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.
Honestly, this IS the bias I'm talking about. Imh, but studied opinion, the cause of the South was nothing near Nazi Germany. Not even close.
I'm actually fine with racist caricatures being removed by the organizations that inherit them. Good reason? They're racist caricatures.
Too soft and sensitive. We'd literally have to erase Don Rickles et al. I've been called a cracker. Laughed. Song of the South? Disney made that movie because he 'loved' those people and their stories. Go figure the ultra sensitive would be 'offended.' Same with "Redskins" btw. It is idiocy, imh but studied opinion. I believe you have a "right" to be offended, but you don't have the right to always remove that offense. I find a lot of comics offensive. I just don't go there. Easy (imho).
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.
Didn't I say as long as it doesn't break laws? That said, the summer solstice is soon upon us and I'll avoid Seattle that day.
Apparently they think that the law can be eschewed once a year.
I'm fine with racist values being marginalized in any society.

I think I got your point, however. Were the statues of Southern generals "racist?"
Does their icon represent slavery? :idunno: If Lee is public soil, so too should be Grant etc.
No one's rights were removed with the statues.
Disagree. Censoring is a removal of my 'right' to come to my own conclusions regarding history.
It is a way of 'steering.' We all do it regarding our values, but there is great protest right now about
the removal of identity. Should the South be ashamed of exercising what they believe was their
right to secede by states? Especially when there were so many that did so? History censors
the reason for seceding. Slavery wasn't the only problem.
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.
...Or the evil people of New Orleans... Are the ones suing to keep them from being removed the evil ones? My home vs. downtown are two different things. I don't want two dudes kissing outside my home. I have curtains. What is the difference? One represents the whole of a people vs. what interests less than 1% of our nation and doesn't represent our greater values. If our German themed town ever posted a statue of Hitler, that is that town's prerogative. If New Orleans wants to remove their statues, 1) I think the citizens that don't want them removed have a right. 2) There is not need for stipulation if they are removed. You want them destroyed, or put behind walls, but don't want them portrayed on private property. It seems your sentiments go beyond rights. For whatever reason, you think a statue of a Southern general is an offensive thing. You thought the same of the Confederate flag. I'm not disagreeing with all of your sentiments here, just the ones that seem biased/unbalanced. We shouldn't remove the Lincoln Memorial imho. It doesn't matter who won and who lost the Civil War, might doesn't make right. I want future generations to wrestle over values, not get the censored version. I have to fight with the liberal agenda and retraining of students almost every day. Our sentiments are greatly influenced by media and culture. I tend to try and fight against indoctrination, only in the sense that I want to think for myself. I'm self-analytical, so of course, I analyze all else as well. I don't want much of my data to analyze, removed. If it is, I have to dig much harder to come to a cogent conclusion. I want a nation of thinkers, not followers.
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?
Neither should the good people of New Orleans.
Or the wicked people of New Orleans... If it was a Michelangelo? I could carve a few leaves I suppose. I could also consider moving my church to someplace else. We don't have to go to extremes though: If the 'good' people of New Orleans want to remove a statue of Louis Armstrong because they no longer wanted to be stereo-typed with jazz? Sounds absurd, but what if many there start hating jazz and the local government decides to bow to the large group (not necessarily the majority)? Realize his statue would be hated, not for what you and I think about him, but because he represents something hated. Okay, let me buy the statue and keep it on my property, then. It doesn't have to be hidden simply because some odd # find it offensive. It, in and of itself, is not offensive. Neither are statues of generals. They were good men. They are good men part of our history that had hard decisions to make, but they fought for what they believed was right. I do not believe 1) that slavery is as offensive as people make it. It is represented in the Bible without fanfare. 2) That it has to be about skin color. Slavery touches ALL of our histories, no matter our color. Anything else is censoring history to benefit another's values and bent. 3) Lee and Jackson etc. don't represent 'slavery' or opposition to blacks. I'm not opposed to Martin Luther King Jr. Statues. I don't think he was the moral standard others have met, that I'd commission statues over, but he does represent a point in our history that is important. Removing him would ALSO censor a student's need to read and understand both sides of history.
Has anyone suggested they wouldn't be?
You said not seen publically, in a museum behind doors, or at the bottom of the sea. It 'seemed' like you did. If not, we are closer to being on page. :up:
Sure. And as a part of a larger historical set out, like Gettysburgh.
:thumb:
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.
:nono: There was no 'evil.' I could argue Lincoln was 'evil' for not letting states secede and 'starting' a war. Rather, everybody
should be encouraged to look at
facts instead of assessments and opinions regarding our history. You are calling 11 states 'wicked.' It
has to be much more than that shallow assessment. You know what is humorous? You were born in the South, I in the North!
To my mind that's like suggesting you can't have a statue of MLK, Jr. without a statue of a Grand Klan Wizard.
An interesting thought. I don't think any of us venerate the KKK. Those TOL members were banned. Further, I don't think any state 'could' erect that statue in the first place. There were different reasons for the statues of those generals being erected.
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.
Totally different history books here in the North, then. I actually appreciated a b
alanced approach.
Lincoln was first interested in uniting the states back to the Federal. Slavery abolition was tacked on 'after' the Civil War was already in progress.
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.
I don't believe the comparison holds up.
Neither do the good people of New Orleans.
...or evil people....
By association, is it your intent to cast those opposed, as evil or wicked, by intention?
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.
And whether you have a purpose or are just shooting up the town, aiming at the dentist sign because you don't like dentists, then moving over to the sheriff sign, because you don't like the law :think: As I said, I avoid Seattle, and Nevada. A statue of a soldier, in and of itself, imho, doesn't compare to nudity. I still avoid Seattle and Nevada. While the neighbor might hang a lighted sign that says 'brothel' I'd likely move.
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.
I disagree. It is giving bias. Again, slavery, in and of itself, was 'supported' by the Bible. I do not at all want to be a part of it, but it would have been more important to me, back then, that slaves were not abused. I am a slave to the Lord Jesus Christ, for instance. Because slavery is against our laws, I'm opposed to it, but not upon moral basis, else I'd have to declare God "wrong."
It's a lesson understood by more and more, and one now championed by those same good people.
....or evil....or misguided....or socialist communists....etc. etc. ALL of politics must be biased as long as it is not run by the Lord Jesus Christ.
At that time, there will yet be bias, the right one. People 'would' oppose if such were possible. We will ALL be slaves at that point. No statue glorifying it, will be taken down. :nono: