With all the peril we are facing now, this may seem trivial, but I think accuracy is worth pursuing. A lack of sound facts and precision in our terminology detracts from the validity of the ideas we present.
While the second Confederate Navy Jack is popularly displayed and waved by extremist groups, it is not, repeat, NOT the Confederate flag. A square, rather than rectangular, version of this popular design was the battle flag of northern Virginia, also referred to as the rebel flag or Dixie flag. This X-shaped design was incorporated as the canton in the second and third national flags of the CSA, in a white rectangular field (emblematic of “the Heaven-ordained supremacy of the white man over the inferior or colored race”) or a white field with a vertical red bar, named the Stainless Banner (1863-65) and the Blood-Stained Banner (1865), respectively. The battle flag remains to this day the canton of the state flag of Mississippi.
But the first national flag of the CSA was the uppermost one of the flags pictured above, referred to as the “Stars and Bars.” The number of stars ranged from 7 to 13 from 1861 to 1863. A thorough discussion of the various flags can be found here.
For your amusement, the third flag above is the MAGA flag.