Just look how fucking dirty this is.
Look at the sudden and specific need to put a ton of these statues in front of schools, then realize that Brown v. Board of Education was decided in 1954.
FUCK this makes me heated. Shit!
BUT MUH HISTORY. HOW WILL I KNOW?Just look how fucking dirty this is.
Look at the sudden and specific need to put a ton of these statues in front of schools, then realize that Brown v. Board of Education was decided in 1954.
FUCK this makes me heated. Shit!
I'd be tremendously happy to be a part of taking them town (and being paid well to do it,) but I'd also be scared that some crazy neo-Nazis may become violent while trying to "protect their heritage."
Fake it until you make it.13 statues in Oklahoma.
We weren't even a fucking state.
I've lost track, but the only one I know for sure is a statue is in Durant. But there are schools named after Stand Watie and Lee (and I'm sure others). Watie in particular annoys me because it's one of the worst possible choices to honor a tribal leader and I just can see them using the "but he was a Cherokee" defense against changing it.13 statues in Oklahoma.
We weren't even a fucking state.
Had no idea there were so many Confederate monuments across the US. All I knew about were selected southern ctities with Confederate flags on occasion.
What do you all think about Confederate cemeteries that honour the dead? Personally I'd be ok with that, but I guess it's a bit tricky.
Someone I know (which is odd considering we're not american) has been calling this 'PC Justice' and that its racist on facebook because they never took the pyramids down and there's still stuff the nazis built in germany.
I think a monument was removed yesterday. And two schools were renamed from Robert E Lee elementary last year. So it's changing.Why the fuck are there 6 confederate things in California lol?
Those Confederados.There's one in Brazil (yes, South America) too.
There's one in Brazil (yes, South America) too.
How did that happen and who is it.
To be clear, here, aren't most of the people in this topic making the "preserve history" argument calling for them to be taken down and put in museums, not left in place?
I sure as hell am, and I apologise if that wasn't clear enough.
I can see great potential in using them to make a striking display based on that graph of their erection dates.
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.
There are monuments in states like Idaho, which didn't even exist during the Civil War. The Confederacy has been weirdly glorified by this whole country until recently.
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.
so what happened in 1911 that caused such a huge boom in statues?
Fuck, I'm Brazilian and didn't know thatThere's one in Brazil (yes, South America) too.
13 statues in Oklahoma.
We weren't even a fucking state.
so what happened in 1911 that caused such a huge boom in statues?
Notably, the construction of Confederate monuments peaked in the 1910s and 1920s, when states were enacting Jim Crow laws, and later in the 1950s and 1960s, amid the Civil Rights Movement:
I think a monument was removed yesterday. And two schools were renamed from Robert E Lee elementary last year. So it's changing.
Apparently there's a town called 'Confederate Corners' that was settled by southerners. Wonder when that'll be renamed.
/Wikipedia
As of 2016, CALIFORNIA had schools named after Robert E. Lee????????????
This is really illuminating.
For all the people saying erasing history yall need to realize this shit is in countless books and you can read about it all over the internet and libraries everywhere. Ive never seen these statues provide any education towards our countries dark past, but rather they stand to glorify these people.
As of 2016, CALIFORNIA had schools named after Robert E. Lee????????????
The first major uptick in the graph not only coincides with plessy vs ferguson, but also the rise of the KKK to it's peak in the 1920's.
There's one in Brazil (yes, South America) too.
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
They should go in a museum of tolerance with a plaque stating they were raised in the civil rights movement and why they were removed.What history? This is Baltimore, part of the Union. Go look up what years these monuments were erected.
Hah, that quote is amazing.To which I'm just going "do you even know when the statues were built?"
Or, my personal favorite...
Yeah, it's transparent bullshit.I saw that. From Oklahoma too. We didn't even participate in the Civil War and weren't a state at all until nearly 50 years later.
And yet I see so many confederate flags and people talking about their "southern pride"...