The comparison to Germany and Rommel only takes us so far Fez. Germany has a negative relationship to its military past in that even war memorials to unknown soldiers need to be protected when demos are happening nearby. My father - who was at the royal Military Hospital in Chelsea, was horrified that Germany had no equivalent for their old soldiers. The comparison to the American Civil War is not applicable because Germany was undoubtedly, the aggressor and anyone involved in their war effort is now highly suspect. The American Civil War did not break out because of slavery, but because of taxation and levies. This idea of the North as being abolitionist is a convenient myth. Abolitionists in the north were a very small minority (possibly little more than a few Quakers) and Lincoln was certainly not one of them - his comments on race were worse than anything coming out of the south. The issue of the abolition of slavery was only included in the North after the war had been going for two years, and as a way of getting international approval - most notably from Britain and France who were close to recognizing the Confederacy as a separate state. Britain was arming both sides at the commencement of the war. Any idea that freed slaves would be welcomed in the north was an illusion - Lincoln believed in apartheid or in enforced repatriation, but in nothing else. Yet there are statues of Lincoln everywhere in the USA without any protest. I agree that having statues of prominent people in public places such as parks can be seen as a political statement - but the fact that they were revered once is part of the history of a country, whether they would like to whitewash that history or not. In East Germany they removed all statues from Marx or Lenin - but does it make any difference to their history ? Historical figures were products of their age and cannot be judged by modern standards - or brushed aside because they do not conform to modern pc. rules - if you do that you will find that no history is left.I'm sorry but I suggest strongly that you read the letters of succession that the rebel States wrote. Lincoln courted Lee but Lee saw his loyalty to Virginia as you rightly say. I compared Lee to Rommel, and you don't see HIS statue in German parks and Volk all know who he was! False equivalence. Nor do we see statues of Charles I everywhere, unlike Cromwell and the other Parliamentarians. They were on the right side of history as there is no divine right of kings! Cromwell certainly meted out a severe and gratuitous penalty to the Irish but they had attempted, in allegiance with Charles I, to return England to a pimple on the arse of the holy roman empire.
Likewise there is no place for a statue of George III in Central Park. Books and museums, not public places.
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