Gilbert Syndrome
Philosopher
We're back to apologetics.
Not really.
We're back to apologetics.
Put it back. It's important Bristol isn't allowed to whitewash it's past and avoid scrutiny.
Well that's true.
*Looks at the black community*
Sorry, guess the statues have to stay up. The white folk ain't done talking about where the line goes.
It will be a hundred years from now and in the discussion we'll being swapping out the perfectly spherical statues in a trolley problem piece until no original piece remains over an infinite plane of uniform gravity in a frictionless vacuum that's not technically in the Champagne region of France......and the goddamn statutes will still be there in real life.
To JoeMorgue,
You see, Joe. It isn't some right wing bogeyman.
It isn't some slippery slope fallacy.
I've been persuaded that statues of Confederate generals don't belong, and especially not in abundance, but let's be careful out there. You can throw out an awful lot of good with the bad. If you let the mob throw out Colston, and they enjoy it, they're going to look for other opportunities. It's human nature.
Very likely, given what I saw the last time I saw a GCSE history text.I reckon there are a lot of Britons who have learned more about the British slave trade since the statue got chucked in the Avon than they did at school.
Paul Stephenson.Online Poll result says that the statue should be replace with one of Shaun the Sheep.
I do give one tin-penny company **** about any of that nonsense.
Yet again we're a point where we can make the lives of black people a little bit better and yet again your standing there going "Okay but we have to talk more." That's what I care about.
Hold onto your hat, but I think we can actually strive to do both.
No we can't because we aren't going to do anything while we have people sitting here doing the whole mealy-mouth "Lookit me handwring!" routine. That routine is EXACTLY why they statues are still up.
I'm sure the death rate was within the level allowed by law.In 1895, when the statue of Colston was erected in 1895 175 years after his death. That's the same year that Oscar Wilde was arrested for homosexuality and the Army was attacking the Ashanti Empire in modern day Ghana and slaughtering them into submission.
Appropriate that it was thrown in the dock as at least 20,000 of his ‘cargo’ died and their bodies thrown in to the sea.
It's hard to argue with that.A crowd has climbed onto the statue of colonial King Léopold II in Brussels chanting “murderer” and waving the flag of the Democratic Republic of Congo
I don't give one tin-penny company **** about any of that nonsense.
Yet again we're a point where we can make the lives of black people a little bit better and yet again your standing there going "Okay but we have to talk more." That's what I care about.
Listen to the yell of Leopold's ghost,Good on 'em!
For those who don't know why:
Congo Free State
A genocide for which Belgium has never adequately paid.
Of course, the U.S. has never adequately paid for several genocides either (Blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans, etc.).
You keep mentioning this insurance on 20,000 people killed and thrown into the sea; do you have a source for that? It strikes me that the insurance company marketing that particular policy must have gone broke.
I hope if any of you every get into a car accident the paramedic spend 20 minutes debating about whether or car is a coupe or a sedan before rescuing you.
Put it back. It's important Bristol isn't allowed to whitewash it's past and avoid scrutiny.
Not really, he was (to use the tired phrase) a man of his times. Remember the Atlantic Slave Trade was regulated by law, laws debated in, and voted by, the Mother of Parliaments.The highlighted seems particularly ... I don't think 'ironic' really covers it.
*Looks at the black community*
Sorry, guess the statues have to stay up. The white folk ain't done talking about where the line goes.
It will be a hundred years from now and in the discussion we'll being swapping out the perfectly spherical statues in a trolley problem piece until no original piece remains over an infinite plane of uniform gravity in a frictionless vacuum that's not technically in the Champagne region of France......and the goddamn statutes will still be there in real life.
A man who realised the evils of slavery? Who campaigned to end it? Who lived to see the trade banned by a law he'd helped create?Next time you guys sing 'Amazing Grace', remember who wrote it!
How about simply "those who made great strides towards freedom and equality, even if incomplete and imperfect, versus those who made great efforts to reduce equality and freedom"?
Doesn't seem to be that hard.