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:rofl:EpicBeardedMan said:Ah yes, Seth Rogen, the Aristotle of our time....
:rofl:EpicBeardedMan said:Ah yes, Seth Rogen, the Aristotle of our time....
Humphrey Bogart said:Nope, I meant decadence, but not in the way you think. Decadence as in "decline" whether perceived or real. When enough Muslims get pissed off at the Religious zealots running their societies, there will be a war/conflict and a cultural shift. Likewise, when enough Westerners get pissed at perceived social excesses in our society, there will also be a war/conflict.
George Wallace said:.......So we are a little late.
At one level, you're right. However, with most statues, there's one "history" for those backing the side/ideas of the person being honoured, and another "history" for those feeling screwed over by said people. All is cool if you like the idea of honouring someone with a statue because you're gung ho behind them, but ask some Latvians, Lithuanians, Estonians or Ukrainians how much they like all those statues of Lenin & Stalin honouring these guys. And when people say, "well, it IS part of the history, like it or not", how many Confederate statues have plaques highlighting their traitorous support for a slave-driven economy, or how many statues of Lenin/Stalin/Pol Pot mention all the "re-educated" for their own good? #MoreThanOneHistoryBird_Gunner45 said:I dont see why Southerners care so much that General Lee statue's are taken down.... he basically lost the South the war through his poor strategic vision and insistence on invading the north in the hopes that he would get his "Austerlitz" and the war would magically end (like he had been taught through his Clausewitz lessons at West Point). His lack of grip on the reality of the time and insistence in living in the past cost the south. If nothing, the south should be happy to not have to see this poor strategic thinkers face and not think about the strategic defence anymore!
Kat Stevens said:Thin edge of the wedge, though. First you take down the statues. Then you destroy all references to that history.
jmt18325 said:Why would you do that? History is there to be remembered, not forgotten. We can tear down statues and still have books.
jmt18325 said:We can tear down statues and still have books.
Kat Stevens said:Until they offend someone, then they get burned.
EpicBeardedMan said:I dont think it is accurate to keep comparing the stuff going on today to Hitler and Nazi Germany.
mariomike said:Then you won't like today's Economist or Time magazine covers.
A Nazi salute, a KKK hood and Trump: Magazine covers after Charlottesville are jarring
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2017/08/17/a-nazi-salute-a-kkk-hood-and-trump-magazine-covers-after-charlottesville-are-jarring/?utm_term=.4468d95d0e88
The latest from the Economist depicts the president bellowing into a white, conical megaphone — with eye holes that lend the appearance of a Ku Klux Klan hood. The clear implication is that Trump has amplified the message of white supremacists by failing to treat them as any more blameworthy than the counterprotesters with whom they clashed in Charlottesville last weekend.
Time magazine's new cover image features a boot-clad white man behind an American flag, held aloft at a 45-degree angle by a pole whose ornament is an outstretched hand, creating the effect of a Nazi salute.
EpicBeardedMan said:I dont think it is accurate to keep comparing the stuff going on today to Hitler and Nazi Germany. I do not like how loosely the term Nazi is being thrown around in the past couple years, most recently to describe anyone on the right who voices an opinion..
Even the actual Nazis of today being compared to the Nazis who actually committed genocide, manned concentration camps, fought for Hitler is kind of a joke.
The idea that some 18 year old kid who just shaved his head and wears a symbol on his shirt because his older brother does it is compareable to an SS member in 1940 is sad. People arent born with hate in their hearts, they are taught it.
The idea that Nazis would ever come back in any sort of power (Real power, not marching on the street with tiki torches from home depot shouting hateful and moronic slogans) without a global intervention is laughable to be honest, so can we stop comparing people in 2017 who are just ignorant to people in 1940 who actually killed people by the hundreds of thousands?
FJAG said:I like a lot of George's stuff too but I've been speaking out quite a bit against folks who are passively failing to condemn the Alt R while (like Trump) suggesting there is equal fault on both sides. I think that's bullsh*t.
If I, as the child of people who fought for the Nazis, can see this then it should be blindingly obvious to everyone whose forefathers landed in Italy and Normandy.
FJAG said:To dismiss their present status as a mere phase or a playful activity which will never take root is naive in the extreme.
[cheers]
jollyjacktar said:Lastly, as a child of a man who went through Italy, France and Holland against "real" Nazi and Fascists I'm pretty sure the skinhead dickbags and sheet wearing ****s of the KKK don't rate that status or that I'd fail to recognize that
George Wallace said:What is offensive in my mind is that there is a total ignoring of the other side having Alt-Left and likely Black Blok instigators who may have initiated the violence.
I have no problem with municipalities removing the statues and memorials to place in museums and such, but there have already been filmed instances of the Alt-Left toppling them a la Sadam Husan Statues.
Infanteer said:That the other side (although I'd argue it was a minority of them) got baited in and also used violence is an issue
Eaglelord17 said:If you want to take down monuments to slavery, when do we want to start on the Pyramids?