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Vote Coming to Confirm Anti-gun Radical
SNC - Statement on Second Amendment
2009 Georgia LS Summer Institute
Let’s Not Forget Memorial Day
What has happened to our country?
Remembering the Great Locomotive Chase
Confederate Memorial Service Saturday 4 April 2009.
Confederate Heritage Month - Minutes
April is also Confederate History Month
Land grab bill coming back, again
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Georgia Taliban
Strikes again - Savannah Mullah Johnson breaks Georgia Law
Not to be outdone by the Georgia Taliban in
Atlanta and Augusta,
Mullah Otis Johnson of Savannah has removed three historical
portraits, claiming the greatest success of the Georgia Taliban.
But his actions like those of
Mullah Young in
Augusta, are a violation of Georgia Law:
50-3-1.
(a) The flag of the State of Georgia shall consist of a square
canton on a field of three horizontal bands of equal width. The top
and bottom bands shall be scarlet and the center band white. The
bottom band shall extend the entire length of the flag, while the
center and top bands shall extend from the canton to the fly end of
the flag. The canton of the flag shall consist of a square of blue
the width of two of the bands, in the upper left of the hoist of the
flag. In the center of the canton shall be placed a representation
in gold of the coat of arms of Georgia as shown in the center of the
obverse of the Great Seal of the State of Georgia adopted in 1799
and amended in 1914. Centered immediately beneath the coat of arms
shall be the words 'IN GOD WE TRUST' in capital letters. The coat of
arms and wording 'IN GOD WE TRUST' shall be encircled by 13 white
five-pointed stars, representing Georgia and the 12 other original
states that formed the United States of America. Official
specifications of the flag, including color identification system,
type sizes and fonts, and overall dimensions, shall be established
by the Secretary of State, who pursuant to Code Section 50-3-4
serves as custodian of the state flag. Every force of the organized
militia shall carry this flag while on parade or review.
(b)(1) It shall be unlawful for any person, firm, corporation, or
other entity to mutilate, deface, defile, or abuse contemptuously
any publicly owned monument, plaque, marker, or memorial which is
dedicated to, honors, or recounts the military service of any past
or present military personnel of this state, the United States of
America or the several states thereof, or the Confederate States of
America or the several states thereof, and
no officer, body, or representative of state or local government or
any department, agency, authority, or instrumentality thereof shall
remove or conceal from display any such monument, plaque, marker, or
memorial for the purpose of preventing the visible display of the
same. A violation of this paragraph shall constitute
a misdemeanor.
(2) No publicly owned monument or memorial
erected, constructed, created, or maintained on the public property
of this state or its agencies, departments, authorities, or
instrumentalities in honor of the military service of any past or
present military personnel of this state, the United States of
America or the several states thereof, or the Confederate States of
America or the several states thereof shall be relocated, removed,
concealed, obscured, or altered in any fashion; provided, however,
that appropriate measures for the preservation, protection, and
interpretation of such monuments or memorials shall not be
prohibited.
(3) Conduct prohibited by paragraphs (1) and
(2) of this subsection shall be enjoined by the appropriate superior
court upon proper application therefor.
(4) It shall be unlawful for any person, firm, corporation, or other
entity acting without authority to mutilate, deface, defile, abuse
contemptuously, relocate, remove, conceal, or obscure any privately
owned monument, plaque, marker, or memorial which is dedicated to,
honors, or recounts the military service of any past or present
military personnel of this state, the United States of America or
the several states thereof, or the Confederate States of America or
the several states thereof. Any person or entity who suffers injury
or damages as a result of a violation of this paragraph may bring an
action individually or in a representative capacity against the
person or persons committing such violations to seek injunctive
relief and to recover general and exemplary damages sustained as a
result of such person´s or persons´ unlawful actions."
(c) Any other provision of law notwithstanding,
the memorial to the heroes of the Confederate States of America
graven upon the face of Stone Mountain shall never be altered,
removed, concealed, or obscured in any fashion and shall be
preserved and protected for all time as a tribute to the bravery and
heroism of the citizens of this state who suffered and died in their
cause.
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