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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(107,985 posts)
Mon Jul 19, 2021, 02:20 PM Jul 2021

Here's what can replace monuments to Confederates

By Tyler D. Parry / Special To The Washington Post

As Republican state legislators push laws regulating curriculum and Confederate monuments fall, the political battle over the nation’s history has intensified. Whose voices and perspectives are remembered has become a prime culture-war issue; one that conservatives seem determined to exploit.

The consequences of such actions are already being implemented, as two teachers, one in Florida and another in Tennessee, were fired for not conforming to the new mandates banning the teaching of “critical race theory” in K-12 schools. The fears about making an honest assessment of institutional racism, which drive such laws, have direct implications for how history is publicly displayed and commemorated. In fact, on hearing that the U.S. House of Representatives passed a measure on June 29 to remove Confederate monuments from the U.S. Capitol, the conservative pundit Matt Walsh claimed, “What Congress is saying today, is that Southern states simply are not allowed to honor anyone who lived in or served their state from the middle part of the 19th century up until the beginning of the 20th.”

But that simply isn’t true. In fact, there are millions of Southerners from this era worth honoring. Many of them, however, have been erased from our history because they were Black. K-12 education has long minimized their contributions and refused to understand them as “Southerners” who fought to make their birthplace a more just and equitable place for all of its inhabitants.

For over a century, celebrating Confederate history depended on erasing the many movements led by African Americans within the region. Writers in the Jim Crow era sketched a romanticized vision of the antebellum period that portrayed Southern whites as gallant agrarians who simply wanted to live free from Northern industrialism. Those who owned enslaved people were represented as paternal figures who promoted Christian values, while people of African descent were portrayed as passive recipients of Christian civilization and rarely given a voice in this mythic narrative.

https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/comment-heres-what-can-replace-monuments-to-confederates/

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Here's what can replace monuments to Confederates (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Jul 2021 OP
How about replacing those Southern Generals with multigraincracker Jul 2021 #1
If they complain "The Republican Party was different back then!", Aristus Jul 2021 #2
+1 multigraincracker Jul 2021 #3
Because the Republican Party back then was anti-slavery Lord Ludd Jul 2021 #5
Another option: SeattleVet Jul 2021 #4

multigraincracker

(32,677 posts)
1. How about replacing those Southern Generals with
Mon Jul 19, 2021, 02:28 PM
Jul 2021

monuments to great Republican generals, like Grant and Sherman? Why wouldn't the South love that?

Aristus

(66,369 posts)
2. If they complain "The Republican Party was different back then!",
Mon Jul 19, 2021, 03:17 PM
Jul 2021

you can reply "So was the Democratic Party, so stop calling us the party of slavery and segregation."

Lord Ludd

(585 posts)
5. Because the Republican Party back then was anti-slavery
Mon Jul 19, 2021, 11:04 PM
Jul 2021

Grant, of course, turned the tide of the war after Lincoln put him in charge.

Sherman torched Atlanta (for starters) in his March to the Sea.

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