Roger, I join Ga.windbreak in welcoming you to the forum.
You bring up a very good point, in that you can show some people actual PROOF until you're blue in the face, and they Still won't be swayed. "The government taught me
this so it Has to be true," is what you will get most of the time.
A few years ago, we (The SCV) were conducting a Living History for a school in the Savannah, Georgia area. We had several people come up to us who were fully aware that what they "learned" in school was a bunch of hogwash, but they really didn't know any details of what exactly was true and what was not. I told one man to take a book he had shown me and open it up to the page showing the author and publication date. My being full of sarcasm after about 50 people had done this, I simply told the gentleman, "That page is true, but I can probably count on one hand how many more pages in this book are." It was a book on Lincoln.
Later that same day we had a captive (and entirely captivated) audience of "educators" who actually wanted us to Teach them the Truth, once and for all. A few of them knew what they were doling out in the classroom was phony balony but didn't know what to do about it. Let me say at this point that about half of this group of 25-ish was black. For the most part, they were really enthralled by what we were showing them. The entire group thanked us continuously for showing them the truth. Then, when most of the people had gone, and a few stayed to get more information, one black woman in particular just sort of hung around until only two or three remained. She calmly came up to us and admitted that what we had shown completely contradicted her "beliefs" on the War, its causes, etc., etc. She admitted to us, away from her colleagues, that she knew we were right, but then we were Floored at what she said next.
"Gentleman, this has been a fascinating event and I thank you for your time and effort in compiling the information used here today. I know what you have shown here today to be true and unbiased information. There was no malice in your delivery of that information and I appreciate that very much. Though your proof is undeniable, and your motives are pure at heart, as I believe them to be,
I CHOOSE NOT TO BELIEVE YOU."
Wait a minute!
WHAT?That's right, she
CHOSE NOT to believe us!!!!!
Everyone, including those who had stayed behind with her, was stunned into complete silence. Nobody said a word for what seemed like 30 minutes, but was more like a couple of minutes. I broke the silence when I said nonchalantly, "Well then lady, you are a complete idiot." "I probably am", she replied. She admitted we were right. She saw the evidence for herself. She had a college degree and was supposedly an educated person. And she CHOSE not to believe us? This lady was a college dean, and she CHOSE not to believe us? I couldn't help but ask what she meant. She said, "As a black woman, I feel more empowered not to believe you. If I chose to believe what I saw here today, and I know beyond the shadow of a doubt it is true, I would lose my empowered status as a person of color."
I asked if she were a religious person and she said, "Of course I am". "Then you are a lost soul and you don't even know it," I told her. I continued, "Don't you know that Truth is one of the most Powerful things on earth? Don't you know that, with what you learned here today, you could help start to re-educate other black people? Showing them the truth would empower you beyond your wildest dreams. You would be seen as a hero for bringing them out of the darkness and into the light. Isn't that what God expects of all of us?" She again admitted I was right. She never could bring herself to say we had changed her mind. She left that day knowing we were right, but still CHOSE not to believe a word we said. It was one of the saddest things I had ever seen. The other black people there couldn't believe what they heard when she said she CHOSE not to believe us.
I'm reminded of a Toby Kieth song lyric,
I ain't as good as I once was, but I'm as good once as I ever was. Now, I know that lyric was saying something entirely different from this topic, but it serves to remind me that, no matter how hard we try, we can't get to everybody at one time, but we can get to them one at a time.
I, for one, have the satisfaction of knowing the truth of the War, and that our Southern ancestors were Right in there endeavor to bring about an Independent Southern nation. And no matter what she Chooses to do with the information, so does that college dean from Savannah.
SBG
DEO VINDICE