worth Southern Christian Leadership Conference
Webster,	Gerald Raymond	
University of Wyoming	
Chair, Department of Geography
White, 	George Jr.	
York College, CUNY	
Assistant Professor of History