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Statues of traitors proudly displayed in the US Capital Building.

Lee is a symbol, and there is more than one interpretation of any symbol. Historical figures such as Lee deserve to be presented with all aspects of history, not just the latest PC-sanitized version of history.

Scrofula: "since you're a supporter of history education, find me an example anywhere in history of a nation allowing monuments to defeated insurgents to go up on public land."

Lee and the Confederacy were not insurgents but were secessionists. Union troops invaded their territory.

In the news, there are plenty of examples of statues of defeated/disgraced regimes, historical figures, and slavers:

Halifax - Edward Cornwallis - politician who isued bounties for Canadian colonists who scalped Indians.

Cecil Rhodes, a white supremicist who was responsbile for subjegating much of southern Africa n the late 19th century, statues exist at Oxford and in South Africa.

Lenin statues still stand in the Ukraine - Kharkiv, Odessa

Arthur "Bomber" Harris, head to the RAF's Bomber Command in WWII, who masterminded the firebombing and massacre of German civilian populations. Statues also exist of Americans who headed firebombing massacre and nuclear bombing of civilian targets in Japan.


Oliver Cromwell who lead massacres in ireland.

Ubiquitous Abe Lincoln statues. Why they are problematic: From Lincoln's Speech, Sept. 18, 1858.

"While I was at the hotel to-day, an elderly gentleman called upon me to know whether I was really in favor of producing a perfect equality between the negroes and white people. While I had not proposed to myself on this occasion to say much on that subject, yet as the question was asked me I thought I would occupy perhaps five minutes in saying something in regard to it. I will say then that I am not, nor ever have been, in favor of bringing about in any way the social and political equality of the black and white races -- that I am not nor ever have been in favor of making VOTERS or jurors of negroes, NOR OF QUALIFYING THEM HOLD OFFICE, nor to intermarry with white people; and I will say in addition to this that there is a physical difference between the white and black races which I believe will forever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality. And inasmuch as they cannot so live, while they do remain together there must be the position of superior and inferior, and I as much as any of her man am in favor of having the superior position assigned to the white race."

Fourth Debate with Stephen A. Douglas at Charleston, Illinois, September 18, 1858
(The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln edited by Roy P. Basler, Volume III, pp. 145-146.)

Barcelona - Franco statue
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Escher: "Why not add a nice explanation of the Lee statues then - that this was a traitor who fought for a rebellion that believed whites were the superior race and that slavery was desirable.

How well do you think that would go over? Seriously?"


abssoluty, that should be on the plaque, except for the part calling him a traitor. He was not a traitor. Secession was not illegal at the time. The legality of secession was not settled until the end of the Civil War. Lee was a patriot to his home state, and he was defending it against an invading army that practiced scorched earth warfare.

The whole story needs to be told, and it needs to be presented in a way that unites peopel and in a way that is clearly against racism. The majority of the public is ignorant of history. The white supremacists seem to know more about one aspect of the history of the Founding Fathers, that they were white supremicists as well. For its first 200 years, America was a white supremacist nation.

How well it goes over is irrelevant. It is the truth so who cares what people think? Too many people are sorely ignorant of history. Recent current events show that they need to be educated.

Whenever neofascists and Trump sopprot a cause (preservation of monuments and art in this case), they ruin it. Then SJWs knee jerk reaction is to scream to tear it down. To counterbalance the neofacist cause with a more sane and rational view, other statues representing other figures of the civil war and civil rights should be added at the site of the Confederate statues. These statues need to be turned into an opportunity to educate.

scrofula: "Do you agree that most of these statues were put up as intimidation?

Or do you believe they were put up during the civil rights struggles in the 50's as a coincidence, a desire to teach history to the area's youth. By putting up heroic monuments of soldiers who fought to enslave black people. They merely reflect heritage."

Yes, erectign the statues mainly wqasm done to intimidate blacks. The timing itself reflects this. But, there is more to the story of why they were erected. Lee himself was more complicqated than the stereotypes presented about him.

First, Lee supported Reconstruction and reconcilliation without bitterness, both things that helped the newly freed slaves. Partly for this reason, his popularity grew after the war. he was regarded as an honorble leader and a hero by both the Norht and the south. Those were also reasons for the statues.

Second, he was not a "traitor fighing for slavery." That is a simplistic view of history. Seccesion was not illegal at the time southern states seceded. Only the outcome of the civil war itself established it to be illegal.

Lee was from the south, and finding that his hoem state had seceded, taht was the side he joined. Accordign to historians, it was a difficult personal decision.

Third, in 1856, sevearl years before the war, Lee wrote a letter to the New York Times saying that slavery was evil and that it should end. Some historians argue this is evidence that Lee opposed slavery or at least did not actively support it.

fourth, years before the war, Lee's wife and daughter worked to educate slaves. They established an illegal school for blacks. They, like Lincoln, supported an American colonisation movement to set up a colony in Liberia taht would be ruled by former slaves.

Fifth, historians argue about whether Lee himself fought for slavery or for States rights. Lee freed his slaves, slaves he had inherited thorugh his wife's family, at the beginning of the Civil War, a yaer before Lincoln"s Emancipation Proclamation. Also around that time, Lee called for all of the South to free the slaves. No longer supporitn the cause to uphold slavery, Lee could only be fighting for somethign other than slavery. Taht was to defend the Confederacy from a cruel invader.



THe USA was founded as a White Supremacist nation. All of the founding fathers were racist elites. Washington and Jefferson were slave owning white supremacists. Congress enacted the first racial naturalization laws in the 1790s limiting citizenship to free white people. Until the 1960s, the USA continued to have racial quotas for immigration.

The racism of the era needs to be put into perspective. Like Lee virutally all whtie Americans at the time was racist.. They were genociding the Indians at the time, and very few spoke against it.

Lee called for freeing the slaves a year before Lincoln. Lincoln was extremely racist/white supremacist and supported slavery until his advisors warned taht he would lose the elecgtion (and therefore the war) if he didt change his stance.

Public education might not have been the motivation for erecting them, but it can become a motivation for keeping them. If handled properly, they can serve as a contextual history lesson. That would include providing more complete informtaion about their past as well as erecting statues of people who fought for true equality. Reactionaires, in this case SJWs, are too quick to destroy history.

Society is too quick to destroy its monuments, art, and artifacts. Out of the 1000s that were created, how many Roman bronzes of the Caesars still exist today?
 
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The current fervor to destroy landmarks seems an awful lot like the Cultural Revolution, I sometimes think.
 
^I agree. Just as the Cultural Revolution was meant to entrench Maoist ideology, the purge of historical landmarks looks like part of a movement to strengthen PC ideology and historical negationism.

edit: at the risk of stating the obvious, one of the tactics used by the Cultural Revolution was to destroy landmarks, art, and other historical relics. They also presented a one-sided view of history. To this day, Mao and his cultural revolution arguably had the most damaging effect on 4000 years of Chinese culture than any other influence.
 
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Escher: "Why not add a nice explanation of the Lee statues then - that this was a traitor who fought for a rebellion that believed whites were the superior race and that slavery was desirable.

How well do you think that would go over? Seriously?"


abssoluty, that should be on the plaque, except for the part calling him a traitor. He was not a traitor. Secession was not illegal at the time. The legality of secession was not settled until the end of the Civil War. Lee was a patriot to his home state, and he was defending it against an invading army that practiced scorched earth warfare.

Ignoring the legal debate, Lee allied himself with a nation that attacked the United States first.

First, Lee supported Reconstruction and reconcilliation without bitterness, both things that helped the newly freed slaves. Partly for this reason, his popularity grew after the war. he was regarded as an honorble leader and a hero by both the Norht and the south. Those were also reasons for the statues.

Odd how Longstreet wasn't so popular. Could have been something about him supporting reconstruction. Or joining the Republicans.

Second, he was not a "traitor fighing for slavery." That is a simplistic view of history. Seccesion was not illegal at the time southern states seceded. Only the outcome of the civil war itself established it to be illegal.

He was fighting for slavery. That's the whole reason for seccession. It's the reason the South gave. They were even pissed that the federal government wasn't doing enough to enforce federal laws (that enforced slavery) that were contradictory to state laws.
 
Also, the context of Lee's 1856 quote on slavery:

I think it however a greater evil to the white man than to the black race, & while my feelings are strongly enlisted in behalf of the latter, my sympathies are more strong for the former. The blacks are immeasurably better off here than in Africa, morally, socially & physically. The painful discipline they are undergoing, is necessary for their instruction as a race, & I hope will prepare & lead them to better things. How long their subjugation may be necessary is known & ordered by a wise Merciful Providence. Their emancipation will sooner result from the mild & melting influence of Christianity, than the storms & tempests of fiery Controversy.
 
^ I'm not disputing the historical records. The interpretation of some of them is debated by historians. A more complete description needs to go with the statues. It is up to you to choose how to interpret them.
 
I'm still convinced this is lost cause BS.

We don't see a bunch of people running around wanting memorials to Benedict Arnold* just so we won't forget him.

Admittedly, Benedict Arnold is famous, but so is Lee. Also so was Grant and Sherman, which aren't popular subjects for monuments in the South, even though both had a major effect on the South's history.

But this isn't about history, at least not about factual history. This is about propagating a myth of states rights and an honorable South. It's crap, and Southerners would do themselves a huge favor if they'd just own their own crap, admit that a lot of bad things happened, and not idolize a bunch of questionable people.

*His one monument that I know of is rather interesting.
 
^Maybe I wasn't clear, but I tried to explain that the context in which the statues were erected should be explained. It should be made clear at the sites of the statues that the majority of them were built by white racists for the purpose of resisting Reconstruction and Civil Rights for blacks. It should also be made clear that until the Civil Rights era, the USA was a white supremacist nation. Unbiased facts should be presented that visitors are allowed to interpret for themselves.

The Founding Fathers and Lincoln himself were all questionable.
 
The current fervor to destroy landmarks seems an awful lot like the Cultural Revolution, I sometimes think.

If the cultural revolution landmarks were a bunch of white people intimidating blacks by putting up statues of their former enslavers, sure.
 
These points have already been brought up, but here's an excerpt from an article that states it more eloquently:

Southerners may have lost the Civil War, but between the 1890s and 1920s they won the first great battle over its official memory. They fought that battle in popular literature, history books and college curricula, but also on hundreds of courthouse steps and city squares, where they erected monuments to Confederate veterans and martyrs. These statues reinforced the romance of reunion.

Now, a century and a half after the Civil War, Americans are finally confronting the propriety of celebrating the lives of men who committed treason in the name of preserving slavery. That these statues even exist is unusual. When armies are defeated on their own soil—particularly when those armies fight to promote racist or genocidal policies—they usually don’t get to keep their symbols and material culture. [. . . ]

The vast majority of Americans have long agreed that the destruction of slavery was a just outcome of the Civil War. But in continuing to honor Confederate leaders and deny their crimes, we signal that the United States has not yet fully come to terms with its collective responsibility for the dual sins of slavery and Jim Crow.

Politico

There are plenty of ways to celebrate your Southern roots, like arguing about mustard in BBQ sauce, something about the SEC (I think that's the game with the acuate spheroid, not the securites commision). You don't need a bunch of bronze middle fingers.
 
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Socko they belong torn down and put in museums...where only people that want to see them can.

Imagine if we erected a statue of the Dallas shooter that killed 5 copes...or James holmes, or the Columbine killers. Those are historical events after all right?

How do you think the families of the victims would feel taking thier still thier kids to play at the park with a big Dylan kleybold statue there?

Put yourself in the shoes of ppl that these statutues represent nothing but death and oppression, not history. If they want to learn about this history of Columbine one day they can go to a museum about it. Not have to drive by it every single day.
 
Scrofula, you can't tell me that the Chinese didn't tear down and destroy artifacts that had to do with oppression at one time or another in their country. I bet you they'd argue that they were symbols of the oppressive upper class that came to tarnish their Communistic values. I bet you they tore down those artifacts without any thought as to the historical value or context of them. No major country can claim that they never had an oppressive past.

Look no one is saying we should erect statues of Civil War heroes anew, they're saying to just leave things where they've already stood for decades.

But whatever. That's racism.
 
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Sure, the Chinese tore down and destroyed artifacts that had to do with oppression at one time or another in their country.

So should we.

I'm not calling anybody racist other than the traitors the statues represent. ANd the people who put the statues up.

Have you read all the times it's been posted that these were put up specifically to intimidate blacks?

They were put up specifically to intimidate blacks and give a middle finger to the rest of the country, and had nothing to do with magnolia trees and mint juleps.

Why would anyone leave them up?

NO, you have history books and museums and a whole cable channel. Many of these aren't even "historic" or old.

Maybe it helps if I say again that it's the locals who take these down? No one ever called for a third Yankee invasion. It's not that important.
 
Two main reasons have been given for taking down the statues.

1. They hurt people's feelings.

Time for a history is violent and life is cruel and unfair lecture.

2. Theyrepresent people who have fallen out of favour.

This has been addressed. A large part of history has been lost for this reason.

None of the arguments justify removing or destroying these artifacts.
 
Two main reasons have been given for taking down the statues.

1. They hurt people's feelings.

Time for a history is violent and life is cruel and unfair lecture.

2. Theyrepresent people who have fallen out of favour.

This has been addressed. A large part of history has been lost for this reason.

None of the arguments justify removing or destroying these artifacts.

Why should we have monuments that "hurt people's feelings"?
What sort of toxic society celebrates such unnecessary division?

America's past - and slavery - isn't about poltical correctness or touchy liberal hypocrisy - it is about a really horrible chapter in history which is rooted in throughly discredited theories about racial superiority, and the mass murder and enslavement of thousands of people be because of it.

No history is being "lost" due to statues celebrating slavery being removed. They're not "artifacts" - they are "monuments".
This isn't nipicking - there is a very clear distinction to be made there.
Hostory isn't about monuments, it is a lot deeper than that.

The statues are monuments celebrating the white supremacist assholes that lead this brutal chapter in america's history, and most of then were erected relatively recently.

They weren't put there by people who lived under their rule, but rather, by those who sought to cerbrate it, in defiance of the push for civil rights and an end to jim crow.
Most were erected when the campaigns for civil rights were heating up - when jim crow and segregation were being defeated.

The monuments to confederate leaders aren't a reminder of history, but an attempt to resurrect the bullshit they stood for, at a time where their white supremacist nonsense was being cast into the dustbin of history.
It's not about slavery falling out of favour - that makes it sound like there is some kind of relativism at play here.

The issue of slavery isn'g something that should be looked at like any other political issue - it is based on a premise that goes against everything anerican is supposed to stand for.

Perhaps Dallas should erect a statue of Lee Oswald?

The presence of these statues isn't about history - it's about politics.
They belong in museums, not prominent parts of towns and cities.
Their presence is an insult to the people who had their lives, liberties, cultures and dignity stolen by a ludicrous ideology that denied them rights as fellow human beings.
The presence of many of these statues is a lingering act of provacation from white supremacists who saw that they were losing the right to segregate and discriminate against people like because of the colour of their skin.
 
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I've tried to explain earlier. That is only a part of what they mean. To be understood on a broader level, those eras in the USA need to have monuments that tell the whole story. Preserving the monuments has parallels to preserving the Nazi concentration camps. They have been transformed from death camps to educationAl monuments.

Would you object to it being used to explain that USA is historically racist and that those in power have kept POC subjugated any way they could including creating historicAK narratives?
 
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But does anyone teach that broader narrative - other than folks calling for them to be removed?

I think most people see monuments as monuments - not part of a wider discussion of history (especially the period in which most of the monuments were commissioned - the 1930s and the 50s and 60s).

How many people were aware of this history before people (and governments) began removing them?
It's got people talking now, but for all the wrong reasons.
People increasingly understand them as symbols of division.

Remember that the nazi death camps' purpose has changed - they were never 'monuments' symbolising some kind of glory - but gristly reminders of the horrors of fascism.
The statues were designed as - and functioned as - monuments when they were built, just as they do now. The context hasn't actually changed.

I don't think the nazi death camp analogy is entirely appropriate.
 
People talking about history is the hoped for outcome. A broad understanding is needed. American students score among the worst in the world in 5he subject of history. European children are generally pretty good at history. For a democracy to survive , its citizens need to be knowledgeable. If not, we end up with Trump in the white house.

Absolutely transform their meaning. Make it unifying and educational.

Maybe the concentration camp example isn't the best but I I liked that its meaning has been transformed. I listed other foreign monuments in another post. Even in France, Marie Antoinette's house where she drank chocolate is preserved, and the French have a deeper and more nuanced understanding of history. France is better integrated and more multicultural than the USA too. African Americans used to move to France to get away from the racism in the US until the recently.
 
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Two main reasons have been given for taking down the statues.

1. They hurt people's feelings.

Time for a history is violent and life is cruel and unfair lecture.

2. Theyrepresent people who have fallen out of favour.

This has been addressed. A large part of history has been lost for this reason.

None of the arguments justify removing or destroying these artifacts.

2) The people they depict didn't fall out of favor, they were totally defeated.

Time for a history lecture.

1) It hurt's people's feelings to take them down.

Time for a life is unfair lecture.
 
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