
Cops in Canada doing a good job, again
Memorials to the dead in general are fine, but I guess if say Germany put up a Mengele statue, it would cause a lot of shite. Glorying individuals on the losing side seems a bit taboo, rightly or wrongly. I guess it all comes down to 'blame' as much as anything.Making a visit to Gettysburg, PA this summer to visit the battlefield. There had been much made in the last few years about things like the Confederate flag and monuments to people who served in the Confederate Army and Government.
On the battlefield are many monuments to the various units from both sides of the battle. What's everyone's view on this? Is it wrong to have monuments to the Confederate soldiers who fought there? Is context everything, IE as long as the battle is presented in it's historical context, the monuments are ok?
In some places there are just historical markers to indicate the position of a unit others are in fact meant to honor the troops.
General Longstreet
![]()
The Virginia Monument
![]()
This I believe is the Louisiana Monument
![]()
This is an example of one that is more about the facts of the battle and a units participation
![]()
Memorials to the dead in general are fine, but I guess if say Germany put up a Mengele statue, it would cause a lot of shite. Glorying individuals on the losing side seems a bit taboo, rightly or wrongly. I guess it all comes down to 'blame' as much as anything.
Memorials to the dead in general are fine, but I guess if say Germany put up a Mengele statue, it would cause a lot of shite. Glorying individuals on the losing side seems a bit taboo, rightly or wrongly. I guess it all comes down to 'blame' as much as anything.
Making a visit to Gettysburg, PA this summer to visit the battlefield. There had been much made in the last few years about things like the Confederate flag and monuments to people who served in the Confederate Army and Government.
On the battlefield are many monuments to the various units from both sides of the battle. What's everyone's view on this? Is it wrong to have monuments to the Confederate soldiers who fought there? Is context everything, IE as long as the battle is presented in it's historical context, the monuments are ok?
In some places there are just historical markers to indicate the position of a unit others are in fact meant to honor the troops.
General Longstreet
![]()
The Virginia Monument
![]()
This I believe is the Louisiana Monument
![]()
This is an example of one that is more about the facts of the battle and a units participation
![]()
Making a visit to Gettysburg, PA this summer to visit the battlefield. There had been much made in the last few years about things like the Confederate flag and monuments to people who served in the Confederate Army and Government.
On the battlefield are many monuments to the various units from both sides of the battle. What's everyone's view on this? Is it wrong to have monuments to the Confederate soldiers who fought there? Is context everything, IE as long as the battle is presented in it's historical context, the monuments are ok?
Depends which war you're talking about. Would it be that offensive if the Germans have a Red Baron statue? Can't see a massive issue with that- helps he was obviously pre-Nazi.Or maybe to the losing side being a bunch of slavery supporting assholes?
Tbf I think he is the only iron cross holder to be removed from the records.
A Mengele statue! That would cause a whole world of crap. Do you have the right Nazi?
Does it not just make sense that you're seeing a lot of monuments to the losing side then.
I guess them glorifying the losing side could be an issue.
People seem to have reduced that war to one over slavery, which, correct me if im wrong, was almost a side issue picked up mid way through a long war.
I'm not an expert on American History though so what do i know.
As for the Nazi thing. Auschwitz is a monument of sorts to them.
Making a visit to Gettysburg, PA this summer to visit the battlefield. There had been much made in the last few years about things like the Confederate flag and monuments to people who served in the Confederate Army and Government.
On the battlefield are many monuments to the various units from both sides of the battle. What's everyone's view on this? Is it wrong to have monuments to the Confederate soldiers who fought there? Is context everything, IE as long as the battle is presented in it's historical context, the monuments are ok?
In some places there are just historical markers to indicate the position of a unit others are in fact meant to honor the troops.
Making a visit to Gettysburg, PA this summer to visit the battlefield. There had been much made in the last few years about things like the Confederate flag and monuments to people who served in the Confederate Army and Government.
On the battlefield are many monuments to the various units from both sides of the battle. What's everyone's view on this? Is it wrong to have monuments to the Confederate soldiers who fought there? Is context everything, IE as long as the battle is presented in it's historical context, the monuments are ok?
In some places there are just historical markers to indicate the position of a unit others are in fact meant to honor the troops.
People seem to have reduced that war to one over slavery, which, correct me if im wrong, was almost a side issue picked up mid way through a long war.
I'm not an expert on American History though so what do i know.
So I guess this belongs here. Bugger all to do with political correctness but will create frothing outrage amongst those who have an issue with it.
I am, of course, talking about the lawyer's decision to spell her name without capital letters. WTF?
My name is spelled without capital letters. People make many assumptions about why that is. Here is the story. I have always signed my name without capital letters. When I was taking a Master of Laws degree in 1990, I had letterhead designed and my name was in lower case. I liked it, so I continued it when I returned to private practice in 1992. What an uproar! Lawyers called me up to say that they had a vote in their firm about why I chose that spelling; a court rejected an Order because my name was not properly spelled; and the local queer newspaper refused for years to spell my name without capital letters.
I realized that I had a perfect illustration of how we react when someone moves even a tiny bit away from a norm of behaviour, even with respect to something that has no impact on anyone else. So I have kept that spelling, and I tell this story in unlearning oppression workshops.
Oh god that lawyers website is not a rabbit hole I want to go down.
Probably end up in convulsions from the rampant insanity.
So I guess this belongs here. Bugger all to do with political correctness but will create frothing outrage amongst those who have an issue with it.
I am, of course, talking about the lawyer's decision to spell her name without capital letters. WTF?
I prefer wtf.
It's ridiculous,but the pics of people doing mundane tasks wearing gloves are quite funny tbf.Sometimes, yes political correctness has gone mad. Or at least social media is fecking ridiculous.
"Beauty queen wearing gloves at orphanage 'not racist'"
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-40496532
The DM Reporter @DMReporter 4m4 minutes ago
EXPOSED: ‘Nigger in the woodpile, chinky takeaway, paki shop, wogs’ - the charming British terms being destroyed by political correctness.
I do shudder at what were common phrases in 1980s East Yorkshire.That'd probably outrage my nan.
Not sure he's amused by it tbh.out of yesterday’s two incidents
that politician hasn’t a leg to stand on. You can’t be having a phrase like that in your vocabulary.
But the Stormzy Lukkaku thing is a mountain out of a mole hill. They genuinely do look similar, it was lazy editor more than anything
I think i'd prefer a simple Good Morning/Afternoon/Evening, followed by the message. 'Hello everyone' sounds a bit weird.
It does make me think back to the evening of the London Bridge attacks though, in which a Met officer was heard addressing people as 'ladies and gentlemen'. She was merely trying to get some lagaards to move the hell along, no ill intent or anything.