laughing dog
Contributor
First, as two posters have shown, public debate in those states where it is ILLEGAL to move was stifled. Now, an intellectually curious poster might wonder why those states felt the need to enact such a law. Well, the reason was to stop people from attempting to move the those statutes with reasoned public debate.It's certainly not even vaguely related to the claim:
Do you withdraw that claim, or are you just hoping nobody noticed that you moved the goalposts to a different continent?
No goal posts were moved. The issue has always been about what the monuments or statues represent. A statue of Churchill erected after the war is that of a historical figure in a moment of history. It is a part of history. A period in time. A significant time in the past.
Whether a statue, bust or monument should be defaced by a mob, relocated or destroyed because Churchill was less than perfect is the question.
Statues of confederate generals or officers erected after the war represent historical figures in that period of history, and the only question is should they be relocated preserved as a part of history, or destroyed because they are symbols of a reprehensible period in history, the defenders of slavery.
Whatever is decided should be done through public debate, not rampaging mobs.
That's all. It's not hard to grasp.
Second, no one is arguing the mob rule is the preferred method of achieving the goal. It happened in the US this time. And this time, the mob was right.
Third, statues of confederates are statues of traitors which you continually and understandably ignore (since traitor is not put on the statute). Can you point to public statutes of traitors? After all, traitors are part of the historical record.