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JustAnotherGen

(37,893 posts)
Thu Feb 12, 2026, 01:00 PM Feb 12

Daughters of the Confederacy - VA - Have a chuckle on me!

Posted in the Black American Group by A Host

It's been rolling around in the VA Legislature for a couple of years - but yesterday a New Version of the Bill Passed in the VA House of Delegates yesterday.


Democratic lawmakers seek to distance Virginia from its Confederate past

Democratic Delegate Michael Feggans said it's important for the legislature to align with the current values of the state.
https://www.courthousenews.com/democratic-lawmakers-seek-to-distance-virginia-from-its-confederate-past/

Democratic Delegate Alex Askew introduced a bill for the fourth consecutive session that would eliminate the state recordation tax exemption for the Virginia Division of the United Daughters of the Confederacy implemented in 1950, and the tax-exempt designation for real and personal property owned by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the General Organization of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the Confederate Memorial Literary Society, the Virginia Division Sons of Confederate Veterans, the Stonewall Jackson Memorial, Incorporated, and the J.E.B. Stuart Birthplace Preservation Trust, Inc.

State code exempts most nonprofit organizations, including hospitals and churches. Askew’s bill allows localities to continue these exemptions while removing any mandatory state exemptions. Former Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin vetoed the measure in 2025, arguing the legislature should broadly reform tax exemptions rather than targeting specific organizations.

“The property tax exemption by designation is ripe for reform, delineated by inconsistencies and discrepancies,” Youngkin said. “Narrowly targeting specific organizations to gain or lose such tax exemptions sets an inappropriate precedent. Initially, the General Assembly granted exemptions through a three-quarters vote of both chambers, but now, a simple majority can revoke them. Choosing winners and losers is imprudent and undermines the tax system’s fairness.”

The new version of the bill passed through the House of Delegates on Tuesday on a 62-35 vote.


Hey America! Never this way pass again. No lost cause when the Regime falls. And let's not be nice to Them. They are the descendants of these asshole women.
16 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Daughters of the Confederacy - VA - Have a chuckle on me! (Original Post) JustAnotherGen Feb 12 OP
Long overdue BaronChocula Feb 12 #1
Republicans have never had a spine Keepthesoulalive Feb 12 #2
Never had a spine? BaronChocula Feb 12 #3
The republicans constantly gave into the south Keepthesoulalive Feb 12 #4
I think we can agree BaronChocula Feb 12 #5
We have always been pragmatic. Keepthesoulalive Feb 12 #6
The Voting Rights Act was signed in 1965. czarjak Feb 14 #7
I need not try Keepthesoulalive Feb 14 #8
It really shows JustAnotherGen Feb 15 #10
Please do Keepthesoulalive Feb 15 #11
Ah the Boule JustAnotherGen Feb 15 #14
We're good Keepthesoulalive Feb 15 #15
That tracks! JustAnotherGen Feb 15 #16
My grandfather always voted JustAnotherGen Feb 14 #9
Black Elites voted before The Voting Rights Act was signed? czarjak Feb 15 #12
Are you kidding me? JustAnotherGen Feb 15 #13

BaronChocula

(4,350 posts)
1. Long overdue
Thu Feb 12, 2026, 01:26 PM
Feb 12

Reminds me of a clip I saw on FB from an Irish Gen Y historian who is celebrating Black History Month. Her clip I saw last night was a reminder that Reconstruction didn't fail - it was intentionally dismantled. I often wonder how differently things would have turned out if republicans hadn't lost their spine in the 1870s.

BaronChocula

(4,350 posts)
3. Never had a spine?
Thu Feb 12, 2026, 02:17 PM
Feb 12

Abolition took some moral fortitude as did Reconstruction while it lasted I'd say. It's why freed blacks overwhelmingly served in legislatures as Republicans and voted Republican for years after the Civil War.

Today's republicans are a way different story.

Keepthesoulalive

(2,214 posts)
4. The republicans constantly gave into the south
Thu Feb 12, 2026, 02:52 PM
Feb 12

Black folks voted republican until John Kennedy because the republican lash was not as harsh as the Dixiecrats. My family in the south were republicans until the 60’s . They did not champion us, because if things become to difficult it is easier to ignore the problem than fix it.

BaronChocula

(4,350 posts)
5. I think we can agree
Thu Feb 12, 2026, 03:09 PM
Feb 12

Black folks voted Republican not out of hero worship but because it was a better option.

czarjak

(13,545 posts)
7. The Voting Rights Act was signed in 1965.
Sat Feb 14, 2026, 05:06 PM
Feb 14

Kennedy was elected in 1960.
Heck of a try though!

Keepthesoulalive

(2,214 posts)
8. I need not try
Sat Feb 14, 2026, 08:26 PM
Feb 14

My grandmother was able to vote because her father was allowed to during reconstruction. She voted as did her siblings because she believed in making things better. She was also a teacher in a segregated school system. She said she taught for the glory because they didn’t get paid a great deal. You have no idea of my history so don’t go there.

JustAnotherGen

(37,893 posts)
10. It really shows
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 08:30 AM
Feb 15

How much the poster wasn't taught by their public school system. They really did not know that Black folks voted in the South prior to 1965.

Wait until they hear about Bachelors and Bemedict , The Boule, The Links, and the Girlfriends.😄 Should I do a post in honor of Black History Month?

JustAnotherGen

(37,893 posts)
14. Ah the Boule
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 07:52 PM
Feb 15

Was founded in Philadelphia at the turn of the last century by four young men. My Grandfather was a member of both this and Bachelors & Benedict.

Some say the Boule was and is a secret society. It's highly selective with approximately 5K members - by invite only. My father was also a member. Fraternity and Community is key. When you dig into who REALLY funded the Civil Rights movement - you don't have to go beyond this group to find where the money came from.

You know - that poster . . . I bet he thinks there was no segregation in the North and no KKK either above the Mason Dixon line. Or that every Black American is poor. Or that . . . I could go in and on.

How sad that our group had this intruder. We should start with *prove it* when extreme leftists start talking about the proletariat. In the meantime - they are gone from the group. Please don't let a person who has that snide pat us on the head and give us a cookie ruin this group.

Keepthesoulalive

(2,214 posts)
15. We're good
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 08:05 PM
Feb 15

Another little known fact is that small African American churches in Georgia gave to black colleges according to denomination baptist churches gave to Spelman and Morehouse , Methodists gave to Clark.

JustAnotherGen

(37,893 posts)
16. That tracks!
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 10:31 PM
Feb 15

My dad was a rebel and did undergrad at Tuskegee. He was ROTC.H His brothers went to Morehouse.

As a legacy with cousins attending I could have gone to Spellman on an almost free ride - but I didn't fit the mold. I don't regret it. Five of my dearest life long friends I would not have met at Spelman.

JustAnotherGen

(37,893 posts)
9. My grandfather always voted
Sat Feb 14, 2026, 10:58 PM
Feb 14

Born and lived at the turn of the last century in Alabama. A Morehouse man. He was a Republican fanatic.
He only voted for 2 Democrats - LBJ and Carter.

He was clear that he *knew* those "boys".

You have an outsiders view of the Black Elites of the South.

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