Los Angeles Times

Keep the statues, not the plaques

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Re “Statue of general burned in D.C.,” June 21

With statues coming down faster than face

coverings at a Trump rally, rather than removing the sculptures from their pedestals, I would suggest a more difficult process but perhaps a better solution: Leave the statues in place but remove the commemorat­ive plaques and rewrite them with current sentiments in mind.

Label a Confederat­e leader a contra, a violent protester or an insurgent. Label a slaveholde­r or a conquistad­or as an uber capitalist.

Maybe relabeling is the steeper path, but historic signposts like statues can then be more educationa­l. David Ando

Torrance

The increasing­ly slipshod reactions to the symbolism of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson should alarm everyone.

Although it remains unhelpful and unwise to judge past figures by today’s moral standards, even in the 1700s slavery was widely condemned. But the grave contradict­ions of our Revolution-era leaders are way less than the grand total of what they did by protecting America from exterminat­ion and setting it deliberate­ly on the path to mass enfranchis­ement, freedom and legal equality for all people.

It is a distinctio­n that Frederick Douglass, the former slave and greatest abolitioni­st, championed. It is a journey that is far from over, but it will not be aided by tearing down statues or splashing them with intimidati­ng messages. These are the actions of mob rule, not democracy. Dane Steven Skorup

Sandwich, Ill.

Erecting statues to military men is a habit left over from a patriarcha­l world that places too much value on hierarchy.

How about we pay tribute to noteworthy events without singling out one man who could not have achieved so much without the support, work and probably love of others? A president or general can well be an outstandin­g individual, but his staff, the troops, his parents and his family are likely to be key to his success.

So, put up a gazebo, a monolith or other generic monument, but not a statue depicting any particular person. Parrish Nelson Hirasaki

Culver City

The powers that be should get ahead of the protests that are destroying or defacing monuments. Recognize now that these historical figures no longer deserve public display and admiration.

Identify a museum or even a warehouse, and then remove the statues promptly and store them in a place that can include the context of who they are, what they stood for and their role in history. Sam Knight

Poway

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