There is no honor in defense of an evil. Lee knew better and acted contrary to his greater moral obligation, the same sense that had him decry the institution his personal service upheld. Seeing them clearly doesn't require my hate, but it does remove from me an ennobling pity and lift the veil of that myth.
It isn't just me, however. Did you
read this?
Again, if there is no redemption in them, I have never heard it, but from you. How is this reasonable? It seems, with the removal of the statues, it is, at least to some, but why? What changed? When does it no longer matter what Eisenhower or Churchill and others believed?
Understanding their states were upholding something else.
Again, the Bible talked about slavery. Slavery is still going on. Not to excuse, but when a culture by and large is steeped in something, it is harder to see the problem.
Abortion is legal, not because it is right. It is an atrocity. Will we call Regan and every president since him, until the law is reversed, evil? They all willing took office at such a time. I'm not understanding all guilty-by-association accusations as they relate to those generals.
No, Germany was under a harder thumb, suffering from economic disaster largely brought on by the actions of the victors in WWI. That is part of what drove that people mad and turned their own racist tendencies into something horrible and consuming. In the South that turn was engendered by a prosperity driven by racism. The only saving grace was that unlike Germany it required maintenance of the object of its contempt, not wholesale extermination.
Hitler was not dealing with a full deck. The Gestapo was wrought by paranoia because the government was a dictatorship of one. There are too many disconnects for this to be an accurate or even fair, comparison, to me.
I wouldn't suggest that he is. I think Hitler was insane and believed in the evil he embraced. Lee knew, evidenced by letter and actions outside of his service to the Confederacy. His evil was vanity. His lot and name was tied to a state and he was willing to embrace the preservation of an institution he knew to be evil in the service of that...reminding me of the rich young ruler after a fashion. Hitler is a personal horror. Lee is a tragic, flawed figure.
Then the comparison is strained. Why use it? I am not sure that Lee saw the Southern institution to be evil, but rather a necessary one. Lincoln, too, chose what he believed was a necessary evil as well.
It isn't in and of itself though any more than a flag is just a piece of cloth. It's a tribute to something and that something is more than the man as is evidence by the uniform they have him wearing and the service it honors. That's the problem. Lee did enough actual good for New Orleans that they could have put him in simple clothing and altered the message. They chose another route and it evidences another intent.
Wasn't it rather, embracing terms of the truce? The Constitution provided for means of men to stand up for their unalienable rights, on both sides. To disdain one side, in its pursuit, is heavy-handed. We have always been a nation of fighters, not push-overs. As such, the statues imho, are not thumbing their nose at the North, but a celebration of indomitable human spirit. Is the only good American a trodden American? A non-contentious American? A compliant American? I may have bought a slave or a few back then. Why? 1) To keep tribes from killing one another. If they kept their enemies alive, me getting them would save their lives. 2) That I might care for them when they got here, and gave them work, taught them the language. etc. Read again Booker T Washington's tribute to Jackson and Lee. It seems to me, a man born under slavery has a more balanced view than you? How is that possible? Do we not listen to Booker T Washington any more?
Well, Lee has been part of the soft soap, nobility myth so I don't wonder at that lack of hostility (though some wanted him tried after the war). Grant gained a measure of respect for refusing to capture and try Lee. Most of the loathing from the South was reserved for other men, like Sherman.
They would never have been able to surrender at that point.
They were heroes of that state and are presented for that service, in uniform.
I've no problem, as being 'conquered' that a requirement would be that those uniforms or flags would not be glorified, but my original problem was the burying of them under the sea or hidden in a museum as opposed to a private group or individual being able to sit them on their own property.
ATF is a bit late. It would depend what the public sentiment of those statues represents. To me, they represent the same as Gettysburg, something we don't want to forget. I might instead, have placed a statue of Grant across the street. Or made another of Lee surrendering, or such. There are other ways, than tearing stuff down, to get a valued point across.
But I haven't compared Lee to Hitler except in answering your question about the comparison.
Well, yes. When Nazi Germany is brought into a conversation, it tends to elicit comparison.
Noble? No. Can it be honorable or in the service of the good and honorable? Yes. And I've said for a long time now that the blame for that war was systemic, that there were captains of industry in the north who profited greatly by the trade for a very long time and I've set blame in foundation on the shoulders of our founding fathers and their capitulation to that evil.
Well good. It the blame and evil is mutual, we have to be careful with our statues of Grant and Lee, as we are of Davis and Lincoln.
If they taught you that slavery wasn't the reason for the war they did you a disservice. Begin your reeducation by reading what the men who made those decisions said, especially in public. Read the declarations of the states as they announce and withdraw. Most are plain enough.
Again, I think it important that all of them give more than just the one reason for the war. You even mention it yourself regarding business practices as well. You also agreed that The Emancipation Proclamation was tacked on after the war was already going. It couldn't have started without that intent, if that was the only thing to draw from its occurrence. You'd really have to work very hard, not just for me, all of us in the North. We all have been educated to believe slavery was but one issue.
From the opening of Georgia's, by way of illustration:
The people of Georgia having dissolved their political connection with the Government of the United States of America, present to their confederates and the world the causes which have led to the separation. For the last ten years we have had numerous and serious causes of complaint against our non-slave-holding confederate States with reference to the subject of African slavery.
First sentence? For context, it isn't enough. It 'could' be clipped to say slavery was the only reason, or 10 other paragraphs could enumerate 10 other equal and important reasons. Context is important for these discussions.
There are people who see those emblems differently. How, God knows. I can only say as a son of the South brought up in the myth I've mentioned that it took an effort on my part to peel that away with fact and history before I understood my error and the root of it. And there are some here who are simply hostile racists of varying stripes. That isn't done with either, which shouldn't shock you. There are Klan chapters and the like in the north as well.
Not as
much as you might
think. Sad really, 65 flyers?
On laws protecting slaves:
Slave codes were mostly about protecting property and reserved in most cases a fairly absolute right to do with that property what was deemed necessary by the owner. Slave Codes were state matter and varied. It was common for masters to sire children by their slaves without anyone saying much about it, though some codes would have imposed penalty for the "fornication". Slave owners who killed their slaves during punishment were not held to account for it, since those codes presumed no man would intentionally destroy his property to his own disadvantage, and similar nonsense.
I looked up a few more prior to reading yours here. It is a shame that Federal law didn't standardize those laws.
As with Jefferson. And Washington owned slaves. And on and on. But what is noted in commemoration is the key to whether or not we should find it objectional as a matter of reason. MLK, whatever his debated faults, is honored for the sacrifice and service to an undeniable good and against an undeniable evil.
Imho, those are concessions, and historically important for the context, setting precedence from our inception as well as reflecting world values at large. Looking back, we will likely always find atrocity where we do not sanction such. Again, abortion will be a dark spot on our generation. I pray our children's children are kind when they spread the blame. We tried and did what we could against Judicial abuses.
No and for the reason given prior and above. I would hope our history is clearer and more objective in schools than the idealized and simplified taught in my day, but again, what we commemorate in the individual is important. Adding traitors to that list, even before we get to the why of it, is rarely a good idea.
"Traitor" is somewhat subjective, even to this day.
I noted the celebration of the myth of the South, not its condemnation in popular media. It went on for a great while. Most of Ford's hugely popular and much celebrated westerns had it as an element, from Fort Apache to The Searchers. Gone With the Wind was a wholesale tribute to it and the rewriting of a brutal history. And so on.
Perhaps only in the interests of the dollar, but odd, when "the real story" is not at all hindered in Hollywood. "Coward Robert Ford" oddly, revamped support for the James Gang and cause of the South. You'd think there would be a different direction taken.
You cannot change the ugly fact of a thing by calling the same thing by another name. If your livelihood is derived by slavery then it is slavery you support. And make no mistake, it wasn't about mere survival, but expansion and power. Lincoln had promised to leave slavery where it lay, sadly. That wasn't enough for those who desired to see it continue into political and economic power with the newer territories.
Which is the problem of economics, when capitalism goes beyond earning a decent wage, to subjugating one's fellows with storehouses that can not possibly be used. It always creates hard feelings and downtrodden. I YET, think the issues deeper than slavery, which seems to be 'part' of the problem, than the full of it. There was no 'you shall free slaves' that caused seceding in the first place. It was for other reasons. The 'part' is a glaring part, yet as I say, full in practice for 100 years at that point in time.
Start with the proclamations I noted. Then look to the headlines of the major papers of the day and the editorials. Start processing real information with your own good sense. It's there and archived for you to see without the filter of another person telling you what it meant. A lot of watered history was written to preserve a troubled peace and to avoid the guilt by association. The victor went to war to preserve a Union. A harder look at slavery would have tarnished that victory given the role the institution played in the economic life of the north, its profit by shipping and moving and the textiles it used.
Will do that. It would preclude our discussion for a bit, however. We'd be talking about other information until such a time.
Outside of that, any number of good books written on the subject. To shake off some of the cobwebs of popular imposition try reading Blight's Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory. Blight takes a look at how both sides managed an uneasy peace by distraction. I think you'll find it informative and helpful.
Added to my reading list. Is it just me, or is there irony in his last name? :doh
The north went into the war to preserve the larger Union. Slavery was an issue for many, but it wasn't the theme for our government. Once the war was well and truly on it allowed anti slavery elements to move the public needle a bit (as had Uncle Tom's Cabin) and with enough work the thing the South fought to preserve was undone. Or, the South left the table to protect what it felt was threatened by the expansion of free states into new territories and the limitation of slave states to their present course. The north fought to preserve itself and to forbid a rival for those new territories. It was then an economic war on both sides. But on the Southern side that economic advance was the cause of slavery, its engine.
Agreed.
Appreciated. I'm doing my level best not to be harsh on the point, but this is my house and this was our evil. It continued to kill and maim and stunt within my lifetime. It continues some of its more subtle work to this day...and much of that can be lain at the feet of well intentioned men who soft peddled a brutal truth and doing so hid it and preserved it and ennobled it to some extent. We're all still paying for that error as a nation.
I lived in Texas and have witness these to some small degree while I lived there less than a year. Rather, I'm yet trying to tie Southern generals directly to those. If the removal of those statues accomplishes what you seek, well and good, but
to me it seems a baby out with the bathwater proposition. Thanks for taking the time. It is appreciated. -Lon