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.
Aside from fundamentally disagreeing with that, the Reich being a racist system within which certain people weren't actually considered people or given the protection of law, my use of it was in noting that doing away with the symbols of its evil didn't erase history or cause anyone to forget. We recall the Nazi evil easily enough. Perhaps one reason people like you don't really see the same evil in the Southern institution is because of the influence of that noble myth and its symbols.
You may be inadvertently making the point for those who want them relegated to museums and/or private collections. You'll make the point more strongly later in your response.
Go figure the ultra sensitive would be 'offended.'
Rather it is the insensitivity of the insulated that isn't hard to figure and the propensity of that privileged class to react to feeling put upon by the object of the offense that seems pampered to me. Soft. That mindset was comfortable dishing out inequality and insult for generations, but listen to it wail when its right to anything it feels entitled to is challenged.
Didn't I say as long as it doesn't break laws?
You did, but those laws are censorship, which remains my point. You aren't an enemy of censorship. No reasonable person could be and hope to have a society that works. You don't have the right to scream profanity in the public square, to peddle pornography to anyone passing by on the street, and so on. Those laws ARE censorship, Lon.
I think I got your point, however. Were the statues of Southern generals "racist?"
Are the emblems of a slave state inherently racist? Yes. Of course they are.
Should the South be ashamed of exercising what they believe was their right to secede by states?
It should be ashamed of why it desired the exercise. That remains the point, not the attempt by some to rewrite the actual history into another noble fable.
...Or the evil people of New Orleans.
Whatever you think of them there's nothing evil about pulling commemorations to a slave state from the public square.
It doesn't matter who won and who lost the Civil War, might doesn't make right.
No one is suggesting it does. At least I'm not.
I do not believe 1) that slavery is as offensive as people make it.
You know I like you and you're a brother in Christ, but that statement takes your reasonableness on the position off the table. People were raped, murdered, families were torn apart and generations suffered both from that institution and from the wake of it. I'm deeply sorry that the weight of that evil doesn't make a deeper impression upon you.
I'm not opposed to Martin Luther King Jr. Statues.
Why would you be?
I don't think he was the moral standard others have met
His statue in Washington is in recognition of his pivotal role in undoing some of the remnants of slavery and giving his full measure of devotion to freeing American citizens who never should have required the sacrifice.
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.
I've said it wouldn't bother me if the lot of them were dropped into the sea, except I'd feel compassion for the fish. I've never suggested anyone had to do it.
If you don't find systematic dehumanization, rape, torture, murder, the denial of right and liberty evil I don't know how to speak with you about it.
Rather, everybody should be encouraged to look at facts instead of assessments and opinions regarding our history.
Sure, that's why I noted inconvenient facts for those trying to preserve the old myth. I noted how prevalent slavery was among the common man, how many benefited from the institution both directly and indirectly. The average Joe wasn't walking about debating the idea of states rights and randomly deciding to test the theory. But they were tied to slavery, whose expansion and power were being threatened by the north with the election of Lincoln.
You are calling 11 states 'wicked.' It has to be much more than that shallow assessment.
You made the assessment then judged it. You're not quoting me. I'd say that the states left to support that institution and its evil. That's a statement founded on fact, not a shallow assessment. It's what it was and how it went. Not what Hollywood, defeated Southern apologists and those who want to drape their racism in the robes of nobility have put on the table for popular consumption.
You know what is humorous? You were born in the South, I in the North!
I grew up in it. I'm a son of old lines here. I've born witness to the impact of that evil across social strata. I've witnessed its echoes, the obvious and subtle and seen some of its damage up close. My criticism isn't something I'm happy to advance, but its necessary.
Slavery abolition was tacked on 'after' the Civil War was already in progress.
I never said the Union went to war to abolish slavery. I've noted the South attempted to withdraw to defend and expand slavery.
I disagree. It is giving bias.
A bias for reason is no fault. A bias for the truth is a virtue. As with censorship the presumption that all instances are cut from the same cloth simply cannot survive a reasoned contemplation.
Again, slavery, in and of itself, was 'supported' by the Bible.
Not the same animal, though I'd argue slavery in the Bible is a complicated narrative.
I am a slave to the Lord Jesus Christ, for instance.
Your master won't abuse you, sell you, rape or maim you. Not the same thing at all then.