Dixie - In Memoriam
New member
I keep hearing certain pinhead groups are attempting to have this or that banned, because it is 'offensive' or 'insensitive' to others, usually some minority group. While it's okay that homosexuals hijacked the word "gay" and made it preferable that any number of other names we had commonly used, the rest of us are supposed to cleanse society of all the other words to describe a homosexual, because it is viewed as 'wrong' to use them. Who died and gave homosexuals the right to decide which words mean what? It's very queer indeed.
There is the movement to remove the N-word from Huck Finn. Replace it with "slave" and this is somehow supposed to be less offensive. And of course, there is my favorite one... the movement to get rid of the Confederate flag. Now, make no mistake about what I am posting this for... it's not to get into some meaningless debate of the Civil War or history, I can thoroughly pwn anyone here on that topic anyway, this is more than that. I don't have any problem with a state voting to remove the Confederate battle flag from their state flag, or a school's student body to vote and rename their mascot who carries a Confederate flag.. That's fine, it's democracy, and the way society should function, in my opinion.
My interest in discussion, is the reason people believe that erasing parts of our past, our legacy, our history, is a good thing for society, ultimately? I can grasp the whole 'offensive' thing, and I understand that.. but to remove something from sight, to erase it from books, is the antithesis of knowledge, isn't it? How can we advance culturally, if we deny our past, or the uncomfortable parts of it? We have to empower ourselves with knowledge and understanding of the past, and this requires these words and images to be used and known, not censored and banned.
There is the movement to remove the N-word from Huck Finn. Replace it with "slave" and this is somehow supposed to be less offensive. And of course, there is my favorite one... the movement to get rid of the Confederate flag. Now, make no mistake about what I am posting this for... it's not to get into some meaningless debate of the Civil War or history, I can thoroughly pwn anyone here on that topic anyway, this is more than that. I don't have any problem with a state voting to remove the Confederate battle flag from their state flag, or a school's student body to vote and rename their mascot who carries a Confederate flag.. That's fine, it's democracy, and the way society should function, in my opinion.
My interest in discussion, is the reason people believe that erasing parts of our past, our legacy, our history, is a good thing for society, ultimately? I can grasp the whole 'offensive' thing, and I understand that.. but to remove something from sight, to erase it from books, is the antithesis of knowledge, isn't it? How can we advance culturally, if we deny our past, or the uncomfortable parts of it? We have to empower ourselves with knowledge and understanding of the past, and this requires these words and images to be used and known, not censored and banned.