Holy shit! Really? That makes it even worse!
Exactly.
The monuments aren't history. Them being removed after last weekend's events? THAT'S history. Folks dying for the cause of standing against the KKK and Nazi sympathizers. That's historic.
Holy shit! Really? That makes it even worse!
Explains a lot! J/KI never realized so much of the US education system was statue-based.
Didn't Maryland stay as part of the Union? Why would they have Confederate monuments?
Wondering if Stone Mountain will look the same next time I'm back home.
Actually in Germany they keep their history intact. To be able to never forget of a dark past.
MUSEUM OF LOSAHSI think we should keep these statues.
They should dedicate an exhibit in a museum for losers and traitors. Right next to Nazis exhibits.
I remember my first visit to Alphabetic Park. Seeing those giant letter statues everywhere commemorating the alphabet. Why I surely never forgot what letters were or how they band together to form words. You just can't learn these things from books, you just can't!I never realized so much of the US education system was statue-based.
Wondering if Stone Mountain will look the same next time I'm back home.
An info board.
To reinforce just how recent most of these monuments are (and, for some years, what the spikes correspond to) here's a little graphic. As someone said, these monuments are NOT part of this nation's history, they were primarily used as a message to minorities to sit down and shut up. That massive spike after Plessy v Fergusen is no coincidence, especially with most being in front of courthouses. Then you have the huge flood of school-based ones during the Civil Rights movement.
source:
https://www.splcenter.org/sites/default/files/whoseheritage_splc.pdf
Wondering if Stone Mountain will look the same next time I'm back home.
Hopefully they remove them and put them in a museum storeroom somewhere.
While they celebrate something bad, they are still a part of the United States history.
That's where he died btw.Here's how Germany honors Hitler's legacy:
An info board.
That's where he died btw.
This is where he was born
But there are probably a bunch of states glorifying him everywhere around. Just not in the frame.
Blow that fucking shit up.
This particular monument I think has an argument to not be destroyed. It's not mass produced and it's good as an example of the resurgence of Confederate nostalgia and the use of monuments as a symbol of fear.
The issue, I guess, is figuring out how to keep it around without actually keeping it around, since it's carved into a mountain.
Well it should probably go in a museum so we can see how shitty people have been/are. Gotta learn from history and all.
JFC
Blow that fucking shit up.
We must never forget our horrid, racist past, or we are doomed to repeat it.
Yes, these monuments were put up to honor Confederate leaders. But the timing of the monument building makes it pretty clear what the real motivation was: to physically symbolize white terror against blacks. They were mostly built during times when Southern whites were engaged in vicious campaigns of subjugation against blacks, and during those campaigns the message sent by a statue of Robert E. Lee in front of a courthouse was loud and clear.
Hopefully they remove them and put them in a museum storeroom somewhere.
While they celebrate something bad, they are still a part of the United States history.
Well it should probably go in a museum so we can see how shitty people have been/are. Gotta learn from history and all.
So the argument for keeping it around rather than the statues is that it's bigger?
The argument of needing to keep these statues around so we "remember" is seriously the most remedial argument a person can make. Like no seriously, it's an absolutely fucking terrible argument.
Did you know there were statues of King George in the 13 colonies? They were all torn down and melted to be used for weapons and other things. Yet somehow magically you still know about the American Revolutionary War.
Almost as if...the removal of pointless statues doesn't impede learning about history or something.
Also the argument of memorializing Confederate soldiers is equally remedial. They didn't want to be part of the US, and they lost so it seems pretty dumb to keep up statues of people who didn't even want to be part of the US. The argument of memorializing them because they're human and blah blah, is also stupid because by that notion none of you who are making this equally remedial argument can argue against having statues of Japanese fighter pilots who bombed Pearl Harbor. I mean after all, they were simply following orders and were humans too.
Didn't Maryland stay as part of the Union? Why would they have Confederate monuments?
The argument of needing to keep these statues around so we "remember" is seriously the most remedial argument a person can make. Like no seriously, it's an absolutely fucking terrible argument.
Did you know there were statues of King George in the 13 colonies? They were all torn down and melted to be used for weapons and other things. Yet somehow magically you still know about the American Revolutionary War.
Almost as if...the removal of pointless statues doesn't impede learning about history or something.
Also the argument of memorializing Confederate soldiers is equally remedial. They didn't want to be part of the US, and they lost so it seems pretty dumb to keep up statues of people who didn't even want to be part of the US. The argument of memorializing them because they're human and blah blah, is also stupid because by that notion none of you who are making this equally remedial argument can argue against having statues of Japanese fighter pilots who bombed Pearl Harbor. I mean after all, they were simply following orders and were humans too.
Am I the only one who finds it hilarious how the white racists rallying to save one statue caused more to be torn down?
Yeah, I think this is the biggest difference between confederate statues and those of (or made by) questionable people in Germany.