We all have a line in the sand, but where different people draw that line is an interesting question.Sandydragon wrote:How has the social contract in this country been broken? There has been an incredible amount of work to reduce inequality and just because Bristol city council don't move as quickly as you would like, that's not evidence of any social contract being broken.Stom wrote:I feel that when/if they fish it out of the Avon, it will have more impact and more of a story in a museum now.Sandydragon wrote: Ive written previously that it should be in a museum. With a full explanation to allow for healthy debate.
I think they've done history a service by toppling it and throwing it into the river. I think it's an important part of history now.
They did petition the council.
The woman at the end of the Last Week Tonight show has it right: the social contract has been broken. What do you expect to happen?
Thats just an excuse for criminal behaviour. At what point does acceptable criminality become unacceptable, and who gets to decide that?
This guy in Bristol was shitting on slaves in the late 1600s so there's a very public line that anyone who was evil at that time should not be celebrated. So 300 - 350 years back from now is our starting point.
Are we going any further back? There were plenty of horrible people around, or at least people who did some horrible things, in the centuries immediately before that, so are we going back further still, or declaring an amnesty at some random point around 350 - 400 years back?
Also, it would be interesting to find out what the criteria are for being judged as EVIL? Colson? Coldston? Coulson? Bristol guy did some good stuff but NOT ENOUGH and has been cast down. What about guys like Andrew Carnegie? Henry Ford? Do acts of philanthropy, kindness and generosity ever count as balance, or is 1 evil act always and forever more important?
For Cashead and others who struggle with comprehension, I am not defending Bristol guy or deflecting away from him. I couldn't give less of a shit about his statue. I am interested in where this path takes us tho.