My Dixie Wrecked ©️

The refusal to air The Dukes of Hazzard today isn’t a neutral act of cultural caution—it’s a form of targeted erasure, an ideological overreach that, in the name of progress, dismisses entire swaths of Southern identity as inherently suspect or unworthy of nuance. And that’s where the racism lies: not in what the show was, but in what its silencing says about who is allowed to have a cultural memory and who isn’t.

Because the South, especially rural Southern whites, are often spoken of but rarely spoken with—flattened into stereotypes, scrubbed of complexity, and quietly labeled a social liability. The Confederate flag on the General Lee isn’t just a symbol—yes, it carries a painful history—but its blanket condemnation fails to distinguish between hate and heritage, between oppression and expression. To cancel The Dukes of Hazzard is to declare that no positive memory can exist in proximity to a contested symbol. It is to say, implicitly, that these people, these working-class Southerners, can have no corner of culture that is theirs without apology.

That’s racist.

It’s racist to imply that white Southerners must submit their entire cultural expression to a cleansing fire before they’re allowed to participate in mainstream media. It’s racist to suggest that because they inherited a complicated legacy, their stories—even the silly, slapstick ones with car chases and good-hearted rebellion—must be buried for fear of ideological contamination.

Because The Dukes of Hazzard was never about politics. It was about family, rebellion against corruption, and a deep, instinctive morality that didn’t come from institutions but from knowing right from wrong in your bones. It was about protecting your land, respecting your elders, outrunning the crooked sheriff when the law turned against the people. These are American themes. But because they were dressed in cowboy boots and Southern drawls, they’ve been deemed radioactive.

That’s not progress. That’s cultural redlining.

So when they refuse to air The Dukes of Hazzard, understand that it’s not about a flag. It’s about a decision to exclude, to humiliate, and to rewrite history in a way that leaves whole communities without a past they’re allowed to remember. And when you take away someone’s story, don’t be surprised when they stop listening to yours.