jab
Veteran Member
So stick them in a museum. Why should we suffer the veneration of foreign leaders on domestic soil? We don't tolerate the flying of foreign battle standards over public/government property so why should this be any different?
Depending on one's point of view, there's an argument to be made that the confederates were traitors to the union. Should we allow for the veneration of traitors? Another problem is that most of these statues were erected AFTER the war, to serve as a symbol to the former slaves, a reminder of who's REALLY in charge. So the argument that they are a part of our history falls flat in that respect. They were erected as a statement of power and oppression over blacks, and should be treated as such.
I think you're wrong. It's chauvinism. The winners rubbing the losers nose in poop and laughing at them. There was a civil war. I hope you are aware of that a lot of the belligerents still supported secession even after they lost the war? The way to keep a nation together after a war, and even more so in a civil war, is to venerate the leaders of the losing side, afterwards. It's extremely important. Allowing the South to erect statues of confederate generals after the war was really smart, and a testament to what USA is supposed to be, a symbol of democracy and freedom.
Looking forward to unifying statues of Benedict Arnold popping up across America--long overdue.