The notion that killing for the sake of keeping slavery legal isn't something to be praised for is "state ideology"?
I think it's very important to remind people that sometimes we get things wrong. Sometimes most people are wrong about stuff. I've never been a big fan of book burning.
In these times of extreme social justice warrior times, it's especially important to be careful. It's easy to get sucked in.
As far as I can tell every major corporation was supporting the Black Lives Matter movement. It has virtually no opponents. At least none with any power. That means a couple of things. The BLM movement is politically harmless and in support of the status quo. It means that extremists committing acts of extremism in the name of BLM are protected by the establishment. An analogue is the SA brownshirts harrassing Jewish shopkeepers and the police did nothing. They didn't dare to, lest it might annoy those in power. The mayor of Seattle pulling back police from Chaz is something similar. His primary function as mayor is to keep the peace. This act means something.
Don't get me wrong. I like that the anti-racists are in power now. But any movement with near total power can quickly spiral out of control. I see tearing down monuments of the old paradigm as a part of this. I see it as an attempt to erase history.
Political progress has to be something other than just replacing one oppressive regime with another. Or it's not progress. If this is the best we can do, what was the point of the civil rights movement?
I love the irony of that the person who formulated this the best was an American neo-Nazi. Kevin Alfred Strom.
"To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize."
The only way to prove that guy wrong is to let the statues stay. Or any reminder of an uncomfortable past. European cities are full of statues of horrendous figures from history. We don't seem to mind them that much. They add colour. Perhaps, try it? It's not like the decendents of African slaves in America can escape getting reminded of it anyway. After all, they live in America. Most people live where they live today because somebody at some point did something horrible to somebody else. Something like a third of all Russians are direct decendents of a soldier in Djingis Khan's army. Yes, it was rape. It's just history. In all it's horrendous and gruesome detail.
Life is about more than genuflecting before socially acceptable pieces of propaganda all day. What Foucalt called the performative life, ie one's entire life is about pretending to be a good person. It's an empty life IMHO.