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Our Mission The
Confederate Battle Flag represents all Southern, and even Northern,
Confederates regardless of race or religion and is the symbol of less
government, less taxes, and the right of the people to govern
themselves. It is flown in memory and honor of our Confederate
ancestors and veterans who willingly shed their blood for Southern
independence. The Industrial Revolution allowed England and France to produce and ship across the Atlantic products that were cheaper than the products of Northern manufacturers. When Lincoln was elected President, he and the U.S. Congress immediately passed the Morrill Tariff (the highest import tax in U.S. history), more than doubling the import tax rate from 20% to 47%. This tax served to bankrupt many Southerners. Though the Southern states represented only about 30% of the U.S. population, they paid 80% of the tariffs collected. Oppressive taxes, denial of the states' rights to govern their states, and an unrepresentative federal government pushed the Southern states to legally withdraw from the Union. Since the Southerners had escaped the tax by withdrawing from the Union, the only way the North could collect this oppressive tax was to invade the Confederate States and force them at gunpoint back into the Union. It was to collect this import tax to satisfy his Northern industrialist supporters that Abraham Lincoln invaded our South. Slavery was not the issue. Lincoln's war cost the lives of 600,000 Americans. The truth about the Confederate Flag is that it has nothing to do with racism or hate. The Civil War was not fought over slavery or racism. We
at Dixie Outfitters are trying to tell the real truth via our art and
products in regards to the Confederate Flag. We hope to educate people
about the Confederate Flag and stop the divisiveness caused by
ignorance and emotion.
In his official report of Sharpsburg, General Richard B.
Garnett,
himself a fatality of the War, unknowingly wrote a fitting memorial of
the 18th Virginia Infantry when he wrote "In this battle, as in former
ones, we are called on to deplore the loss of many brave spirits, who
have sealed their devotion to the Southern Cause with their life's
blood. May the memories ever be enshrined in the hearts of their
Countrymen" |