The Pak Banker

Old South vs the new America

- BJ Rudell

The 20th anniversar­y of Sept. 11 challenges us to consider what our country stands for, what it should stand for, and for whom it should stand.

The central conceit of Confederat­e monuments is that the antebellum South is ever-present. It remains - and always will remain - embedded in the fabric of American consciousn­ess.

The problem, of course, is that one cannot separate - historical­ly, sociologic­ally, or emotionall­y - the Old South's reverence for torturing human beings. For buying and selling them. For separating children from parents and wives from husbands. For capturing them. For murdering them.

That's not to say other Americans did not support slavery, or even own slaves. But to my knowledge, there are no Confederat­e monuments honoring Vermonter secessioni­sts. Confederat­e monuments were dedicated to advancing a supremacis­t Southern heritage, aimed at intimidati­ng and threatenin­g those who stood in the way. And not only "stood," but also "stand," because they continue to offend and dishonor those whose ancestors died so that these Confederat­es could live in public squares forever.

Last week's removal of a

Robert E. Lee statue in

Richmond, Va., has been met with the usual backlash. Former

President Donald Trump - who according to the Republican

National Committee "still leads" the GOP - was quick to name Lee a national hero while lamenting erroneousl­y - that "except for

Gettysburg, [he] would have won the [Civil] War." Trump also strangely insisted that Lee would have handed the U.S. "total victory" in Afghanista­n.

Hyperbole and questionab­le How many centuries are intent aside, the idolizatio­n of enough to honor men who Lee and those he led into battle killed hundreds of thousands of against the United States raise Americans? And by extension, questions his eternal supporters for what purpose are we obeying will not - or cannot - answer: monumental decisions made generation­s ago?

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries - the years when many of these monuments were erected - doctors commonly recommende­d soothing teething babies with licorice-flavored morphine syrup.

Why don't American medical textbooks continue to promote morphine syrup? Because of scientific progress. Previous "experts" who pushed this product into people's homes don't merit public recognitio­n. They don't deserve pedestals. Simply put, we should have known better back then. We didn't. Now we do. And medical writings and parents' attitudes have evolved accordingl­y.

And the notion of "evolution" is critical. We can remember past mistakes without shoving them in people's faces. So, too, can we remember past horrors without venerating the perpetrato­rs.

Slavery was our country's original sin. Displaying monuments to those who killed and died to perpetuate slavery is a contempora­ry sin. A majority of Americans agree, and want the monuments gone. The other side believes, inexplicab­ly, that removing them will somehow desecrate America.

By keeping these Confederat­e monuments, we are taking orders from avowed bigots of the past, who desperatel­y sought to reignite the Lost Cause. More than 1,000 remaining statues represent these bigots' triumph over modern-day America, which is supposedly (but nowhere close to) "post-racial."

Every day these structures tower over us, we, an allegedly evolved nation aspiring for goodness and greatness, straining to liberate ourselves from a history steeped in dehumaniza­tion, are surrenderi­ng unconditio­nally to a devoutly racist philosophy.

If we truly are a better country than we were 50, 100, and 150 years ago, then it's way past time we grow up and act like it.

 ??  ?? ‘‘Why don't American medical textbooks continue to promote morphine syrup?
Because of scientific progress. Previous "experts" who pushed this product into people's homes don't merit public recognitio­n. They don't
deserve pedestals.”
‘‘Why don't American medical textbooks continue to promote morphine syrup? Because of scientific progress. Previous "experts" who pushed this product into people's homes don't merit public recognitio­n. They don't deserve pedestals.”

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