I meant from a global perspective, which was something I should have made a lot clearer. Unless a foreigner knows a lot about US history, they see the Confederate Flag and it means nothing to them. That same foreigner sees a Nazi flag at a Neo-Nazi rally in Europe and feels differently.
I don't know how the other countries dealt with Slavery, but nothing in South America or Africa represents "slavery" as much as the Confederate Flag does to America.
You're original post still reads as though you're saying American Slavery wasn't as bad as the Jewish holocaust and the perpetrators of that weren't as evil as the those who perpetuated and fought to maintain slavery and white supremacy in the United States.
Like I said, the exact same things went on, only it happened for nearly 300 yrs.
There's a disturbing attempt by many to downplay just how horrific American slavery was and paint those who participated in it in a sympathetic light.
Someone earlier in the threat mentioned how the founding fathers get a "pass" for owning slaves, but in reality they're not. MANY Black people see the founding fathers in the same light. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and even "The great emancipator" Abe Lincoln were all white supremacists. These are facts that are continually downplayed within the mainstream.
Hell even many of the people in the abolitionist movement were white supremacists. They abhorred slavery but didn't see blacks as equal or deserving of equal rights to white Americans.
American refuses to deal with the realities of what happened during Slavery, reconstruction, and Jim Crow.
One more thing I'll add is that it's VERY unfair for anyone to act as if racism is somehow unique to the south or southerners. Both in the past and today as much racism can be found in the rest of the country as in the south. It just tends to be more blatant in the southern states than in others (which doesn't make it any worse or better).
I don't think everyone who waves the confederate flag are racists, and meanings change over time. Like that one bit by George Carlin, it's the context of words/symbols that matter. Words and symbols aren't inherently racist, it's the intention of the people using them.
What exactly have the people who wave around the confederate flag done to change it's meaning?
Mind you a big part of the reason they hold on to the flag is the history behind it, they just want to ignore every negative aspect about said history (which is plentiful).
People can't have it both ways. You can't wave that flag around and talk about "Southern pride" and "Honoring those that fought for the confederacy" while at the same time continually deny what the confederacy fought to maintain. It's comparable to celebrating Hitler because you admire his art while at the same time ignoring his role in the holocaust.