The Truth About Robert E. Lee That Liberals Hope You Never Hear
Make sure you read both pages.
I knew some of this but didn't know exactly why he fought...he fought to protect his state, not to fight for slavery. He was against it and encouraged reconciliation.
Just in case you can't get to the second page...the most important page, here is the link: http://conservativetribune.com/truth-...
I knew some of this but didn't know exactly why he fought...he fought to protect his state, not to fight for slavery. He was against it and encouraged reconciliation.
Just in case you can't get to the second page...the most important page, here is the link: http://conservativetribune.com/truth-...
Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
Lee appears to have been more concerned with his "home state" as a collective than with the freedom of the individuals in it.
I do not intend to try to maintain that he was a monster, I just do not think a statue of him as a military hero should continue to be maintained at public expense.
I live in Richmond, where we have Monument Ave. It might cost too much to remove those Confederate statues, but perhaps we could donate them to the Confederate Museum, to be taken there at the Museum's expense. And then signs could be put up, naming the "heroes" whose statues had stood there, how long they were there, and the address of the museum(s) where they were to be found. Or, if this is not feasible, perhaps we could put a sign above them, reading "Confederate Museum--Outside
Branch".
Jefferson wondered if they could learn like everyone else. He taught them to read and write, taught them skills and found them to be no different than anyone else...that's what changed his mind about slavery. Unfortunately, Virginia law prohibited him from freeing the slaves he inherited from his father...same goes for Adams and Washington...they inherited slaves from their fathers as well.
What many do not know is that during those times there were many Black Americans involved in the revolution, in state, federal governments not to mention, The Congress in Session. Any one of those people would make our present day government look like kindergartners.
The speed limit analogy was simply to illustrate accountability and rational assignment of guilt could change over time for various reasons. Sorry you missed it. Here's another example: We know today that human sacrifice is murderous evil, but try explaining that to an Aztec priest 700 years ago. Their descendants are now more enlightened and no longer practice such things. Accountability has changed with knowledge. We don't burn witches anymore, either.
Here's a hypothetical based on your phrase "...in this case the slavery of rational beings...". What if at some future time that definition is expanded to include non-rational beings, such as dogs, cats, horses, et al? What if pet ownership is looked upon as an evil subjugation of another species and pet owners of today are referred to as vile hateful people whose statues should be torn down regardless of any other positive or historical contribution the individual may have made? Oh wait, I think this expanded definition is already under way.
Do we assign guilt and erase all history because our ancestors may have committed some "crime" by TODAY'S standards? Let's face it, by today's standards in Western Civilization the whole past world was pretty nasty and a large portion of the contemporary world continues to be just as nasty. We should learn from the past with a mind towards understanding and take care in how we judge those who came before us.
Jefferson himself is judged as a great man because of how he thought and fought to implement his superior ideas over the course of his career. It isn't based on a single trigger word and no context, followed by an hysteria to tear down the Jefferson Memorial.
This moral judgment has nothing to do with prosecuting speeders under whatever the current legal speed limit is. Speed limits are optional within a range and set for the current road conditions; they are not moral principles. The moral principle is not endangering others' lives and the necessity to judge what driving actions do that.
The American Civil War was a defining point in US and world history and the primary participants of both sides should be studied, not erased. One interesting point is the fact that the states that had an estimated 4.5 million slaves to contribute to their war effort still couldn't beat the free states. America was becoming a powerful nation with slavery, but in the end became a far more powerful nation without it.
Are we not having a similar battle today? A paradigm of Freedom will not give way to a paradigm back into slavery...I think most have learned that lesson but are still blinded by the fact that the reverse fight never ended...example: big government, collectivism, political correctness (making anyone wanting to discuss the matter an instant criminal), global warming, Big City states, dumbed down education, revised history and all manner of disempowerments.
Everyone , in those times, grew up and lived with slavery, they all were enslaved by Kings and Queens; thoughts otherwise was a recent development, radical, so to speak, for those times...memes or paradigms do not change quickly.
Are we not having a similar battle today? A paradigm of Freedom will not give way to a paradigm back into slavery...I think most have learned that lesson but are still blinded by the fact that the reverse fight never ended.
As soon as government took upon itself the right to tax and confiscate, it infringed on freedom - the level of infringement rising with the depth and breadth of taxation. The only way to restore freedom is to restrain taxation and the infringement it brings.
One of my ancestors was an Irishman conscripted into the British army and sent to the Colonies to kill George Washington and any other rebel, but after he got here realized what the patriots of true freedom were all about. He was a commoner who owned NOTHING, but had to work to pay the royal rent on everything he had. He was virtually a slave. He changed sides and fought in the Colonial army for freedom and a piece of land to call his own near Elmira, NY. He paid no property tax, no income tax, and could build his home as he saw fit and grow the crops he saw fit and no man or government could take it away. He paid NO royal rent to anyone. He was a FREE MAN. Didn't last long, I guess. If I don't pay the "Royal Rent" I will soon learn I actually own NOTHING and, in that respect, am as much a virtual slave as my ancestor before he fought in the Colonial army. The majority of the people have returned to being "commoners" again.
And another tidbit...
I read that Frederick Douglas was asked why the negro wasn't set free at the conclusion of the American Revolution and his response was the white man had to free himself first.
http://www.nytimes.com/1862/08/24/new...
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