By Michael Rozeff
The cry will go out to destroy Mt. Rushmore, because all 4 presidents depicted there were racists — were.
Dogmatic cultural cleansing is gaining popularity. But for these men,
those were the times. Those were the currents of thought that were
prevalent. It’s demanding too much after the fact to create a sanitized
history. Removing memorials that elicit all sorts of thoughts and
feelings, for and against, disrespects the experiences of the past that
belong to everyone in the country in memory. This disrespects the people
of the past who erected these memorials. Wrong or right, they lived
according to their lights and darknesses. The destroyers act as if they
have found and know the truth for all time and as if they know how to
make it explicit to the eye and mind, but do they know that truth and do
they know how to memorialize it? Do they have a right to destroy that
which annoys them?
In our time, now to create a present that’s sanitized according to
particular currents of thought that are now held by particular groups is
to accord respect to these thoughts and groups. Are these deserved?
Does the proclamation of one’s purity and virtue on slavery justify the
power of certain self-selected groups to destroy the memorials erected
by past Americans?
If libertarians united and demanded similar kinds of purification
rites against all those in America’s past who have been
anti-libertarians, would not their case be even broader than the case
being made by memorial-bashers today? What a massive excision would be
involved in removing the works of our anti-libertarian forefathers.
However, the case for doing so is as weak as the case for destroying Mt.
Rushmore.
The past in memory belongs to all of us as it happened. The past in
its public physical forms belongs to those in the past who created these
forms. They left them as an inheritance to be preserved. They’d erode
over time perhaps or be taken or removed or relocated, but they were not
meant to be destroyed because of the aggression of past human beings.
We were not bequeathed them to be destroyed because they annoy some of
us or because of the sins of the fathers or because we wish to erect new
monuments to our supposed purity and virtues or because of political
motives disguised as virtuous ones.
The Governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo, writes “Robert E. Lee and
Stonewall Jackson will be removed from the CUNY hall of great Americans
because New York stands against racism.” This is a cheap shot that
wounds the hall’s purpose and history,
which is “to honor prominent Americans who have had a significant
impact on this nation’s history.” The state is a trustee or a custodian
of this property, and that means that it should be fulfilling a duty to
the creators to maintain their works. It should not be culturally
cleansing the art works because anti-racism has recently become a
popular rallying point for political elements that have a political
agenda.
If all property were private, this matter would be a libertarian
no-brainer. In our world, much property is officiated over by
governments. In such cases, we can ask what treatment would be
appropriate if they were private. The governments, often cities, hold
them in a variety of ways, because the land was sometimes donated and
the statues were paid for and made in a variety of ways. We have to ask
to whom the statues belong in order to get some idea of the government’s
just role in protecting their heritage. They basically are held in
trust for the people who built them and paid for them.
We are surely not going to find that they belong to people who are
upset because the statues are of people who were slaveholders or
racists. One does not gain ownership because one is unhappy about
something that belongs to others or about something one has no real
claim to. Tearing down statues or pressuring governments to remove them
is going to be in many cases a rights violation, a disrespecting of the
rights of their dead and buried owners who left them as an inheritance
to be kept up by various governments typically.
If a private society were to collect these statues, which may be
available at bargain prices, they could perhaps be arranged to make for a
profitable tourist attraction.
posted by ΛΕΟΝΙΔΑΣ
1 comment:
The national debt approaches 20Trillion, the Federal reserve is trashing the Dollar, we descend into possible war with North Korea and Russia, promote hatred of us among people whose countries we have invaded while the media is obsessed with which statues are allowed to gather pigeon poop in the parks. WOW!
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