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Learning Day: The Confederate Alphabet

I have sympathy for Lost Causers. And love lying. But I also understand it’s a tough position. It hurts to be out of step with culture. And history. And the avowed, public, Cornerstone positions of your idols. Cognitive dissonance is painful, and the stupid suffer in silence.

Constant, screaming silence. Across reenactments, imageboards, and coup attempts. I’d love five noisy minutes. Maybe if Sherman had done his thing a little longer.

Today’s junior propaganda is Confederate Alphabet, written by Rickey E. Pittman. And if you look carefully, illustrated by Stephanie Ford. Considering how thin the writing is, it’s odd the bulk of the labor’s taken for granted. Seems ungentlemanly.

But I’m made of opinions, despite Lee’s best efforts. I’ll let this one pitch itself:

I used to drink a lot, so this looks harmless. “Little Confederates” evokes a preschool hate group, but history matters. An education shows the whole picture, warts and all. Otherwise you get Americans that think Dresden’s just a snarky wizard. Kids should understand the Confederacy, to whatever extent picture books can cover mandingo fights.

But let’s double-check. What’s “S,” in this Civil War book about the Civil War?

Checks out. After all, we fought over his nickname.

Secession Street has a gifted team. Stephanie’s a triple threat: a hopeless reenactor, illustrator, and writer. Her broken website includes a few works of historical fiction, some intentional. Including a Confederate sharpshooter’s journey to the Boshin War. I guess she found The Last Samurai too sensitive.

Rickey Pittman’s known as the “Bard of the South,” meaning he calls himself that and registered bardofthesouth.com where he promotes Stonewall Jackson’s Black Sunday School, a children’s book I own. I almost covered it for Black History Month, until my extended family provided feedback. Confederate Alphabet’s our compromise, and I’ll be out of the hospital by April.

I rarely mock dedication pages, but the art pulled me in. The margins are a world tour of insults. This appears below Singapore's dragon:

Besides, Chattel Slavery and You is special. What does Rickey love, book? I want to see it burn. Again.

The names Mason and Dixon were right there. What’s the point of bardic knowledge if you miss that? Years of chart-topping resentment anthems, thrown away. That’s like charging a mile without cover and hoping God sorts it out. But not quite as bad. You worship failures.

We’ll cover the rest of this brain graveyard in order.

Excellent start: Stephanie’s spared drawing a face. For all we mock Liefeld’s feet, they’re avoidable enough to save creator-owned comics. Stephanie spends the rest of this book drowning. She begged Rickey to name 26 ships, and he burned out at four.

Unfortunately, the flicker of talent dies here. This navy trivia’s the least stilted stanza, and Rickey has 25 letters to go. He’s smart enough to abandon consistent meter, but the ABCB pattern strains his ability to word good. He could learn from old spirituals, but that’s not the Bard of the South’s thing.

Depending on your childhood, that’s either a JibJab jingle, a Fallout deep-cut, a song your father mumbled at the bathroom mirror in full uniform, or a TikTok renaissance. Pittman loves “Dixie” enough to paste the full lyrics in his verse tribute to the South. He says “Now that you’re done with my garbage, here’s a better tribute to chattel slavery. Please pretend I gave you these feelings.”

It goes something like this:

At least other race war reporters try. I’ve never heard Tom MacDonald bite Burzum. Or a full Tom MacDonald track. But I assume there’s craft. You can’t just regurgitate stale zeitgeist.

We might not make it to space.

This one’s important, and not just for giving up on a clear thought per stanza. Rickey had a choice between sidestepping the Confederacy’s quirks, or celebrating everyone Django Unchained paraphrased. He never chooses, so the latter stands out.

I’m not saying every slave trader needs an asterisk. Or Klan founder. Or butcher of black prisoners. But the triple crown’s worth a line. It would only double this book’s length, tops.

Is that middle soldier meant to be…they wouldn’t. They couldn’t. Pelican Press is a real company. An editor would’ve been shot. They’d be in publishing hell with Kinja’s design lead.

Note: the propaganda quality peaks here. A kid might actually care about or remember a silly peanut song, instead of 19th century shipping or race war innovators. Rickey reprints the whole song.

Forget this page’s war between hand and crayon. Or Rickey stumbling over zero rhythm constraints. There’s a dumber problem.

I’m stuck on the strangest tokenism in print history. The Confederate Army used black people for manual labor and target practice. You know, unpaid work. There’s a word for that, but I can’t remember it. Only my love for Goober Peas.

Right! Misdemeanor possession. Black Southerners served as drug offenders.

The extra-fictional soldier above is reaching to an Antebellum version of Lil’ Orphan Annie. Resetting my Yankee preconceptions is very much the point. Or keeping me from growing them in the first place. Because this is a kid’s book, for children.

If I wrote a General Lee diss track, I’d start with his cult and jump right to his failure. Excellent work. Rickey’s getting a handle on this.

I know, General Lee deserves some credit. Without him, the Dukes would have driven the General Custer, and who needs that? Instead, Lee inspires everyone whose lips move when they read.

Hold the fucking telegraph. M is for Manasses, but we blew G on peanuts? Shenanigans. Between Grant and Gettysburg I’m surprised Rickey kept the letter. It’s the turning point in the alphabet.

I’m brainwashable. I’ve seen the closing credits of Eternals. You just have to ease off the gas a little bit. Think odd-numbered Thors. Keep Taika happy, and you can get away with anything.

Q’s a tough letter. But if I were power-washing history, I’d tiptoe around prewar slave catchers. It’s off-message. I’m not sure Quantrill even noticed the war, he was already a land pirate. The arson was muscle memory.

Giving propagandists advice sounds risky, but they’re much more about talking than listening. And I’m not sure Rickey’s even alive. He hasn’t published a new Hate on Phonics in a few years, and he is not the type who shuts up.

Stephanie. I’m rooting for you to succeed, but the effort isn’t there. This culture war skirmish only works when all three of us show up. The rebel yell’s the Confederacy’s crossover hit. This page should look good enough for plausible deniability on your college roommate’s wall.

I’ll try a compliment sandwich.

Rickey’s a hack, so Y’s probably “Yankee.” I expect your best.

I’ve never desired representation less.

Granted, one could argue that these aren’t people, period. Just paint pens rising against their masters. I buy it. This could be the art supply version of Nat Turner’s revolt. But it looks like Tim Scott’s subconscious.

Beautifully done. I support these images and words without reservation, down to the burning shack in the distance. They’re aspirational. Rickey could republish this page and call it “The Audacity of Cope.”

Or the whole book. There’s a market.

Right, Americans cosplaying Frenchmen cosplaying Algerians. Great trivia, Rickey. But did you know that Z is the last letter? The ending of your book? Think bigger. Rewriting history in crayon takes work, and I can still remember Dred Scott. That’s no way to train the next Greg Abbot.

Granted, there’s a timeline of the war after this. You’d assume it’s impossible to make a five-year mass bloodletting boring. But it strips out slavery, Union wins before Gettysburg, and everything between Gettysburg and Appotomax. Leaving…ships and goober beans. I don’t know why Rickey’s all-in on peanuts, Carver’s estate gets a cut of every shell. Those are Emancipation Beans.

Maybe I’m nitpicking. But brainwash your children carefully. Cliches and quarter-truths could leave them insane and stupid. Then what use will they be in the rematch?

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Mort, who drives the Union equivalent of the General Lee - a sensible gray Honda CR-V. 

You can read this article and every other one on the much better in every way 1900HOTDOG.COM.

Comments

Most of the Confederate Army uniforms were made in England. Let that sink in Cotton Boys.

Scribbler Johnny

Thank you! One great thing about writing today is that comment sections have killed direct rage-mail.

Dennard Dayle

The rhythm's too smooth. Try working goober beans in after Soros.

Dennard Dayle

The thumbs-up symbol was Facebook's only good idea.

Dennard Dayle

"The locals will rise to join us" is history's best running gag.

Dennard Dayle

They're mostly grapplers, but Lisa's striking game is on point.

Dennard Dayle

It's very, very tempting.

Dennard Dayle

Happy to help!

Bonnybedlam

My chapbook is coming.

Dennard Dayle

Everything else has a horror movie. This is overdue.

Dennard Dayle

Tom's not an idea guy. Or a brain guy.

Dennard Dayle

This was educational. Unlike the educational book above.

Dennard Dayle

What a charmer.

Dennard Dayle

Genet's reverse minstrel show was ahead of its time.

Dennard Dayle

Thank you! I'll get a belt made.

Dennard Dayle

So next time I read Gone With the Wind, it will be weird when I start humming Rico Suave?

Bonnybedlam

The « -es » part is silent yeah. So more like « zoo-wahv »

Elgofo

The Nathan Bedford Forrest drawing looks like she used the statue as a reference. Which is a pretty apt metaphor for lost cause mythology as a whole, now that I think about it.

Bicken Bones

Surely the Union equivalent of the General Lee would be KITT: far more technologically advanced and obviously going to win in a fight between the two.

Matt Edwards

the line about Robert E Lee fans’ mouths moving when they read 🙏🙏🙏🙌

Alex Schmidt

Philistine! That was when Canada invaded the USA and nobody noticed! This was when the USA invaded Canada and everyone decided to ignore it!

The Parallel Viewmaster

No shit? I always thought it was like zoo-ah-vays. That seemed more French somehow.

Bonnybedlam

He did it. He really went there. He used the J-word!

Daphne Lawless

Right at the end of the war, the rebels tried to recruit Black soldiers. Thoughtful members of the Confederate Congress pointed out that if Black people would make good soldiers, then the entire theory on which slavery and Southern society was based was falsified.

Daphne Lawless

Doris Sanford and Graci Evans have some tough competition here.

Kevin Hanlon

Zou as in,well, « zoo » Aves as in « halves » (plural of half, without the L)

Elgofo

Yeah, that sight gag took me a minute to figure out too. Congratulations, Dennard, your subtle wit is matched only by your taste in children's weekday afternoon television

Robert K.

Do the reenactors get into a lot of arguments about who gets to be John Candy?

Munchy P

“Her broken website includes a few works of historical fiction, some intentional.” Hahaha

It's That Guy!

I like to think they’re working on a sequel. J is for January, The first month of the year. We went there on the 6th day To take a peaceful tour that Liberal Elites funded by Obama Hilary Soros turned into a riot and blamed on the Leader without Fear! It needs some workshopping, but it’s coming along!

Chris “Ace” Hendrix

Also, my Black History Month project was visiting Puerto Limon, where i learned that there are aspects of Costa Rica history that are not surfing and pura vida.

Matthew Harris

One thing about this, like a lot of such propaganda, is it is basically playing chicken with us... (And I do believe this type of propaganda is for us, not for its supposed audience). How offensive and inaccurate can it be, while still maintaining some plausible deniability "This is just to teach history". How bad can it be but still maintain an illusion that we are the crazy ones for calling it out?

Matthew Harris

I really could use a different icon than a heart to show approval for this article, something indicating a horrified reaction...or maybe acknowledgement of heroism?

Kevin Hanlon

Using the "Q" for a certifiable psychopath seems like a very accurate way to celebrate the CSA.

Bill Culbertson

Oh, sure, when a big company like Google does it, everyone supports it, but when a small artist does it, you just have to mock... Oh, literally no one supported it? Okay, carry on mocking.

The Parallel Viewmaster

Hello Friends! Do you want to enjoy historical revisionism but find that the Civil War is too mainstream? Do you want to avoid all those pesky race relations and just enjoy some good old fashioned anti-British hate like all right-thinking Americans can agree on? Why not look into the PATRIOT WARS historical society, celebrating the third American Invasion of Canada(holy fuck, third? That can’t be right... 1776 revolution.... 1812... okay, sorry, that checks out). Join us on weekly talks about how the American strategy of invading Canada in small numbers and relying on the populace to join the uprising would surely have worked if those damn Canucks weren’t so lazy. Bimonthly talks on why it was actually a good idea to re-invade the exact same region that was invaded in the War of 1812, and why the colonists in that region (who in addition to being invaded two decades earlier were descended from the British Loyalists who were exiled after the American Revolution), were too brainwashed to join our noble Patriots. And participate in our annual 'Battle of the Windmill' reenactment, where our historic American Forebearers bravely took over a windmill in 1837 and hid in it for four days while a cowardly army six times their size besieged them. Join now and get entered into a draw for a paid vacation! Retrace the route of our noble Patriots on their historic globe-spanning journey to a surprise destination( ...it's Australia. The British government even gave them free transportation there, although they had to find their own way back).

The Parallel Viewmaster

This book is dense with problems, but mostly I just want to know more about the dynamics of Dennard's extended family based on the get well soon card.

Vooster

Same. I hope Ice T gets his ass. Legally, I mean.

Skebotron

I blame the fact that I'm very tired this morning for being slow on the uptake, but I got to Dennard's Dixie poem and my brain was like "okay, 'jerks' is clearly a joke edit, so let's go back and see what rhymes with f- OH. RIGHT." Anyway, after all this I'm still curious as to what that printing and publishing note involving Singapore says. Normally I'd guess that "1000 Burmas" is the beginning of an address cut off by the screenshot, but given the contents of the entire rest of the book it could easily be something wild and almost certainly racist.

Skebotron

I didn’t realize some white guy tried to rip off a Body Count song 🤔

Devon the Rogue Supreme

HELLO FELLOW LIBERALS WE ARE ENGAGING IN DIVERSITY INITIATIVES WOULD YOU LIKE MORE BLACK REPRESENTATION IN YOUR CONFEDERATE WHITEWASHING

Jasper Phua

In a way, the artwork is perfect. It looks like a colony of ghouls put on flesh masks to try luring in more victims.

FancyShark

"Lookit that burning school! I wish Quantrill came and burned down *my* school!" --What I assume that illustration was trying to evoke

D.J. Trindle

How sure are we that this isn't some kind of ironic joke for grownups? It really feels like a joke. And I'm not just saying that because I'm almost 50, have read Gone With the Wind at least 20 times, and am still not sure how to pronounce Zouaves.

Bonnybedlam

well ill get in here now cause im not gonna be able to leave this one up on the work computer so ill just say if you google quantrill and mormon war you get a result

sissyneck

wow can't believe even our Confederate propaganda has gone woke smh Are neo-Nazis going to include IDF soldiers in their Hitler fanfiction next

Jasper Phua

G is for Good Job, like Dennard always does! The most delightful Jamaican man that ever there was!

LabialTreehug


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