Those were the 20s back almost 50years before any race movements were mainstream. Of course no white people were arrested??
This logic does not even work
And now you see the same loving stuff happening again, black people being overrepresented in crime statistics, being monitored more, causing stress on neighborhoods which leads to more crime, families being broken apart, jobs being lost, and in the end the right to voting being lost. It's essentially a repeat of the jim crow era voting laws except it's hidden under a veil of "oh its not tribal! they're just criminals"
Back in the 40s and 50s, the military used to discharge people who were deemed 'mentally insane.' They didn't directly say 'you can't serve if you're homoloveual' but instead they said 'you can't serve if you're mentally insane' and as a loophole they added homoloveuality into the ICD and then they were allowed to discharge homoloveuals from the military. From the outside, they weren't homophobic, they didn't make any laws discriminating against homoloveuals. However, on the inside, the laws were carefully put in place to put homoloveuality down as a mental condition in order to discharge them.
What relevance does this bear to the race and prison industrial complex? Well, it's the same game they're playing. They don't make laws that say "you can't vote if you're black" they just say "you can't vote if you're a criminal" and then go on to overrepresent and falsely charge thousands of black people, ruining their lives and families, depriving them of their right to vote & breeding even more criminal activity in that exact area.
There are still people that fly the confederate flag but that doesn't mean the Civil War is relevant or related at all. Same thing with people's views today and what's happening. Neither the Holocaust or the Tulsa Race Riots are legitimately relevant in today's society, so idk why you are pretending otherwise.
The confederate flag has everything to do with the loving civil war. The civil war is almost still relevant today considering how polarized the two sides of politics are.