timschochet said:
But that doesn't make them malevolent. I already pointed out that the Confederate leaders believed, wrongly, that slavery was a positive good. These were good decent men who were misguided based on long tradition and history. To compare them to Nazis or others who deliberately choose to commit evil is just wrong IMO. I'll leave it at that, but it's an analogy that I find repugnant.
"Good decent men?" The leadership and power base of the confederacy? They were traitors, criminals and rebels that all deserved to be hanged upon capture or shot on the field.
But you are right - they weren't Nazi's. Because they weren't socialists. But other than that the existence of the confederacy was based solely on the same kind of institutional racism and hatred that ended up controlling the Nazi party, mixed with a lot of "we didn't get a our way!" crying not unlike the "we didn't deserve to be punished for WWI" that the germans suffered from.
I don't think it's repugnant at all. We glamorize the south too much during the civil war. They had no glamour. They think they did. Their supporters think they did. But they didn't. There was no glamour, romance, integrity or honor in what the south did. It was based on solely racist deluded self interest and a level of narcissism that is close to being unmatched in American history. Oh, and states rights. Sorry. You always have to throw that in there in these days.
Having said that, taking a show about an orange car that jumps hills in front of a green screen with two guys pretended to drive it was really stupid. It's still a cool car.