Thomas Piketty2 360x1000
Margaret Fuller2 360x1000
1empireofpain
1albion
2jesusandjohnwayne
1gucci
1lauber
Betty Friedan 360x1000
5albion
storyparadox2
lifeinmiddlemarch2
7confidencegames
Lafayette and Jefferson 360x1000
lifeinmiddlemarch1
3confidencegames
11albion
Brendan Beehan 360x1000
Maurice B Foley 360x1000
James Gould Cozzens 360x1000
2trap
Margaret Fuller 360x1000
2theleastofus
4albion
Susie King Taylor 360x1000
storyparadox3
1theleasofus
Anthony McCann2 360x1000
399
George F Wil...360x1000
299
2gucci
Margaret Fuller 2 360x1000
1lookingforthegoodwar
12albion
2defense
Gilgamesh 360x1000
George M Cohan and Lerarned Hand 360x1000
2lookingforthegoodwar
Margaret Fuller4 360x1000
Margaret Fuller1 360x1000
1jesusandjohnwayne
Margaret Fuller3 360x1000
Spottswood William Robinson 360x1000
6confidencegames
9albion
Thomas Piketty1 360x1000
1defense
Susie King Taylor2 360x1000
Thomas Piketty3 360x1000
7albion
Ruth Bader Ginsburg 360x1000
1madoff
Storyparadox1
3paradise
Mary Ann Evans 360x1000
1transcendentalist
Edmund Burke 360x1000
2transadentilist
Tad Friend 360x1000
Mark V Holmes 360x1000
2confidencegames
2albion
6albion
1lafayette
2paradise
Richard Posner 360x1000
199
Margaret Fuller5 360x1000
Stormy Daniels 360x1000
Maria Popova 360x1000
5confidencegames
LillianFaderman
1trap
Anthony McCann1 360x1000
1confidencegames
4confidencegames
14albion
1falsewitness
13albion
499
Samuel Johnson 360x1000
8albion'
Office of Chief Counsel 360x1000
3defense
Learned Hand 360x1000
1paradide
AlexRosenberg
Adam Gopnik 360x1000
3theleastofus
3albion
2falsewitness
10abion
2lafayette
11632

Originally published on forbes.com on July 7, 2013.

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The walk across the field from the Virginia Monument to the stone wall on Cemetery Ridge with 15,000 others was not at all exhausting.  It was kind of exhilarating actually.  Besides the crowds of people on Cemetery Ridge, there were numerous vehicles.  Ambulances and television trucks were among them.  Someone on a Red Cross truck handled me a bottle of a water.  A lot of preparation had gone into the event and it came off very well.  I wandered around trying to find out if there was a crowd estimate.  A couple of rangers had given me eyeball estimates of 6,000 to 7,000. The official estimate ended up being 15,000.  I don’t know, maybe you can count them.
My covivant who had been watching the mass coming across the field at the Angle thought the crowd was overwhelming and intimidating when she imagined them carrying guns and wanting to kill her.  She was most impressed, though, by all the random interactions of the people milling around after the charge was done.  A Confederate standing near her broke into a song she did not recognize which was followed by Amazing Grace, with everyone singing along.
The Confederate Flag
 
During the election I had the good fortune to interview Green Party candidate Jill Stein.  One of the things that I gave her a pretty hard time about was her party having a plank in its platform against display of the Confederate Flag
You have to stick your head in the historiographical sand in order to not think that the Confederate Flag stood for slavery for at least a few years.  Of course, Lost Cause historians have been piling up mountains of sand in the last century and a half, so there are plenty of places to stick your head.  Also, by the same standard, the flag of the United States of America stood for slavery for over eighty years.  Flags are symbols and symbols have meanings that vary.
I think progressives who spend time being offended by Confederate flags are wasting that time.  Think about what the symbol means to the person displaying it.  When I see somebody displaying the Confederate flag my working assumption is that to them it stands for honor, courage and virtue.  That may be combined with an aversion to engaging with pre-1862 primary source material, but, frankly, very few people seemed inclined to do that.
We Get Ready To Go
 
I wandered around proving to myself what a lousy reporter I am and realized that I should get serious about finding CV.  This being 2013 and all, we both had cell phones.  Imagine how a couple of them would have changed the outcome 150 years ago.  She told me she was by the Angle.  CV has not exactly turned into a Civil War scholar since May 1st, when we first went to Chancellorsville, but she now knows considerably more than she ever intended to learn.
There had been a large number of tents set up by the cathedral-like Pennsylvania monument.  On Saturday there had only been one up labeled as a hospital tent.  I interviewed Bob Tycenski, a Verizon power technician, who impersonates a Civil War surgeon attached to the 14th Brooklyn.  CV and I kept meaning to get over to those tents and interact with the other interpreters, but there was always something more pressing.
As we walked by most of the tents were already struck.  I walked over to one of the few remaining tents.  It was close to where the hospital tent had been.  It was labeled “Embalmer”.  The fellow in period costume told me more than I wanted to know or care to share about what was involved in preserving bodies for shipment.  The embalmers were free-lance and it was a service that only went to those who could afford it.  He said that his research indicated that the going rate was about 100 bucks for an officer and somewhat less for enlisted men.  CV wisely skipped that discussion finding a nice shady tree to sit under.
As we walked to our car I asked CV what her overall impression was.  She said that she was strongly reaffirmed in her belief that war is stupid, irresponsible, obscene and a waste of human life.  She thinks there is a better way to resolve conflict than sending your children to be slaughtered. (She had been really impressed by the comment by one of the interpreters that over 100,000 Civil War soldiers were under fifteen, some as young as nine.) She thinks that if we were to spend as much money on learning skillful conflict resolution as we do on war and preparations for war, we would be a world at peace.  She thinks we associate war with honor, duty and integrity, but it is really about slaughtering your children.
Just a couple of weeks ago CV and I had been wandering the streets of Northampton (which is a bit like Greenwich Village North) and noticed that Buffy Saint-Marie was playing at the Iron Horse.  CV said she kept thinking about the Universal Soldier
I wonder if any other of my 15,000 comrades had somebody who had actually been at Woodstock waiting for them on the other side of the wall ?

You can follow me on twitter @peterreillycpa.