BOOM!Censorship doesn't have to be forced to be considered censorship.
Strawman.
Sound reasoning again.
You're on a roll, Lon.
:cheers:
BOOM!Censorship doesn't have to be forced to be considered censorship.
Strawman.
I was bothered when Disney was forced to discontinue Song of the South sales. There was no reason.
Who forced them? :idunno:Censorship doesn't have to be forced to be considered censorship.
Strawman.
How about the people of New Orleans would rather have a better, nobler association? Sounds good to me. And removing Swastikas and Nazi emblems in Germany didn't lead to anyone forgetting the Third Reich, but it took any semblance of honor from the association.Censorship of the past bothers me. I see no good reason, other than socialistic pressure, to remove our history.
I'm actually fine with racist caricatures being removed by the organizations that inherit them. Good reason? They're racist caricatures.I was bothered when Disney was forced to discontinue Song of the South sales. There was no reason. Being offended is no good reason. Soon, Peter Pan will be removed for promoting "red man." We'd reduce the Civil War to never happening and blame the South for all of it. I'm not THAT white.
So you're okay with pornography on the stands for anyone passing by to see and purchase? Because if you're not you're fine with censorship.Nothing to you in particular, but I don't relate to censorship.
I'm fine with racist values being marginalized in any society.It always seeks to remove another's identity and values.
No one's rights were removed with the statues. And if someone sent you a gift that personally offended you would you proudly display it at the entrance of your house? Neither will the good people of New Orleans.I don't want to remove another's rights simply because I'm personally offended.
You'll excuse me I hope, but why on earth should that be the standard? If you bought a business that had the painting of a naked lady on the outside of it because it once was a brothel (that part of town having undergone a gentrification) should you be required to leave it on your new home for a church?If it doesn't break the law, it should not be removed.
Has anyone suggested they wouldn't be?These statues should be allowed on any private property
Sure. And as a part of a larger historical set out, like Gettysburgh.A museum is fine too.
Really? I'd argue you should be. Lee was a man of renowned character who recognized the evil he fought to preserve. Grant, a more notably flawed character fought to end it and to preserve the Union. I'll take flawed in the service of the good over gentlemanly in the service of an evil any day of the week.I'm not any more ashamed of General Lee than I am of Grant.
To my mind that's like suggesting you can't have a statue of MLK, Jr. without a statue of a Grand Klan Wizard.If one statue stands on public property, so should the other.
No, it wasn't. Other issues were tied to slavery, but the war was all about that inhuman and indecent practice. I've set out the declarations on the point by most of the states that rebelled. I've noted the headlines and stump speeches. It's not even close to arguable, Lon.The war was about many other principles than just slavery
I don't really care if the Nazis believed in what they did to the Jews. I don't think it elevates their conduct a whit.and both sides stood up for what they believed were their rights.
If you believed that you'd be fine with porn on street corners and over the public airwaves of major networks. You'd be fine with blasphemy around here. I don't believe you are, Lon. Censorship is like a gun. It depends on how you use it.Censorship is more wicked than the purported ill that it seeks to silence.
The dinosaurs who support romanticizing that lamentable chapter will pass into a clearer, more objective treatment of history and no one will forget the real lesson of that war and how many died to teach it to us.Trying can easily lead to another civil crisis. This censor mentality will cause civil conflict and deeper rift itself.
Of course there is a force else we'd have it (I own it, had to purchase out of country, beautiful show). I just read they are considering repealing the decision.:liberals:
So they were not forced as your originally stated...
Because the South lost. Easy as that.
It's sorta like that "You libs lost so get used to it" thing. :think:
If this monument were in the US, I'd want it torn down too!
View attachment 25699
Blows the mind!yep, thats liberal logic 101. His problem for getting involved.
Blows the mind!
Our nation has way too many wussy little sheep that don't have the good sense to just stand up and say, "This is frivolous and a huge waste of taxpayer money. Just stop the madness already!"
And make a law that everybody has to hold hands and drink a Coke while they are singing We Are The World.Why in the world would you want that torn down?
I guess we should tear down the battlefield memorials, too. The Gettysburg museum....
Heck, let's not ever show Gone with the Wind. Let's not even mention slavery. Let's get rid of all those books in the libraries. Purge the earth of all historical evidence and put up rainbow flags across this land. :doh:
Truth doesnt matter, and liberals hate states rights also. (the main reason was states rights not slavery)
:liberals:
So they were not forced as your originally stated...
In response to Tam's 8% comment...
That said, I have no idea where she's getting her numbers.
Here are a few more fun facts. In 1860, 47% of the population of the South was slave.
One third of Southern families owned slaves (that's more than 8% for the math challenged). So if you thin a thing out you can get one number. But if you look at it where it mattered, another.
Number of slave owners in the South: 385,000. 50% of slave owners had fewer than five.
How profitable was the institution? Though the South had only 30% of the U.S. free population it had 60% of the wealthiest men among its number.
The war was all about slavery. Most people in the South approved and one in three participated in the process directly. Many more indirectly.
As to the myths being spread of late, again, using the History Channel:
Myth #2: The South seceded from the Union over the issue of states’ rights, not slavery.
[FONT=&]This myth, that the Civil War wasn’t fundamentally a conflict over slavery, would have been a surprise to the original founders of the Confederacy. In the official declaration of the causes of their secession in December 1860, South Carolina’s delegates cited “an increasing hostility on the part of the non-slaveholding States to the institution of slavery.” According to them, the Northern interference with the return of fugitive slaves was violating their constitutional obligations; they also complained that some states in New England tolerated abolitionist societies and allowed black men to vote.[FONT=&]
[/FONT]
Myth #3: Only a small percentage of Southerners owned slaves.
[FONT=&]Closely related to Myth #2, the idea that the vast majority of Confederate soldiers were men of modest means rather than large plantation owners is usually used to reinforce the contention that the South wouldn’t have gone to war to protect slavery. The 1860 census shows that in the states that would soon secede from the Union, an average of more than 32 percent of white families owned slaves. Some states had far more slave owners (46 percent in South Carolina, 49 percent in Mississippi) while some had far less (20 percent in Arkansas).[/FONT]
[FONT=&]But as Jamelle Bouie and Rebecca Onion point out in Slate, the percentages don’t fully express the extent to which the antebellum South was a slave society, built on a foundation of slavery. Many of those white families who couldn’t afford slaves aspired to, as a symbol of wealth and prosperity. In addition, the essential ideology of white supremacy that served as a rationale for slavery, made it extremely difficult—and terrifying—for white Southerners to imagine life alongside a black majority population that was not in bondage. In this way, many non-slave-owning Confederates went to war to protect not only slavery, but to preserve the foundation of the only way of life they knew.[/FONT]
And so on. [/FONT]
Why in the world would you want that torn down?
Regarding ‘Song of the South’ – The Film That Disney Doesn’t Want You to See
The force is political correctness, which is rampant these days. I have a bridge to sell right now, for anyone who doesn't believe it.
If it's a minority that removes them, it's totalitarian. What is going on is no different than ISIS destroying monuments. If you want to remove a culture from your society, remove it's history first. Our history has already been revised beyond recognition by the stalinists in our society. They have been taking down our visual reminders too. Soon, we will have no real history and we can safely be removed from society like has already begun. Much of the remaining members of our society have been relegated to the backwoods and left to live off government scraps and opioids.
ok good.This conservative isn't OK with it at all.
Not following you here.But I will now use liberal logic ......
If the guy had not agreed to remove it, he and his car would be OK.
Just like if you hadn't of drawn that pic of Mohamed (piss be upon him), you would still have your head attached to your body.
Just should have known it was gonna offend some poor little soul somewhere.
:doh:
In response to Tam's 8% comment...
That said, I have no idea where she's getting her numbers.
Here are a few more fun facts. In 1860, 47% of the population of the South was slave.
One third of Southern families owned slaves (that's more than 8% for the math challenged). So if you thin a thing out you can get one number. But if you look at it where it mattered, another.
Number of slave owners in the South: 385,000. 50% of slave owners had fewer than five.
How profitable was the institution? Though the South had only 30% of the U.S. free population it had 60% of the wealthiest men among its number.
The war was all about slavery. Most people in the South approved and one in three participated in the process directly. Many more indirectly.
As to the myths being spread of late, again, using the History Channel:
Myth #2: The South seceded from the Union over the issue of states’ rights, not slavery.
[FONT=&]This myth, that the Civil War wasn’t fundamentally a conflict over slavery, would have been a surprise to the original founders of the Confederacy. In the official declaration of the causes of their secession in December 1860, South Carolina’s delegates cited “an increasing hostility on the part of the non-slaveholding States to the institution of slavery.” According to them, the Northern interference with the return of fugitive slaves was violating their constitutional obligations; they also complained that some states in New England tolerated abolitionist societies and allowed black men to vote.[FONT=&]
[/FONT]
Myth #3: Only a small percentage of Southerners owned slaves.
[FONT=&]Closely related to Myth #2, the idea that the vast majority of Confederate soldiers were men of modest means rather than large plantation owners is usually used to reinforce the contention that the South wouldn’t have gone to war to protect slavery. The 1860 census shows that in the states that would soon secede from the Union, an average of more than 32 percent of white families owned slaves. Some states had far more slave owners (46 percent in South Carolina, 49 percent in Mississippi) while some had far less (20 percent in Arkansas).[/FONT]
[FONT=&]But as Jamelle Bouie and Rebecca Onion point out in Slate, the percentages don’t fully express the extent to which the antebellum South was a slave society, built on a foundation of slavery. Many of those white families who couldn’t afford slaves aspired to, as a symbol of wealth and prosperity. In addition, the essential ideology of white supremacy that served as a rationale for slavery, made it extremely difficult—and terrifying—for white Southerners to imagine life alongside a black majority population that was not in bondage. In this way, many non-slave-owning Confederates went to war to protect not only slavery, but to preserve the foundation of the only way of life they knew.[/FONT]
And so on. [/FONT]
I wasn't talking about most, or how many. I was only wondering what type of statues a conservative might go after. Is there an equivalent to the Confederacy monuments?Most conservatives? None. The chaos and lawbreaking parties are the liberals, as seen on tv often this year and last, hence trump.
And they still dont get it.
It goes both ways though, doesn't it? :think:
The point is that no one forced Disney to stop making copies of 'Song of the South'.
All of you are totalitarian