Furman University is way ahead of this movement. Hopefully, what was accomplished by the diversity group will be enough.
I also feel that what Furman U has done / is doing is beautiful, relevant, meaningful, and tangible. It is well thought out, highly reasoned, and should be a model for how other institutions address these issues.Mr. Taggart wrote: ↑Fri Jun 19, 2020 9:06 amAs to slavery, I think what Furman did was appropriate. We need to be honest about what it was, and the impact it had. It wasn't as it was portrayed on "Gone with the Wind." It was brutal, and those who justified it were wrong. Those who supported it at the time knew or should have known it was wrong. Thomas Jefferson called it an "abominable crime" in the Declaration of Independence, and yet he didn't give up the economic advantages it gave him. That needs to be said. George Washington knew it was wrong -- he struggled with the institution, and he emancipated his slaves when he died. That colonists thought taxation without representation deserved a Revolution, declaring that an inalienable right endowed from our Creator was liberty, is telling.
The Confederacy lost the Civil War, but after 11 years of Reconstruction, it waged it again, through lynch mobs led by people like Ben Tillman. In South Carolina, gangs of Red Shirts engaged in systemic violence, murder and intimidation, to elect Wade Hampton Governor in 1876 -- then they had the gall to call themselves "Redeemers." What exactly were they redeeming? So, I don't have a problem with changing the name of the street, or the high school, or the mascot, or stopping them from wearing red uniforms. That is wholly different that Washington or Jefferson, or other founding fathers who, while flawed, contributed values and traditions we rely on today.
Richard Furman had some shaky theology on slavery, but he also helped create the Baptist Convention, founded a university, was important in the Revolution, etc. James C. Furman is famous for 2 things -- being President of a University and being a leading secessionist. I am fine with changing the building to reflect other family members who contributed more to our community. I also would be fine with naming the building after Dr. Harrell, for his work in integrating Greenville County Schools. Johnson Hagood's only notoriety is his command of Battery Wagner -- where he was notoriously brutal to the 54th Massachusetts, because he believed them to be engaged in a slave rebellion.
I would take the dividing line past the mere Confederacy, to say if your sole notoriety is racial brutality and oppression, or if your brutality is shocking to the conscience, we can remove your statue. Gone are Tillman and Hampton, Washington and Jefferson are fine. Wouldn't we be shocked to see a statue of Bull Connor? Sims has to go -- he is America's Mengele. Calhoun is a closer call.
There is a reason we say slavery was the original sin of America. For my entire life, I have been told that the remedy for sin is earnest repentance.
The military bases were named after Confederates in the Jim Crow era, to appease supporters of the Jim Crow system; so they were named after people who violated the Constitution, to appease those who continued to do so. To me that one is not a hard call at all.
Is that sort of deeply contemplated process what we are seeing play out on a national level now? Is that what we expect to occur going forward in a ‘new normal’ frame of sanity reference where “Silence = Murder?” FUBeAR kinda thinks not.
I like the Taggert Subjective Sliding Scale for Redemption & Restoration (TSSS4RR) that you have proposed. I also like purple unicorns & rainbows made of gummy worms with pots of gold at both ends.
Do you think you can get this system implemented soon?
FUBeAR is a bit more black & white (pun not really intended)...
2 choices...
1) Everything that can be tied directly to the War of Northern Aggression has to go & just stop with the fool’s errand of attempting to erase slavery & racism past. Maybe, make those situations only subject to local referendum at the appropriate lowest level of relevant locality (Washington Monument & Jefferson Memorial would be a National referendum, Washington (state) vs. ChazChop, a state-wide referendum & the Aiken situation described might be local or county, etc.) & trying to do anything otherwise is a crime.
2) Burn it all down - If anyone is ever offended by any non-living thing at all, they have the right to destroy it in the way they see fit without fear of any governmentally-sponsored consequences.
...or we declare the TSSS4RR is the new law of the land & Mr. Taggert will make all decisions in these matters unilaterally. Failure to abide by his directions will be punishable by law.