I have a feeling that if they actually did start removing monuments, we'd have a situation with the confederacy similar to how Germany views its history with WWII; we could scrub it clean on the surface so as to not attract controversy, but the rest of the world still knows and openly talks about it.
I can sympathize with the Germans a bit more, wanting to remove blatant symbols of the Nazi regime in Germany, due to it being a short lived regime that not only wanted to conquer Europe, but also wanted to exterminate an entire group of people (and nearly succeeded due to the industrialized efficiency in which they carried out the genocide).
Sure, keep the concentration camps as tourist destinations, museums, and reminders of what can happen when a particularly charismatic leader gains control of a powerful nation and uses the population to build a war machine capable of successfully invading most of their neighbors. Then rounding up, kidnapping, and forcing ethnic undesirables into crowded, fenced off ghettos before sending them in crowded trains to camps where they will be worked to death and systematically slaughtered with industrial efficiency in such a way that the world had never witnessed until that point.
My point is, I have zero problem with Germany wanting to remove blatant symbols of Nazism, because the German people of today certainly don't want to be reminded of such a dark period in their nation's history. However, a statue of a brave General unconnected to the Holocaust should be preserved, as well as graveyards of the dead Wehrmacht soldiers who were merely patriots following the orders of their superiors, fighting for their country
This is night and day when compared to maintaining statues and monuments of the former Confederacy. For one, the monuments are typically of famous CSA Generals and battlefields. This is part of history, of CSA history and American history. As someone mentioned earlier in this thread, the United States is a young country without many historical monuments compared to our brothers and sisters in Continental Europe. It is of utmost importance that we maintain these monuments rather than removing them because a small minority decides that they "hurt their feelings" this week.
This is a very dangerous precedent to set. First they want to remove Confederate monuments, but what is next? It's very interesting to note that one of the main proponents (besides Mayor Landriue) who had been pushing for the removal of these monuments in New Orleans has a long history of doing this type of thing.
Back in the early 1990's, he successfully had the name of a primary school's name changed. The reason? Because the school's name was "George Washington Elementary".
This is too ridiculous to make up. Our very first President, hero of the Revolutionary War. Even he wasn't safe from this radical black Professor (a card carrying communist, by the way) and his cronies in the City Council. His reason? Because George Washington owned slaves at one point.
Again, instead of respecting the Father of the United States, a brilliant Statesmen and a Revolutionary War hero, this pseudo intellectual communist who is completely unapologetic about hating America, Capitalism, and everything that entails, takes pride in tearing down American culture.
Marc Morial was mayor when the communist had George Washington Elementary changed (Mayor Morial was another problem), when Mayor Nagin was elected, the communist was largely ignored since Nagin was more of a pro business Democratic candidate who cared little for nonsense like that (Though Nagin had an entire different set of problems as he went to prison for corruption) but now that we have Landriue as mayor and his term will be ending soon. the time was ripe for the communist professor to strike again.
I love my city. But living here is like a circus. Between the Mafia running the Quarters, the police (Who do a great job, all things considered.) I can't think of another city's police force that could successfully handle the millions of people that descend upon the city during Mardi Gras, drinking, drugging, and acting like maniacs.