Originally posted by Old Greg
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Reuters Fact check: London’s Cenotaph war memorial was not defaced on 3 June
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostI've not said anything about racists. I was talking about slave traders. Do please try to keep up (although you're clearly cross about the whole thing).
As for Henry VIII, make an argument for each case individually. If you're bothered about statues of Henry VIII, say something. If you're bothered about people who are bothered about statues of Henry VIII, go and find someone to have a go at. If you're bothered about people who are bothered about other statues but not about Henry VIII and you're worried about inconsistency, then be consistent and also worry about people who care about or donate to one cause but not about / to another similar cause. Otherwise you are being inconsistent yourself, so maybe you could just have a stern word with yourself.Make Mercia Great Again!Comment
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostSimple argument: reductio ad absurdum fallacy to avoid the issue. Is that the next line of defence after abandoning the slippery slope?Comment
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Originally posted by BlueSharp View PostNot cross at all I'm quite enjoying myself actually. Watching someone who constantly deflects from questions or takes offence about spelling to cover their own ignorance is quite amusing.Comment
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Let's take a few case that have been mentioned here.
Edward Colston - on one hand he was a philanthropist, on the other he was a slave trader
Henry VIII - on one hand he founded the Church of England, on the other hand he persecuted Catholics and treated his wives badly
Cromwell - on one hand he overthrew Charles I, on the other hand he persecuted Catholics
Churchill - on one hand he led the UK to victory in WW2, on the other hand he led the UK as a power suppressing its colonies.
An argument can be made for each of these cases independently to retain or remove statues. There is no slippery slope here. Argue each on its merits.Comment
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostLet's take a few case that have been mentioned here.
Edward Colston - on one hand he was a philanthropist, on the other he was a slave trader
Henry VIII - on one hand he founded the Church of England, on the other hand he persecuted Catholics and treated his wives badly
Cromwell - on one hand he overthrew Charles I, on the other hand he persecuted Catholics
Churchill - on one hand he led the UK to victory in WW2, on the other hand he led the UK as a power suppressing its colonies.
An argument can be made for each of these cases independently to retain or remove statues. There is no slippery slope here. Argue each on its merits.Comment
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Originally posted by woohoo View PostI suppose the issue many people have is a mob bypassing that argument for each case and just tearing it down. I think that's where the slippery slop slopes.
The other issues appear to be "what about Henry VIII?" and similar stuff.Comment
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostLet's take a few case that have been mentioned here.
Edward Colston - on one hand he was a philanthropist, on the other he was a slave trader
Henry VIII - on one hand he founded the Church of England, on the other hand he persecuted Catholics and treated his wives badly
Cromwell - on one hand he overthrew Charles I, on the other hand he persecuted Catholics
Churchill - on one hand he led the UK to victory in WW2, on the other hand he led the UK as a power suppressing its colonies.
An argument can be made for each of these cases independently to retain or remove statues. There is no slippery slope here. Argue each on its merits.
Paul Gascoigne and Jonathan Edwards statues unveiled - Chronicle LiveComment
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Originally posted by mrdonuts View Postperhaps if the protesters educated themselves they would realise that africans werent the only victims of the slave trade, its an evil trade for sure but they werent always the victims, indeed they were perpetrators
it doesnt fit with the current narrative, but if people understand this then they may feel less victimised, calm down and act more reasonably
Slavery on the Barbary Coast - Wikipedia
"between 1 million and 1.25 million Europeans were captured by Barbary pirates and sold as slaves "Comment
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