Well, I’m sure of it. We’ve lost our minds and our ability
to use common sense. If anyone doesn’t believe it, just look at what is going
on in our country. We don’t need to act so fast sometimes. Knee-jerk reactions
never help situations.
In Charlottesville, Virginia, groups go after each other
during protests. That’s not so different from years past. However, several
things involved in it are what leave most of us scratching our heads and
uttering “Huh?” For one, what in the world are we doing when we allow
Neo-Nazis, white supremacists, and other racists to march in the streets? Yes,
citizens have the right to free speech, but when groups take advantage of that
right with the intention of causing friction, we have to use some
common sense in
passing out permits to them. These very groups are ones against which our
country has already waged wars. They lost but seem hell bent on reviving and going
for round two. The very mention of “Nazis” and “KKK,” and “racists” sickens me.
Those words and groups associated with them should have no places in our
country.
All of a sudden, it seems, the removal of statues from
cities around the country has become a priority. Many of them have been in
place for as long as a century, but for some reason, they now are eyesores. I
do realize that many of the monuments in the South memorialize Confederate
generals and political figures. Yes, I also know that the war waged by the
South to continue slavery was especially despicable because it shed blood because
the mistreatment of an entire race of folks. However, removing a few statues
and memorials won’t change what happened. In fact, the leaving of those things
should be a constant reminder of man’s inhumanity to man; their existence
should keep us from ever again allowing slavery to exist.
In Memphis, the yearly showing of “Gone with the Wind” has
ended. According to news accounts, The Orpheum Theater decided to end a 34-year
tradition of showing the film because it offended some viewers with “its racist
content.” A big “DUH” goes out to those who complained. The movie
has contained
the same material since its premier. It is set during the Civil War in the
South. Of course it has racist material. However, far beyond that, “Gone with
the Wind” is a classic movie that presents the struggles of a woman who has
been displaced by the war and who watches her entire life and culture destroyed
as the Union sweeps across the Confederacy and eradicates slavery. That’s the
beauty of the movie: it disparages those who were misguided and puts to shame
mistaken lifestyles of slaveholders and Southern sympathizers.
I never want anyone to feel oppressed because of the color
of his skin. Shame on every person who espouses such disgusting ideas. At the
same time, it is important to keep in mind, in some form or fashion, the South
that held people in chains and treated them no better than livestock. The old
saying, “Those who do not learn history are doomed to repeat it” applies in
this situation. One question I ask is how many folks have ever given a second
thought to the monument at Fort Sanders? Another is do folks know that “Gone
with the Wind” was responsible for a Hattie McDaniel receiving the first
Academy Award given to a black actress? It seems that something good can come
from something bad on occasion. A little more insight into things might just
prevent violence, hatred, and destruction.
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