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Manifesto: Why A Southern National Congress?
To Our Fellow Southerners: This is an invitation to all Southerners of good will and good character, who love their country and who seek to preserve our liberty, prosperity, and identity, to join with us in organizing a Southern National Congress (SNC). We start with the proposition that the South and its inhabitants are a separate, distinct, and worthy people rooted in soil, kinship, shared history and customs. If you reject this notion or find it pointless or irrelevant, then you needn’t bother to read further. But if you do accept it, you probably also understand how significantly we Southerners have contributed to America’s founding and her subsequent history, and you believe we deserve to prosper and flourish. You probably also understand that our identity, culture, liberty, and well-being are threatened as never since 1865. These threats are subtle and insidious, yet potentially more destructive than the outright invasion, military force, and occupation used against us in the Second War of Independence. What then are we to do? What can we do? Of course, we of the SNC Committee don’t profess to have the final answers to such deep, complex, far-reaching questions. But we may have a partial solution. Moreover, we believe it’s foolish to refrain from doing anything simply because we can’t do everything. The mighty oak springs from a single acorn. The longest journey begins with but a single step. “A Separate and Distinct People…” In other words, the South is a nation. But just what is a nation? Is it merely a geographic subdivision on the map? An area ruled by a particular government? A collection of abstract political propositions? Or is it something deeper and more lasting? Ernest Renan (1823-1892), a French political philosopher, provides a definition that fits the South like a glove. In a lecture given at The Sorbonne in 1882, called “What Is a Nation?” he said:
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