If a black man is proud of such a flag.. he's misinformed.
I never said everyone had to accept what I say it means. I'm telling everyone to use common sense. Hon A black man in history has joined the Ku Klux Klan. Jews have joined the neo-nazi party. What's your point? Gay men belong to the Conservative Republican party.
		
		
	 
My point is that you are being narrow-minded, and stubbornly refusing to see anyone else's point of view.
To the black guy I posted about earlier, the Confederate battle flag is a source of pride.  And why shouldn't it be?  Under it, his ancestor fought alongside whites as equals -- while in the North, blacks were in segregated units.  That ancestor fought for his home, for his family, and he's proud of that.
The situations you list are parallel at all:  the Klan wants to oppress all non-whites -- the South didn't.  The Nazis wanted to exterminate all Jews -- the South never wanted to exterminate blacks.  And gay men belong to the Republican party because in their view, it supports more of the things they believe in than do the Democrat.
You plainly didn't read my post well -- I explained that my black college acquaintance was hardly misinformed; he knew more about the subject than you do.  Did you know that free blacks could, and did, own their own land?  That they could, and did, get university educations?
And did you know that a significant root of ill treatment of blacks in the South was the political movement in the North to get slavery banned?
The issue is more complex than you admit, and my black acquaintance understood that.  He knew that a symbol can mean different things to different people -- such as the swastika, which has been used by Native Americans, Hindus, Bhuddists, the Celts... and even as a cattle brand in the old west.
"Common sense" doesn't impose a single view of a subject on everyone; instead, it says "Live and let live".    It allows that an item may mean different things to different people.  But by your view....
Finland should remove the swastika from its presidential standard, and from its Air Force colors; the Jains should abandon it as a holy symbol; the Japanese should stop using it as a symbol of strength and intelligence....
To the black guy I've spoken of, the Confederate battle flag means his family roots, defending their home, standing up alongside others as free men -- because that's his history that goes with it.  Just because others say it's evil doesn't make it so.