Makeshift Python wrote: ↑Wed Jul 01, 2020 6:24 pm
Then they belong in museums. If you want something that's "literally history", go read a book. Or better yet, let's put more money into the education budget. American clearly needs more of that than they do of symbols.
The problem very much is that lost cause mythology doesn't hold up very well to actual historical analysis. Once you start digging into the facts you realize a few pertinent points very quickly:
- The war was entirely about slavery. Entirely. The Confederate President put it thusly:
Our new Government is founded upon exactly the opposite ideas; its foundations are laid, its cornerstone rests, upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery, subordination to the superior race, is his natural and moral condition.
Any pretending that it wasn't about slavery is revisionist history.
- Being a slave was AWFUL. The photographs of the whip scars, the slaves who literally drowned trying to join the Union army, the fact that every step of Sherman's march he had slaves volunteering to join his army and take up arms against the slave owners. Slavery was HATED by black people at the time, and was a thoroughly awful, unconscionable institution with nothing to recommend to it.
- The South had no fucking clue what war meant. Robert E. Lee himself told them not to do the stupid thing they were planning to do. They did it. They went to war. War fucking sucks. That's why you don't casually start one. The south believed they were prepared because they shot some guns. They had no idea at all what they were getting in for, and oh boy it showed.
- Sherman and Grant were both good generals and good people, as much as any career military man ever is. Both of them showed considerable restraint in war, and refrained from atrocities to a surprising degree (more so than most armies in history before or since).
So the problem is that if they put them in a museum, the museum will tend to surround the statues with facts, and oh boy facts don't play well with Lost Causers.