skyskooter
Airman
- 33
- Jul 8, 2016
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This is why one would want to see more sources then wiki. This article is writen in light of the amercian expierience of the word. Now it is fact the word is longer in circulation then that and more important with a different loading. It is also not only a word that sprouted in english. It also is seen in Dutch French Portugees. But all stamming from tbe latin niger, meaning black.I don't want this to go political. Here's a reference of the word and how it evolved.
Nigger - Wikipedia
With that said I can understand the frustrations by many as we now enter a world where attempts to make things right with some peoples are being done at history's expense.
I am probably a descendant of Christopher Columbus, not very popular to admit these days but I cannot deny who I am. At the same time my DNA reveals that I am almost 10% indigenous, more than likely Taíno, which was basically bred out of existence by Spanish settlers. Am I bitter or upset about this? No. Would I accept racism or even genocide in today's world? Of course not.
I don't think we can judge people's actions of the past (especially if they happened generations ago) by the standards and norms of today's world.
(stepping off soap box)
A sign just telling that next to the grave of the dog should be enough. Even for the politic activists who can just do what they want to do because of men and women just like Gibson.
While the achievements of Guy Gibson are historically significant, his use of the slur is also part of history. No human being I know of is without flaws, that is the nature of the beast. It has nothing to do with the dog. If your neighbor named their dog after Guy Gibson's dog, and ran around the neighborhood yelling the dogs name would you find that offensive? We have the Right to Free Speech in this country, but not all speech is free.Let's give the dog's owner some credit for being aware of the connotations of the term, which was not, insofar as I am aware, used in any way other than as a derogatory term for non-white people.
Should we subject the Jewish community, and other communities, who were victims of the Nazis to the painful memories and reminders on every corner? Somehow we seem to have a collective memory of the atrocities without preserving every single image of the Nazi regime. Our collective societal memory would better served by enhanced education rather than preserving every single physical reminder.The idea that tearing down the statues and emblems of the Nazi regime is somehow an act of Jewish (or anyone's) revisionist history, or attempting to hide the real history, would be laughed at by anyone sane. How is what is going on relative to slavery and genocide (by the US or other countries) or hundreds of years of racism (by the US or other countries) any different?
So as long as the entire country participated in slavery that makes it acceptable? What if the United States had just accepted the Confederacy and let those states go their own way? No Civil War, and slavery still exists in the Confederacy until what changes? In that scenario I guess it still exists in the United States too. At what point do we start trying to live up to the ideals contained in the Constitution?Just a bit of a reminder of U.S. history:
Between 1871 and 1865, the soverign nation of the United States engaged in the slave trade, both in slave ownership and slave-trading between Africa and the Caribbean via Yankee slave ships.
While Confederate monuments may be seen as "intimidation aimed at African Americans", it was more aimed at a nostalgic time when passionate men invoked their constitutional right to challenge the abuses of the US Senate.
If one takes the time to read the emancipation proclamation, it only freed slaves in the states of the rebellion, not slaves in Union territories.
So in the end, we should abolish all Union soldiers statues, all Revolutionary war statues, hide the American flag and erase everything that happened before 2020 in the desperate hope that no one is offended.
Perhaps in stead of closing whenever a reply goes over the limit, why not delete just that reply, i have full trust in the mods that only those that polute etc. the o.p. shall be deleted.It's going well guys, I am proud of you, but be careful. As this is a very sensitive subject, we're as the forum team will keep a close eye on this thread and will close it at the slightest provocation.
Yeah, we don't choose who we're born to.I am probably a descendant of Christopher Columbus, not very popular to admit these days but I cannot deny who I am.
Of course. I think they're oblivious to this.In the attempt to remove the past by some, that will provides us with a path which may allow us to forget and then repeat.
In the attempt to remove the past by some, that will provides us with a path
which may allow us to forget and then repeat.
The Confederacy was created to continue and expand slavery, which was under political and moral attack from the drafting of the Constitution. Indeed, the only way to have avoided secession would have been for all the states to have abolished slavery to have reinstate it and to suppress the First Amendment rights of abolitionists.
After losing the War to Continue Slavery, the very first thing many of those memorialized confederates did was to start and support terrorist campaigns to ensure Black citizens were denied the rights that came with emancipation. Those statues were largely erected to memorialize those generals post-war work to maintain white supremacy, not their actions in the Civil War.
In the attempt to remove the past by some, that will provides us with a path
which may allow us to forget and then repeat.
Hey GrauGeist,
re: "1871"
Do you mean 1671?