Remembering Those Who Fought Against the Immoral Invading Hordes from the north.
On April 29th and 30th, Landmark Baptist Church and Free Florida First will jointly mark Confederate Memorial Day 2023.
This commemoration is by Confederates to the memory of Confederates. There will be no recognition of the evil yankee empire, nor of it striped rag. That villainous flag is dripping with the blood of our ancestors and with the blood of many other innocent victims since that time.
You
will find an online invitation and details of our events here:
www.libcfl.org/invite/
According
to Florida Statutes, Confederate Memorial Day is a recognized legal holiday.
http://www.leg.state.fl.us/Statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&Search_String=&URL=0600-0699/0683/Sections/0683.01.html
In today’s political climate, it’s not surprising that attempts are made virtually every year to eliminate the Confederate Memorial Day holiday, but fortunately it has been avoided to date. But regardless of what carpetbagger and scalawag politicians may do, our celebration will continue on, by the Grace of God. We can’t control Tallahassee or DC, but we can control ourselves.
In 1900
a red St. Andrew’s cross was added to our Florida’s State Flag as a remembrance
of our Confederate ancestors and defenders.
The Confederate soldier is most worthy of remembrance and recognition. Those soldiers fought in defense of their homes, their families, their way of life, and their state. In spite of the manifest lie that the modern day storm troopers of the amerikan empire are fighting for our freedom, the truth is that the Confederate soldier was the last veteran to fight in defense of our God-given rights.
The
amerikan empire is certainly no less tyrannical today. So, more than a mere
remembrance, we have dedicated ourselves to taking up the banners and the sacred
Cause of our Confederate forebears. We seek a truly Free, Independent, Godly,
Prosperous, and Traditionally Southern Florida.
You will find a large display of historical flags at our observance, even some early US flags. You’ll see the Betsy Ross flag (designed by the Southerner, George Washington). You’ll see the 15 striped “Star-spangled Banner” of which Southerner Francis Scott Key wrote his memorable poem. Ironically, the tyrant Ape Lincoln imprisoned Key’s grandson within the walls of Fort McHenry for his opposition to the yankee cause from within the pages of his newspaper. And you’ll see many other flags of our Southern Nation (over 50).
You’ll see the Florida secession flag of Colonel William Chase, who removed the multiple stars of the failed union from the blue field of the US flag and replaced them with the single-star of a Sovereign and Independent Florida.
What you will NOT see
are any modern US flags (since we sought to go our separate way in 1860). We DO
NOT honor the flag of the invaders of our country, not on this day – not on any
other day. Nor will we ever pledge allegiance to the tyrannical union by
reciting a “Pledge of Allegiance” written by a South hating, socialist yankee.
Above
is a replica of the Battle Flag of Florida’s Marion Light Artillery, in which
my G-G-Grandpa, Sergeant John Cauthen Strickland, served. As the banner
declares, he and his compatriots fought for “God and Our Rights” as free
Southern men. By the Grace of God, we hope to continue that struggle against
the increasingly evil and thoroughly perverse amerikan empire.
The following link contains descriptions of all the flags displayed during Confederate Memorial Day:
https://libcfl.org/articles/flags4.pdf
Quite simply, when it comes to the striped rag of the amerikan empire: “Ain’t my flag; Ain’t my country.” It has not been so since 1861. It appears to me that the time is approaching when true Southerners will be called upon to fight against that banner once again.
In the
words of Major Innes Randolph, C.S.A. (taken from his poem, “I’m a Good Ole’
Rebel”): “I hates the glorious Union – ‘Tis dripping with our blood - I hates
their striped banner, I fought it all I could . . . I'm glad I fit against
it, I only wish we'd won, and I don't want no pardon for anything I done.”
From
time to time, some folks will admonish us that the war is over and that we
should simply forget and move on. We have no intention of doing so. We happen
to agree with Pastor R. L. Dabney, who served as Chief of Staff for Lt. General
T. J. “Stonewall” Jackson:
“What, forgive those people who invaded our country, burned our cities, destroyed our homes, slain our young men, and spread desolation and ruin over our land? No, I do not forgive them.”
Furthermore,
it’s not over yet -- not by a long shot. It’s not over as long as there are any
of us who remember. It is not over as long as there are any of us still committed
to picking up the banner and the Cause of our fathers and to continuing their
struggle for independence and self-determination. That is why they hate our
banners, our monuments, our remembrances, and above everything else – why they
hate us.
We pray along with our great chieftain, Robert E. Lee, that God may be pleased to “give us a name and a place among the nations of the earth.”
If you are likewise inclined, come out and mark this day with us. On Saturday there will be a special memorial service at our flag pole, followed by placing flags on Confederate soldiers’ graves in a local cemetery.
Sunday there will be a
special Confederate Memorial Day church service, in which Pastor Wilson will preach
on the Theological principles that precipitated the war. Last year he preached
on the Christian symbolism of our Confederate Flags. If you like, you can
listen to last year's Confederate Memorial Day service here:
Part 1: https://libcfl.com/sermons/042422_1.mp3
Part 2: https://libcfl.com/sermons/050122_1.mp3
Handout: https://libcfl.org/sermons/FLAG_SERMON_Handout.pdf
We do not mark this day simply because some of our ancestors served in the Confederate Army or Navy. Many who will celebrate with us have no Confederate ancestors. We mark this day because those who fought against the northern invasion were right in their actions and pure in their motives and we seek to stand with them.
We do not seek simply to remember those who struggled against the yankee invaders, but as our ancestors noted in the Declaration of Independence in the First War for Independence, “we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor” in the struggle against Leviathan in the 21st Century.
Come out and encourage yourself and others as you fellowship with like-minded Southern patriots.
Online invitation and
details of our events here:
www.libcfl.org/invite/
STAY IN THE FIGHT!
NEVER GIVE UP!
NEVER QUIT!