No. The Ku Klux Klan burning a cross symbolize does not symbolize a declaration of war.
A burning cross was used in Scotland to signal a declaration of war and thus to draw the clans together to form an army. A variant of this was used as late as 1812.
The Klan's burning of a cross is used to intimidate people. Some Klan members claim that it is an illumination of a cross to symbolize the members' faith. Others reference the Emperor Constantine's vision of a burning cross that led to his conversion to Christianity.
Well, "disrespect" refers to the intent of the person (or group). The Klan would say that cross burning (or the "fiery cross") is not disrespectful because they consider themselves to be Christian. However, (true) Christians would say that their actions and beliefs say different. Richard Land, President of Southern Evangelical Seminary said, "It is blasphemous for the Ku Klux Klan to seek to wrap its white supremacist beliefs in the glory of the cross. The cross of Jesus Christ is the antithesis of everything for which the Ku Klux Klan has stood and now stands."
Thomas Dixon included a cross-burning scene in his book The Clansmen, which was an attempt to compare the Klan with the Scottish clansmen who set crosses on fire in medieval times in defiance of their rivals. Later, D.W. Griffith adapted the book into a movie, the infamous The Birth of a Nation. The Klan was inspired by the big-screen portrayal and soon started using the burning crosses themselves. The Klan today says that the ritual is "cross-lighting" (not burning) and symbolizes their Christian faith.
Today the KKK still leaves threats across America. For example; a noose on a car its a warning that they are coming after you.
The Ku Klux Klan (KKK) uses a burning cross as a symbol of its ideology, representing both a perverse form of intimidation and a perverted expression of their beliefs in racial superiority and white nationalism. The act of burning a cross is intended to evoke fear in marginalized communities, particularly African Americans, and to signal the Klan's presence and power. Historically, the cross burning has roots in the group's origins in the post-Civil War South, where it was used as a method of terror and as a symbol of their commitment to white supremacy.
The Ku Klux Klan has a strange ritual of Burning the Cross. This might be because the Satan didn't like the cavalry and crosses were a sing of the cavalry. Although, the Ku Klux Klan give an argument that they do it as the Christian Scots used to burn them to muster forces for war. Sources: http://www.johnnyleeclary.com/questions_on_the_ku_klux_klan.htm (Answer to the question: Why does the Klan burn the cross?)
A bunch of rednecks in the same place. With a burning cross and with cops guarding the area so normal people wont beat them up.
Yes they did they killed people by hanging or burning on the cross and they have been accused in some cases to have killed martin Luther king jr.
the kkk (ku klux klan) got into the houses by burning the houses or get in throw the window, open door or a gap
They are known for racism, hate, and burning crosses in people's yards.
First off, do not get in confused with the symbol used by the Ku Klux Klan. The burning cross represents the cleansing of sins and all that is not good and pure. Originally that is what the KKK used represented when burning crosses in Negroes' front yard. It represented their belief that Negroes do not deserve to exist, and that god does not approve of their existence. so there you go: Cleansing sin through the flames.
It's an interesting question as to why the Ku Klux Klan, an organization based entirely on racism, chose the religious symbol of the cross to be part of their strategy of intimidation. But it's not that unusual; in all wars in human history, people always believe that God is on their side (or in the case of polytheists such as Hindus, that gods are on their side). Slavery itself was given religious justifications by slave owners of the old south, so it is not surprising that white supremacists also like to claim that the superiority of the white race was ordained by God. But a burning cross is not a religious celebration, it is merely a threat. There is nothing celebratory about it.
It is a movie about the search for the Ku Klux Klan murderers of the civil rights workers near Philadelphia Mississippi.