blackjackgabbiani asked:
mitigatedchaos answered:
Wasn’t big enough to justify a full post since my followers have already seen the post on my feed.
You can just block quote it and tag me, like
oh look a quote here lol
Supposedly there’s some official way to do it, but eh.
Regarding that topic, while I don’t believe all Robert E. Lee statues were erected in the name of white supremacy, one in the news for being removed recently was.
So if rednecks putting up a Robert E Lee statue bothers you even if they’re not actually racist per se but because it’s symbolically racist and offensive, then it’s just part of their culture you don’t approve of, which makes you uncomfortable, which was the entire point of using rednecks as the example in the first place. Respecting such things is itself part of culture.
And if you’re assuming it means they’re actually racist, then that delves into more harmful/threatening territory.
(Yes, I know not all rednecks are like that, but I saw how libs/lefties responded to the election, including btching about rednecks, and that post is intended to have libs/lefties that say “HOW COULD ANYONE EVER BE OPPOSED TO DIVERSITY?!” stop and notice that they, too, don’t actually terminally value diversity.
And thus while it may be worth the tradeoff, the opposition are not actually a bunch of weird evil people being evil to be evil.)
But when someone puts up a symbol of hate that isn’t the same thing as “wanting diversity”. That’s not wanting a symbol of hate. Same as I would want from anyone living here already. I’m applying the same standards to newcomers that I am to established locals.
The rednecks don’t believe that it’s a symbol of hate. Cultural difference. Why aren’t you respecting that?
So why do they want a statue of him? There are tons of Southern leaders and heroes who don’t stand for racism.
They would argue that Robert E. Lee in particular does not stand for racism, but both loyalty to one’s duties as a soldier, freedom from federal tyranny, and so on.
It doesn’t actually matter. They don’t see it as racist. Either you can respect that culture, or you see your own culture as superior.
How would that be seeing my own culture as superior?
There are some things in cultures–all cultures–that are objectively bad. Fighting them in people of other cultures the same as you do when you fight it in your own doesn’t show that you think either culture is superior. It shows that there are problems facing society as a whole, the combination of cultures and them as individuals.
Child marriage is cultural. FGM is cultural. To pick an example closer to American shores, circumcision is cultural.
You can argue whether human rights are cultural or not, but clearly believing in human rights is cultural, and people argue regularly over what is and is not a “right”. (Medical care, for instance.)
So no, if you think culture A which has no FGM is better than culture B which does have FGM, you think culture A is superior.

