AK said:
My personal view is that we should evaluate these sort of monuments based on why/how we remember that individual and the historical context of the monument ... Cornwallis's story is not clear-cut and maybe the best place for him is in a museum with all the facts laid out, the good beside the ugly.
My :2c:
That's a very good, insightful post and I agree with it ...
The problem is that many and sundry
progressives do not. They are not interested in having "all the facts laid out," in fact they want none of the facts at all because they have a
legend based narrative which, they hope, they can repeat over and over and over again until we all come to accept it as true.
Museums and scholars are the bitter enemies of the
progressives because all those pesky facts get in the way of the new "revealed truth."
We have law-courts that have, in good faith, bent over backwards to accept some legends as historically
near enough to being factual in order to provide some sort of framework for providing redress for things that happened centuries in the past. That's not enough: we are required, now, to accept that whatever certain groups say is gospel truth, even when it is, demonstrably, historical rubbish. But the
progressive narrative, for now, posits that everyone (except those brought here as slaves) whose ancestors were not settled here, in Canada, before 1608 (as aboriginal people, in other words) shares, somehow, in being guilty of a monstrous crime against humanity. No other view can be tolerated.
Does that mean that all First Nations' claims that are based on their own oral history are invalid? Of course not. We must accept three things:
First, some French and Brits and Canadians did quite dreadful things to our First Nations and some redress is owed for legitimate grievances;
Second, some oral history is, almost certainly, grounded in historical fact; and
Third, 250 years ago First Nations and Europeans were, still, talking
at one another, talking
past one another not talking
with one another.
First Nations have a right to believe that they have been lied to, cheated and robbed ~ deprived for centuries of what was promised to them. What,
in my opinion, they do not have a right to do is to revise history without some reference to the actual facts.