chris1989 wrote:
For example, Samuel Pepys who was famous for his diary and insight into the Great Fire of London may have invested in slavery but I don't know how much he knew about the suffering that was going on...
That's exactly why things like slavery are so insidious: it's so much easier to give orders if you don't have to see a persons face who is in the thick of things. Turning a blind eye makes you just as bad as the person holding the whip: worse even, because you're perpetuating the concept of it being good to treat fellow humans that way.
Statues of people who did those atrocities should be recycled into more useful things, they only serve to perpetuate their faulty ideals. But as far as removing them from textbooks, no, but it should be made clear of the bad choices they made too.
It's funny how someone like Adolph Hitler will go down in the annals of history as killing some 6-million people, yet, someone like Winston Churchill who is responsible for the deaths of 20-million + people in India, is glossed over completely
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Gosh, that's alright, I don't like them, so what we did is acceptable. Or someone like Buffalo Bill Cody and his ilk who killed hundreds of thousands of buffalo just for s*** and grins because the Plains Indians depended on them for their survival. White Americans had a very famous saying, "The only good Indian, is a dead Indian!" Ironic how people are starting to use that phrase again, in all honesty
DIVAIR