Meadmaker
Unregistered
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2004
- Messages
- 29,033
It's an example. The question I am asking being: should we now begin to revise all of the other people that we celebrate?
People who were sometimes ****** is a funny way of discussing a person who routinely beat up his wives and didn't give a toss about his children, but okay...
It's just funny, because part of the question being asked here was regarding how we separate the good some people do from the bad they did. As far as people like Colston are concerned, his contributions were seen to pale in comparison to his wrongdoings.
I guess successfully navigating the rope-a-dope game plan and speaking out against Vietnam were enough to diminish Ali's complete disregard for females.
Morrissey makes crap music, and he's a racist, but I guess his contribution to whiney music and his outspoken veganism is enough to give him a pass as well, lol.
I think Ali is a good example. We admire him primarily for his athleticism. When we put up a statue of him, we aren't saying "this is a perfect person". We are saying, "That one thing you know about this guy makes him a very special person." We are ignoring that there may be other things about him that make him....not so special.
If we only celebrated perfect people, we could save a lot on bronze, because we wouldn't need any statues.