Dash119
Senior Airman
Snowygrouch,I`m singularly unimpressed, if you want to go on a global quest to eliminate all offensive words on all public signage, I suppose its hard to say "where is the harm!".
However, I think this is only a tenable thing to propose if it is applied by one-and-all, otherwise its just a stick to bash your opponents with.
I should like to highlight (by way of an illustration) that the co-founder of a certain organization which is a present (claiming) to be about dealing with racism, said on camera quite plainly that her activism was highly idealogically based and that she and her colleage considered themselves "trained Marxists".
Personally although I think communism was stupid, thats hardly grounds for complaint - however, what IS grounds for complaint (given the level of detail we`re apparently all needed to comply with now, down to the retro-active renaming of dead-dogs), is what Marx thought about africans. Some quotes for you from letters Marx wrote to Engels:
(Lassal had written something moderately critical of Marx and Engels)
Marx, in a letter to Engels called Lassal:
"A Jewish n*****r !"
He then went on to write (and this again, is a quote):
"It is now perfectly clear to me by his cranial formation and hair growth, that he is decended from negroes... unless his gradmother was decended from a n*****er, well this combination of German stock with the negroid is bound to yield a strange product. The fellows importunity is also n*****er-like."
Engels wrote back, consoling Marx and said not to worry because Lassal was:
"A stupid yid"
Note that not only is he saying the word, but clearly ALSO believes the African peoples to be of undesirable and inferior genetic stock.
I could list a lot more. One could say in their defence, its a large organization and any such group will contain people with beliefs which dont necessarily align with the goals of the group. However, this isnt "a member" these are the beliefs of the co-founder. Organzations are top-down, so its very concerning.
So my view would be, once certain persons renounce their Marxism (because he was a disgusting anti-semitic racist and apparently a fan of eugenics), I`ll join them in chisseling off opressive language from memorials.
Nobody is perfect, but I think if you are going to campaign against all symbols of racism in history whilst also claiming to be an idealogical student of an anti-semitic racist, people are going to view that poorly.
Continuity of actions, thought and purpose is needed to be a vessel for social change, and I have no time for hypocrites who (apparently) dont even know the first thing about periods of history which they claim to be students of.
As I have stated before, I am a native born U.S. Citizen so that informs my experience with the use of the word. I have never traveled to Great Britain, nor have I educated myself on the history of the use of that word in that country, or most others for that matter. However, there seems to be pretty universal agreement here that the word is offensive to a significant segment of our societies. I note that even in your post you do not use the word. Here in the United States it is particularly offense to African Americans when used by other races. As I have pointed out previously, for historical reasons I am willing to grant them that offense.
During the course of this thread I have taken the position that the headstone should be placed in a museum where the history can be better explored in the proper context. I disagree with removing the name from the headstone and leaving it in place. This is the same solution I have proposed for the Confederate statues in my country.
When it comes to organizations, I am of the Groucho Marx school of thought. To paraphrase, 'I have no interest in belonging to any organization which would accept me as a member.' The fact that some unknown woman, who heads some unknown organization might share a common belief with me does not mean we share each others beliefs in their entirety. I am neither a Marxist(except the aforementioned Groucho) nor an Anti-Semite despite my belief that the word should be removed from public common areas.
Respectfully,
Kim