Four Confederate flags were left at the King Center and Ebenezer Baptist Church overnight, and the glaring act of intimidation is rightfully being investigated as a hate crime. Today I also located the eroding Confederate flag carved into Stone Mountain ages ago and bemoaned the van-loads of Confederate flag "enthusiasts," as the media often calls them (as if racism is a hobby), that will descend upon Stone Mountain Park this Saturday, from far and wide, to rally for the disgraceful Confederate flag, under the cloak of Southern pride and heritage, at the very 20th Century rebirth place of the Klan 100 years ago. They will be corralled in the Yellow Daisy lot, far away from the mountain itself, bloviating their First Amendment rights like windbags and noxious exhaust pipes pointed at each other. I'd like to hire a skywriter to fly above them all day spelling out Dr. King quotes. Or, how about, THIS IS GOD, PUT DOWN YOUR FLAGS! Or maybe an orchestra of only sousaphones to cacophonously disrupt the tune of Dixie and every Rebel cry. Dr. King once said, "Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity," so I will not go to witness this obscene and easily volatile spectacle. But that doesn't mean I will be silent.