TO: Our Southern Brothers and Sisters
FROM: The Southern National Congress Committee
SUBJECT: Call for Delegates
DATE: July 21, 2008
The Southern National Congress Committee, now grown to some
350 members from the thirteen Southern States and beyond,
will convene the First Southern National Congress on
December 5-7, 2008 at the Kanuga Conference Center near
Hendersonville, NC. (See
www.kanuga.org).
The SNC Committee is the convening
authority and support body for the actual Congress. The SNC
Committee is issuing this Call for Delegates to Southern men
and women of good will and good character and who meet the
qualifications discussed below. Delegations are now being
organised from Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas,
Texas, Tennessee, Kentucky, and Missouri. Each of these
States will have one vote in the initial Congress,
regardless of its number of Delegates attending.
Observers are welcome from Maryland and
Oklahoma and from “Southerners Abroad”; that is, Southerners
residing outside these 15 States. Observers will be
non-voting Delegates. They will enjoy Floor privileges and
the right to address the assembly, but not a vote.
What Is the Southern National
Congress?
The Congress will be a representative
assembly of citizens of the Southern States, providing an
alternative, legitimate forum to express Southern grievances
and advance Southern interests in a way that is no longer
possible through today’s political process or the major
political parties.
SNC Committee Executive Council member
and noted historian Dr. Clyde Wilson says, “The Southern
National Congress is being organised around the proposition
that we Southerners are a separate and distinct people,
rooted in kinship and place, with a common culture and
history. In other words, we are a nation. We respect
the rights of other national and ethnic communities to
self-preservation and self-determination, and we demand the
same. But we Southerners won’t restore our rights unless we
assert them ourselves.”
Dr. Wilson, the country’s leading
authority on John C. Calhoun, notes, “The SNC will reclaim
the political legacy of great Southerners like Thomas
Jefferson, Patrick Henry, and John C. Calhoun. That legacy
is individual liberty and a small central government of
checks and balances, limited to its enumerated powers; and
which is the creation, the servant, and the agent of the
sovereign people acting through their respective States. But
these principles enacted in the Constitution of 1789 have
been irretrievably violated. The Federal Government today is
engaged in ‘a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing
invariably the same Object, evincing a design to reduce us
under absolute Despotism,’ to borrow the words of Jefferson
in the Declaration of Independence.”
Thomas Moore, Chairman of the SNC
Committee, observes, “We believe the courts and especially
the U.S. Congress no longer provide the necessary checks on
the growth of the centralised state and its threat to our
liberty and prosperity. The U.S. Congress no longer
represents the people’s interests; it represents the
interests of the highest bidder, the big corporations and
money power. Through oppression, greed, corruption,
incompetence, and imperial folly, the centralised state in
Washington has forfeited its moral authority. The result is
increasingly harsh measures against the people as the Regime
loses control. Decent, honourable people of the South who
still love liberty and justice, and who seek to preserve
their livelihoods, their identity, and their heritage have
no choice but to withdraw their consent from this corrupt
and criminal Regime. But withdrawing our consent by itself
is not enough. We must have alternative, legitimate
institutions to which we can transfer our consent. This is
the principle behind the SNC.”
What Will the Congress Do?
The first and most vital task is to give
birth to itself as “…the means by which Southerners regain
control of their own destiny. The pathway to that goal is to
create an independent forum in which we Southerners can
voice our interests -- a forum with moral authority and
legitimacy because it will reflect the wishes and concerns
of the Southern people,” according to Ray McBerry, member of
the SNC Committee Executive Council, former candidate for
Governor of Georgia, and President of Dixie Broadcasting.
This will be the focus of the December
session. The First Congress will also take up a number of
resolutions addressing the most urgent threats to Southern
liberty, identity, and prosperity. In this we will exercise
our Constitutional rights recognized by the First Amendment
of the Bill of Rights; to assemble peaceably, speak freely,
and petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
Future deliberations beyond the December session will be the
decision of the Congress, which will be sovereign over its
own acts.
What Are the Qualifications to Become a
Delegate?
There are formal qualifications and
informal qualifications.
First, there are no restrictions based on
race, creed, or sex.
The formal qualifications are as follows:
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A Delegate must be a resident of one of
the 13 Southern States cited above.
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A Delegate must be 18 years of age on
the date of the initial session of the Congress, December
5, 2008.
-
A Delegate must be willing to affirm
the following: I believe that I have a duty to my home
State. I believe that the Southern people are a distinct
people. I believe in the right of voice, the right of
preservation, and the right of recognition, for the South
and her people.
Other qualifications, no less important
because they are informal, are related to the character of
the individual Delegates. Unless Delegates possess a high
degree of these essential traits, the Congress will not
achieve its full potential.
Maturity and judgment. The SNC
Committee is seeking Delegates who are mature, purposeful,
and wise in discerning the perils of the times we live in.
They should be well schooled in the traditional Southern
principles of liberty, individual responsibility, and
independence. They also need to understand human nature and
practical politics. A sense of humour would also be welcome,
and that usually comes with maturity.
Self-sacrifice. The Congress is
not for the vainglorious, the egotistical, the contentious.
Southerners are proud and combative by nature. This fighting
blood is strong in our culture; indeed, it’s one of our
virtues. But it must be subdued to the greater good lest we
tear ourselves to pieces before we can create our forum.
This demands self-discipline and self-sacrifice. Be able to
“deny yourself,” in the words of Robert E. Lee.
Realism. The Southern National
Congress is not play-acting. It is a serious enterprise with
high stakes, based on the example of our ancestors of the
Revolution more than of the War Between the States. It is
not an effort to create a make-believe Confederacy or a
forum for reliving a romanticised Southern past. A high
degree of realism is necessary to be an SNC Delegate.
Courage. The SNC will not advocate
or engage in breaking any law, by word, deed, or thought.
But keep in mind we live under a Regime that is increasingly
lawless. It will disobey any law it chooses, including the
Constitution; and criminalise any dissenting word, deed, or
thought it chooses. Taking part in the Congress is by its
nature a form of dissent. In normal times it would be a
Constitutionally protected act. But today it could bring you
to the attention of surveillance-and-police-state
authorities; and they may arbitrarily ascribe “unlawful”
motives to your participation. These are some of the stakes
we mentioned. You need to engage in serious reflection
before you commit. You need moral and physical courage and
must be prepared to exercise it.
Charity and magnanimity. We seek
Delegates with a spirit of Christian charity toward all
others, including our black brothers and sisters. Black
people are a part of the South, have been, and always will
be. Black Southerners have contributed immeasurably to the
building of our country. Black and white Southerners share a
common culture, including religious faith, manners, and
attitudes toward life that are part of our distinctiveness.
We encourage black Southerners to become Delegates. Those
unwilling to accept this, those who nourish animosity toward
black Southerners, we invite you not to apply.
Resources. You must have the
necessary means to take part. Regrettably, we are not able
to offer a stipend or defray Delegates’ individual costs.
Daily accommodations including meals at Kanuga are quite
reasonable, only about $100, although between now and
December 5, it’s possible the rate may increase as the value
of the US dollar collapses and the cost of everything goes
up. We recognize travel expenses may be considerable for
Delegates coming from long distances. This is a condition we
have no control over in today’s world of high energy costs
and the plummeting dollar.
If you meet these formal and informal
requirements and wish to become a Delegate, please fill out
THIS FORM. We will forward your name to the SNC
Registrar for your State who will contact you.
If you wish to participate in some way
other than as a Delegate, we urgently need folks to join the
ranks of the SNC Volunteers to handle publicity and media
relations, administration and logistics, and many critical
support functions. To be considered for a post with the SNC
Volunteers please visit the
sign-up page.
A Final Word
In the Book of Genesis, God allowed the
Patriarch Abraham to intercede over the fate of Sodom and
Gomorrah, which He had resolved to destroy because “their
sin was very grievous.” Abraham actually bargained with the
Lord, and the Lord agreed to relent if fifty righteous could
be found therein. Then He agreed to forty, then thirty,
twenty, and finally to ten. In the end, there weren’t even
that many, and the cities were buried in a hail of fire and
brimstone. Now, we don’t presume to place our undertaking on
the same level as this, and the SNC is not an ecclesiastical
enterprise. Nevertheless, the Biblical story does suggest
the number ten is a good number, enough to act in an
intercessory capacity. If all we can find are ten good men
and women from each Southern State to act as agents for
their people in this First Southern National Congress, we of
the SNC Committee believe there is no limit to what we can
accomplish.
This project is still in its infancy, and
like most Southern efforts, our resources are few compared
to the magnitude of the crises facing us and the urgent
needs of the day. Consequently, at this early stage we may
not be able to answer every question or resolve every issue
you might raise. We ask you not to be discouraged as we
struggle to make this beginning. The important thing is to
keep our eye on the main task of planting the seed, in the
confidence that Southerners of good will and good character
will be able, with mutual respect, to work out the
inevitable differences that arise in such an undertaking.
But above all, we must begin, for
We are left alone with our day, and
the time is short, And history to the defeated May say
‘alas’ but cannot help or pardon.
No one else will magically step in and
solve our problems. We must take responsibility to meet our
own challenges, under God’s mercy and providence. If we
don’t, then whatever fate befalls us will be deserved. It’s
up to us. We ourselves.
The SNC Committee
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