All Confederate Statues Will Be Replace With

I guess folks like yourself haven't a clue that the Theme of "The Planet of the Apes" was symbolic of our own modern issues of Religion vs. Science and/or status quo vs. progress. Here is an example for which faction you're batting, Ape boi;]
It is about race and slavery, the movie is about what if blacks (apes) had inslaved whites
Bullshit you idiot!
 
D-lawgiver3-1300x.jpg
What do you think?
You're volunteering to take one of the con-federate statues in your front yard, of course.

Did you know that Memorial Day, originally Decoration Day was proclaimed to honor all Union and Confederate dead? Did you know that Confederate soldiers are and were considered American veterans with benefits and privileges of Union veterans and that widows and children received a widows pension? Growing up in the 40s and 50s I knew quite a few Confederate widows and children. Now, assholes and other Progressive Liberal Pukes are tearing their monuments and statues down. These assholes need to taste some hot lead, if not an ass kicking.


Public Law 810 and other Federal laws:

Summary of eRumor:

Confederate soldiers are officially considered American veterans and have the same protections as Union soldiers because of an act of Congress called Public Law 810 and other federal laws.

The Truth:

It’s true that Union and Confederate soldiers are considered U.S. veterans under federal law, and that they would be entitled to the same benefits as Union soldiers today.

These claims went viral on social media after the Confederate flag was removed from the South Carolina Capitol grounds in July 2015. The state legislature voted to remove the flag after a self-described white supremacist murdered nine black churchgoers there.

That inspired posts on social media sites that claimed Confederate and Union veterans were considered equals under federal law, and that they are entitled to the same protections and benefits.


It’s true that a federal law passed in 1958 listed the spouses and children of all Civil War veterans — Confederate and Union — as eligible for federal pensions:


Whenever there is no surviving spouse entitled to pension under section 1532 of this title, the Secretary shall pay to the children of each Civil War veteran who met the service requirements of section 1532 of this title a pension at the monthly rate of $73.13 for one child, plus $8.13 for each additional child, with the total amount equally divided.

It’s also true that federal law (formerly Public Law 810) makes Confederate soldiers eligible for burial in national cemeteries and for taxpayer-funded headstones, just like Union soldiers:

The Secretary shall furnish, when requested, an appropriate memorial headstone or marker for the purpose of commemorating an eligible individual whose remains are unavailable. Such a headstone or marker shall be furnished for placement in a national cemetery area reserved for that purpose under section 2403 of this title, a veterans’ cemetery owned by a State, or, in the case of a veteran, in a State, local, or private cemetery.


Confederate Soldiers Are Considered U.S. Veterans Under Federal Law-Truth!
 
I predict it will be Harvey Milk, Barry Sotoro, and Karl Marx.
 
D-lawgiver3-1300x.jpg
What do you think?
You're volunteering to take one of the con-federate statues in your front yard, of course.

Did you know that Memorial Day, originally Decoration Day was proclaimed to honor all Union and Confederate dead? Did you know that Confederate soldiers are and were considered American veterans with benefits and privileges of Union veterans and that widows and children received a widows pension? Growing up in the 40s and 50s I knew quite a few Confederate widows and children. Now, assholes and other Progressive Liberal Pukes are tearing their monuments and statues down. These assholes need to taste some hot lead, if not an ass kicking.


Public Law 810 and other Federal laws:

Summary of eRumor:

Confederate soldiers are officially considered American veterans and have the same protections as Union soldiers because of an act of Congress called Public Law 810 and other federal laws.

The Truth:

It’s true that Union and Confederate soldiers are considered U.S. veterans under federal law, and that they would be entitled to the same benefits as Union soldiers today.

These claims went viral on social media after the Confederate flag was removed from the South Carolina Capitol grounds in July 2015. The state legislature voted to remove the flag after a self-described white supremacist murdered nine black churchgoers there.

That inspired posts on social media sites that claimed Confederate and Union veterans were considered equals under federal law, and that they are entitled to the same protections and benefits.


It’s true that a federal law passed in 1958 listed the spouses and children of all Civil War veterans — Confederate and Union — as eligible for federal pensions:


Whenever there is no surviving spouse entitled to pension under section 1532 of this title, the Secretary shall pay to the children of each Civil War veteran who met the service requirements of section 1532 of this title a pension at the monthly rate of $73.13 for one child, plus $8.13 for each additional child, with the total amount equally divided.

It’s also true that federal law (formerly Public Law 810) makes Confederate soldiers eligible for burial in national cemeteries and for taxpayer-funded headstones, just like Union soldiers:

The Secretary shall furnish, when requested, an appropriate memorial headstone or marker for the purpose of commemorating an eligible individual whose remains are unavailable. Such a headstone or marker shall be furnished for placement in a national cemetery area reserved for that purpose under section 2403 of this title, a veterans’ cemetery owned by a State, or, in the case of a veteran, in a State, local, or private cemetery.


Confederate Soldiers Are Considered U.S. Veterans Under Federal Law-Truth!
Bump, bump, bump, bodecea
 

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