Confederate statues My view
#1
Posted 2017-August-18, 09:08
Their purpose in warring was to ensure a southern way of life, i.e., to continue an economic system based on slave-labor, treating slaves - fellow human beings - as property. There is nothing heroic or admirable about what they did. They should be remembered, all right, but only as black marks in history books.
#3
Posted 2017-August-18, 13:13
Confederate Memorial (Arlington National Cemetery
https://en.wikipedia...tional_Cemetery)
#4
Posted 2017-August-18, 14:21
It is also ironic that what was then the Democratic party was the political party most against abolition of slavery.
Things do change which is good.
By the way I am not an American.
#5
Posted 2017-August-18, 14:37
If we are discussing history from many decades ago let us not forget the monuments to slave owners in the UK, Rome, Greece and Egypt to name a few. People may forget that Native Americans took slaves.
With all of that said if your local community wishes to remove their local monument for whatever reasons I have no issue with that.
If Winston wishes to remember Lee as ONLY A Black Mark in History I would hope he might reconsider. I would hope Winston would take a look at Lee's life before and after the war.
Side note. You may wish to take a look at the life of the Union General Sherman who after the civil war took control of the war against the Plain Indians. He gave them a choice, assimilate or be exterminated. This was under the leadership of Grant and others.
#6
Posted 2017-August-18, 15:22
#7
Posted 2017-August-18, 15:27
Winstonm, on 2017-August-18, 09:08, said:
Their purpose in warring was to ensure a southern way of life, i.e., to continue an economic system based on slave-labor, treating slaves - fellow human beings - as property. There is nothing heroic or admirable about what they did. They should be remembered, all right, but only as black marks in history books.
Washington and Jefferson and all signers of the Declanration of Independence were traitors that rebelled against their lawful king.
Slave holders are bad so the great black kingdoms of Africa with their large slave holdings were very bad.
For most of history nations held slaves up till very recently. Greece and Rome guilty.
Egypt guilty. Persian Empire quilty
#8
Posted 2017-August-18, 16:21
Winstonm, on 2017-August-18, 09:08, said:
We should tear down whatever is left of the Coliseum right now ...
Let's ask ISIS to do it, they already did such a good job at Palmyra.
Before internet age you had a suspicion there are lots of "not-so-smart" people on the planet. Now you even know their names.
#9
Posted 2017-August-18, 17:35
In 20 years or 50 years will we look back at the consumption of meat, all meat, the slaughter of animals for meat as some horrible moral weakness?
In 50 years will there be a discussion of treating robots as property to use as we wish including for slave work or sex or bridge or some ethical issue to debate?
#10
Posted 2017-August-18, 18:09
spotlight7, on 2017-August-18, 15:27, said:
Slave holders are bad so the great black kingdoms of Africa with their large slave holdings were very bad.
For most of history nations held slaves up till very recently. Greece and Rome guilty.
Egypt guilty. Persian Empire quilty
If you will notice, in my statement I made two arguments against memorializing Lee: 1) the legal argument (he committed treason) and 2) the moral argument (his treason was in support of continued slavery). Even if you disagree with the second, how can anyone argue against the first? Or should Wisconsin memorialize Aldrich Ames for his 31 years of service to the C.I.A.?
#11
Posted 2017-August-18, 18:10
mike777, on 2017-August-18, 17:35, said:
In 20 years or 50 years will we look back at the consumption of meat, all meat, the slaughter of animals for meat as some horrible moral weakness?
In 50 years will there be a discussion of treating robots as property to use as we wish including for slave work or sex or bridge or some ethical issue to debate?
You might weigh in on my response above - the legal argument against memorializing a treasonous traitor.
#12
Posted 2017-August-18, 18:48
Lee was pardoned after the Civil War so he is not legally a traitor as you claim.
Slavery has existed for thousands of years and in many nations/empires.
The great black empires in Africa held large numbers of slaves.
Greece and Rome held huge numbers of slaves.
#13
Posted 2017-August-18, 19:06
The only reason that Lee is remembered is that he was a traitor who went to war against the United States to defend slavery.
Had he never done so nor be so successful in his cause he would be no more venerated than any other random major or colonel from the 19th century.
Let us not forget that, by and large, the statutes that we are fighting over today were erected in the 1920s in an attempt to celebrate the end of reconstruction and remind blacks that they had once again been disenfranchised.
#14
Posted 2017-August-18, 19:27
Winstonm, on 2017-August-18, 18:10, said:
I doubt there is a law in US against memorializing a traitor. If you find one I stand corrected.
#15
Posted 2017-August-18, 20:25
I believe this is a partial list of confederate statues in the north, to say the least there are many of them.
As I said in my first post.
This was certainly a hot topic after the war, should we just say the hell with south, the rebels, the traitors or should we offer Grace, undeserved forgiveness and reach out.
Again I add the Arlington Cemetery a sacred Union cemetery where the rebels, traitors if you prefer were buried with honor at the time.
Many of these monuments to the rebels were erected in the north .... the purpose to honor the fallen including the traitors in the hope of reconciliation...many more were erected esp in the south as testament to discrimination and racism and hate in the south decades later.
If your local community would prefer to take them down for whatever reason, no issue here, if you prefer to maintain them, you decide.
#16
Posted 2017-August-18, 20:36
Were you to remove monuments to terrorists and slave-owners, few old statues would survive.
A lot of old art is religious and has merit even it's fashionable to blame religion for the world's ills.
Also, ethics are always a bit arbitrary and evolve over time, so we must be wary of judging historical figures by current concepts of right and wrong.
For example, you can imagine a future society condemning us for our
- Cruel enslavement of animals to eat and for pets. Subjecting them to foul eugenics programs. Brain-washing them. Perverting their natural growth and instincts.
- Disgraceful mistreatment of robots and AI programs. or
- Squandering precious resources on chimera like the millennium bug and global warming
- Bigoted prevention of church/state recognition of human-marriage to a sheep or to an Apache helicopter.
#17
Posted 2017-August-18, 22:24
steve2005, on 2017-August-18, 19:27, said:
Do you fail to understand that the legality I mentioned was the act of treason? If you think treasonous behavior should be memorialized, you have that right. Perhaps we should add Robert Hannsen and Aldrich Ames to your list, as well.
#18
Posted 2017-August-19, 01:06
"There were pieces of history that they didn't like, they were taking them down," says the country and Southern rock veteran.
As Daniels sees it, the answer isn't in removing Civil War statues of Lee, Jackson and the like, but simply turning away.
"If you don't like it, don't look at it," he says. "I walk past movie posters I don't like … there's all kinds of symbolism in this country that I don't like, but I'm not going to go tear them down. I just don't look at them … These statues aren't preaching or shouting out some kind of crazy epithets or something. They're just sitting there. Just turn around and don't look at them."
Daniels remains one of country music's most politically vocal figures. "Wonder if any of the radicals fomenting chaos would consider marching to save the lives of the millions of unborn that are murdered each year," he tweeted today, along with his regular tweets about the terror attack on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya. "Benghazi ain't going away!" he wrote.
My view: Rewriting history by burying it or destroying it does us no favours at all. Even if I agree that what the Confederate States stood for was morally wrong.
#19
Posted 2017-August-19, 02:17
The_Badger, on 2017-August-19, 01:06, said:
"If you don't like it, don't look at it," he says. "I walk past movie posters I don't like … there's all kinds of symbolism in this country that I don't like, but I'm not going to go tear them down. I just don't look at them … These statues aren't preaching or shouting out some kind of crazy epithets or something. They're just sitting there. Just turn around and don't look at them."
The statues are on public lands and represent deliberate and continual speech by the state.
This is very different than private speech by a movie theater.
#20
Posted 2017-August-19, 03:12
hrothgar, on 2017-August-19, 02:17, said:
This is very different than private speech by a movie theater.
Yes, I agree that Daniels remarks are clichéd at best comparing Confederate Statues to movie posters. But many of these statues were erected in the late 1800s/early 1900s and are part of the history of the USA.
As a traditional left-wing Labour (Democrat) voter myself, I would definitely veto any attempt to erect any divisive symbolism such as Confederate Statues in this day and age.
However, given that the USA has participated in numerous wars around the world, some very divisive, killing millions of ordinary people, shouldn't the Statue of Liberty be dismantled too?