True, they want their cake and ice cream. Been saying that for years.
My free speech is being assaulted by them now when they try to silence me or tell me to know my place. Stuff like that pisses me off to no end.
I think there is enough public space in the South for statues of Robert E Lee and MLK. And I'd like to see a Sherman Avenue in Atlanta. And a statue of Ulysses S Grant. And more recognition of the 150,000 plus freedmen who fought for the North and 100,000 plus white southerners who fought for the North. They are all an important part of southern history and heroes in my book. Instead of taking down statues, let's be more inclusive in recognizing those who contributed to southern history.
"I am a victim, I will tell you. I am a victim."
"I am your retribution."
AerchAngel (08-14-2017), Jaw (08-14-2017), Runnin (08-14-2017)
Wow, someone gets it. Too bad the alternative doesn't care about our vote or don't care about us at all. I don't necessarily see it as a bad thing because you work your butt off you will be rewarded.
It's bad we can trust the Republicans more than the Democrats who only pay lip service and don't do anything. Republicans is not going to promise us anything so they don't have to lie about it. They just won't help. At least they are being upfront about it. Even the ones on this board would not lie to me and tell me in my face you are on your own. The others, they try to mince words and say they are there for me.....yeah right. When I see a white person go to a street corner or even in church to preach and tell my kind to keep their dicks in their pants, graduate from school, quit dealing drugs and be responsible and if not we take some of your welfare away would be the first.
I'm on board with sacpi's idea of broadening the historical context.
To sturg, I'd suggest that literally elevating any person to a pedestal is potentially problematic, because it tends to elevate only their historical virtues. Doing so figuratively can likewise transgress, but it's easier having a conversation with a person about a set of historical facts than it is with a statue.
FDR provided inspiration through implacable opposition to fascism and his personal struggle with a physical disability. He also presided over the internment of Japanese-Americans during the war.
Reagan provided comfort and inspiration to pro-democracy activists in E Europe, and also to Central American death squads and apartheid S Africans.
Same story for MLK, for Obama, for JFK, Thomas Jefferson, for Richard Nixon. Same thing for you and for me, I suppose. Maybe even for Justin Amash.
Personally, I don't see much of the same ambiguity around the leading lights of the Confederacy. That's a red line for me, though I'm willing to admit it's a subjective judgement. To choose--and they all chose--to take up arms against their country in defense of a system that treated other human beings as property seems like something that shouldn't be celebrated. What's more important to you? "White culture" or personal liberty? I'm sure you'd say the latter. So why go to bat against the perceived sin of the legislation of morality over the unambiguous sin of the promotion of the ultimate affront to personal liberty?
Last edited by Julio3000; 08-14-2017 at 09:33 AM.
A personal anecdote: When I was in high school I received some promotional literature from a school named Washington and Lee University. I knew who Washington was but had to read the brochure to find out who this Lee fellow was. It wasn't that I was ignorant of Robert E Lee. It was that it never occurred to me that a university would be named after a confederate general, no matter how distinguished. Shows you how clueless I was as an immigrant about certain aspects of American culture and history.
"I am a victim, I will tell you. I am a victim."
"I am your retribution."
"I am a victim, I will tell you. I am a victim."
"I am your retribution."
I have always felt every landmark to the Confederacy should be replaced with one of Wm Tecumseh Sherman. Just as a reminder to the atrocity of war and the horrible wrongs people will go to for a buck.
What gets lost is Lincoln allowed the South to go back to their lives without punishment or branding as traitors.
Let no good deed go unpunished
The end of the Civil War allowed our country to get back to the business of genocide on Native Americans
We are a violent people and like a famous person once said "America's chickens are coming home to roost"
" Violence begets violence. Hatred begets hatred. And terrorism begets terrorism. A white ambassador said that, y'all. Not a black militant. Not a reverend who preaches about racism. An ambassador whose eyes are wide open and who is trying to get us to wake up and move away from this dangerous precipice upon which we are now poised. The ambassador said the people that we have wounded don't have the military capability we have. But they do have individuals who are willing to die and take thousands with them. And we need to come to grips with that."
Rev Jeremiah Wright
Last edited by 57Brave; 08-14-2017 at 10:52 AM.
The best way to stop a bad guy with a gun is to make sure he doesn’t get a gun.
AA, do you think it's enough that I care about your welfare as an American? I couldn't care less that you are black, I don't think we should lower college entrance requirements because of it, provide you a special stipend because of it, try to draw special voter districts because of it, or audit how many people with dark skin work at any given companies. I don't think your skin color is a disability because I have worked with too many people who were really smart and really good at their job and had really dark skin. I guess my point is, do you feel that it's people like me treating you in a racist way, or is it the people who are trying to cater to you specifically based on your skin pigmentation?
The thing is, most of the soldiers didn't. They couldn't look this stuff up on the internet. Heck most of them couldn't read it for themselves in a newspaper, and those that could would have had to read it from a paper published in a big, prosperous, slave economy driven town that gave a biased perspective. Most of these guys were told the Yanks were invading so they put on their walking boots and went to defend.
We also need to recall that until Lincoln, more precedence was put on the state than the country. Robert E. Lee famously disagreed with secession, but chose Virginia over the US.
Bill Clinton signed DOMA. Candidate Obama was opposed to gay marriage until his position on it began "evolving" around the time the poll numbers on it went through a major shift. We need to stop trying to judge historical figures based on the current moral compass of the day.
Hawk (08-14-2017)
Should we discourage Muslim signage in NYC and take down the Saudi flag so those that lost loved ones on 9/11 aren't reminded of the pain?
Will we one day take down all crosses because some homosexuals feel they were persecuted by Christians?
Should we ban roman candles on July 4th because of Pontius Pilate did to Jesus?
We can't make the whole world a safe space.
I've also had the pleasure of meeting many successful black people in my travels through PwC and now my current employer.
I just don't buy the fact that people can't escape poverty through hard work. But, whatever it takes to keep minorities under the lefts thumb for those votes.
Natural Immunity Croc
If you'd like to make an argument that nobody deserves a statue because nobody is perfect... then fine. I'm not there, but fine if you are.
But if you prefer to have a living testament to someone's contributions, then I think we should be consistent. Imagine the outrage if a Christian city demanded and successfully argued that an MLK statue should be taken down because it hurt their feelings because he represented an ungodly man and a hypocrite. But hey, now we have to appease the left by ripping down Thomas Jefferson memorials. I assume Washington will be next. The good news here is it will create a lot of jobs in DC.
So somebody's feelings get hurt over a statue and thus that is enough reason to remove it?
Yes - individual liberty is frankly all that matters to me (although you and others have told me time and time again that it's not necessarily that important to you. And yes, slavery is about worst thing imaginable to libertarians. But as you said, erasing a statue doesn't erase the history.
Re: Lee, it is my understanding that his views of the war were a state's rights issue more so than slavery. He was originally planning to be a master general of the union army UNTIL Virginia seceded.
Now you can say (and I'm sure you will) that since he fought for the south his intentions are meaningless, and thus he fought for slavery and should be remembered as such. I disagree on that point, and recognize that he was an American hero for the majority of his adult life, and many people from the north thought as much, even after the war.
If we want to wipe his memory from history because some people get their feelings hurt, well I respectfully disagree and think that is the larger issue our country is currently facing.
Sigh.
First off, killing, maiming, and terrorizing are generally the calling cards of extremist political groups. Those tactics are absolutely, unequivocally not endemic to one ideological subset.
Your initial comment struck me as tone deaf because you were, in no uncertain terms ("100% consistent with the agenda" ... "What that kid did is completely in line with that ideology"), aligning what I perceive to be the underlying, justifiable grounds for protest with wanton violence and race hate. There were over 25 individual right wing 'organizations' that participated in the Charlottesville protest. Some overtly connected with supremacist values, others simply not. You want to point to David Duke, I'll point at Gavin McInnes. So, please, spare me the over-amped, over-simplified soapbox harangue on Nazism and White Nationalism. I'm well aware of what these ideologies espouse and hope to achieve.
There is a degree of overlap between a white nationalist and a nationalist. That doesn't mean that all nationalists are white nationalists. For example. But you know this, and you are more than capable of understanding the nuance. I guess that's what is disconcerting to me about the slaphappy approach you've taken here by casting a wide net over the entire 'right' side of the equation and, then, casually fashioning every creed within into a kind of pithy moral v. amoral construct.
That's not reasoning and that's not reasonable.
There is a netherworld in the contemporary conservative belief system that's somewhere between the alt-right/ultra-nationalist wing and what we've traditionally considered to be the far right. It's a place where many of your 'disenchanted' twentysomethings reside. These are people with negative views toward both the government and society, and they tend to embrace things like a strong immigration policy, strong military, First Amendment rights, a loosely defined notion of national pride, etc. They are not inherently racist, they are not inherently supremacist. They are, however, inherently susceptible. They support an issue like the Lee statue in Charlottesville for reasons completely antithetical to Neo-Nazism/Neo-Confederacy. But now, suddenly, you (and really, it's not just you, it's many other people both on this board and well beyond) have neatly positioned them in a dichotomy with a bunch of dudes that do the Hitler salute in public (and aren't joking about it).
Do you understand the danger of labeling these people something they aren't ... for protecting a concept that they have every right to want to guard?
Aren't JOKING about it? So it's OK if they are?
how many monument are there in the south to General George Henry Thomas of Virginia