A flag to represent the sweet South. It DOES NOT stand for slavery you jackasses so stop getting your underwear in a wad.
by Adrienne November 6, 2004
Flag flown by the southern (losing) states in the American Civil War. It used to just represent racism, hatred,and slavery - but now includes all red state "values", including xenophobia, jingoism, treason, incest, and gun ownership. In short, representing all things deplorable in human nature.
When Steve ran out of toilet paper he thought about using a Confederate flag to wipe his ass, but he decided to walk around with shit stains rather than handle that deplorable symbol of bigotry and hatred.
by Littlehandsdonniedotard June 28, 2018
by Vreq September 9, 2019
by Potata March 19, 2018
The confederate flag is a flag that has promoted racism, since the a Civil War, no matter what someone Imbecile has made up and spread through Fox News, or the likes, over the past ten-fifteen years. Read any peice of literature from the era of the civil war, any historian's work, or any real documentation from that time. The south was fighting for slavery during the civil war. That's all there is to it. Anyone who says otherwise is ignorant to the facts, and what has been true for over a century.
People who say the confederate flag doesnt promote and represent racist values are uneducated and ignorant to the truth of what was and what is.
by Tellthetruth6102 August 7, 2016
by WorseThanHitler December 6, 2020
An extremely provocative swim suit, both because of its brevity and its political subtext, based on the pattern of the Confederate Battle Flag. For example, depending on the wearer, it may be worn as a sexy yet ironic statement about the fabled Lost Cause, or as a literal affirmation of the wearer's Southern heritage. Obviously, the implicit message is necessarily subjective.
Its first known manifestation was one worn by Bridget Fonda in "Shag: The Movie." While some Southerners were offended by it, Southern sociologist and chronicler John Shelton Reed pronounced it to be "fetching."
Its first known manifestation was one worn by Bridget Fonda in "Shag: The Movie." While some Southerners were offended by it, Southern sociologist and chronicler John Shelton Reed pronounced it to be "fetching."
by eViL pOp TaRt January 25, 2006