Gransnet forums

News & politics

I am not trying to be controversial, but...........

(303 Posts)
Lexisgranny Wed 10-Jun-20 10:33:30

Much has been written universally about the appalling murder of George Floyd and the subsequent global reaction. I wholeheartedly agree that not only black people, but other ethnic minorities have been, and still are experiencing unacceptable discrimination, which must stop.
The removal of the statue of Edward Colston in Bristol has resulted in demands for all statues of those connected with the slave trade being removed. This has now escalated to calls for this to be extended to road signs etc that incorporate their names.
My question is what about the hospitals, schools and charitable institutions that were endowed by those who benefited from slavery and bear their names? Where does it stop? For example Guys Hospital was founded by Thomas Guy, a philanthropist who had made a great deal of money from the South Sea Company. Will public opinion demand that it’s name be changed? Discrimination and slavery are abhorrent, but as to the rest, I don’t know, but would be very interested to hear what Gransnetters think.

MaizieD Wed 10-Jun-20 13:30:22

I find 'whitewashing' history in this context such a very ironic phrase.

GrannyGravy13 Wed 10-Jun-20 13:25:43

Do not twist my words GGumteenth

Those who are removing statues, changing names etc are whitewashing history!!

Surely it is better to learn their stories so that the same mistakes are not repeated.

The UK is one of the most equal societies in the world, everyone is afforded free education and health care from birth, it is then down to the individual to make their life choices.

GGumteenth Wed 10-Jun-20 13:18:04

Smiless2020 I do think that in 2020 the party in the quote has been replaced by BLM, disgruntled Labour Activists and unfortunately Antifa.

So you don't think all lives are of equal value, that we shouldn't fight for a more equal society and supporting fascism is okay GG13. I think that is the most shocked I have been on GN.

sodapop Wed 10-Jun-20 13:16:10

I agree GGumteenth we can't rewrite history but we can explain the context and hopefully learn from it.

Smileless2012 Wed 10-Jun-20 13:15:53

I think that's a sign of the times Franbern, people beginning a sentence in that way because they fear they will be accused of racism.

There's been a lot of criticism of Meghan and Harry's general behaviour and treatment of the Queen and wider royal family here on GN. As a result there have been unjustified accusations of racism. It is the behaviour that has upset many people in the UK; and for many Meghan's race/colour has nothing to do with it

GGumteenth Wed 10-Jun-20 13:12:07

I think that is a good idea Missfoodlove. We shouldn't want a Ministry of Truth rewriting history but we do need something to bring the story up to date.

Although " Gone with the Wind " has been taken off whichever streaming service it was on they have said they will bring it back with a sort of prologue explaining the time it meant to depict, etc.

Smileless2012 Wed 10-Jun-20 13:08:46

Yes, I've read it Maizie. I don't have a copy now so cannot look to see if GrannyGravy quoted it correctly but I'm sure she has. If she hadn't that would be an example of "twisting a quotation".

People seeing and agreeing that a particular quote is in their opinion, pertinent and relevant to a current situation, is not an example of that quote being twisted, simply because others disagree.

For me it's relevance and pertinence is self explanatory.

MaizieD Wed 10-Jun-20 13:07:42

As Orwell was a prominent 'antifa', GG13 I think he'll be turning in his grave at your interpretation.

MaizieD Wed 10-Jun-20 13:05:25

Saw it on the telly, EV!

It fills me with horror and great sadness to think that at least one of my ancestors was captured in their home country, shipped across the world in appalling conditions, sold like a commodity and used like an animal on a plantation.

GrannyGravy13 Wed 10-Jun-20 13:05:14

My post of 11.19 on this thread is still how I feel about the Orwell Quote

janeainsworth Wed 10-Jun-20 13:04:01

I think that police brutality in America is a different problem from how we should remember slavery as it was in the 18th & 19th centuries, but the two seem to have become conflated.
The current protests in this country about historical slavery risk distracting from the fact that modern slavery exists and that as a society we should be addressing that, and the reasons why black people are disadvantaged, in our society, today.

EllanVannin Wed 10-Jun-20 12:57:48

I think everyone should buy Alex Haley's book---Roots !

Franbern Wed 10-Jun-20 12:55:29

Surely,it is not so much that Gone with the Wind, showed slavery as part of its plot. That was correct for the historical time it was depicting -however, the depiction of nearly all the black characters (like the young servant girl in it) as not really 'with it', less able intellectually than the white characters, that is what is so horrible in that film and book,

I would much prefer to see To Kill a Mockingbird' which shows how very bad racial problems were in USA in the 20th century. And quote the Walk in Another shoes is more pertinant for us all.

Whenever someone starts of a sentence ' I am not a racist , but....' I start to curl up inside!!!

These statues are of an important part of British and colonial history - they should be confined to museums with good information alongside them . We should not be having them in public places as if they are to be admired.

MaizieD Wed 10-Jun-20 12:54:42

What 'point of view' is that Smileless? Twisting a quotation from Orwell to try to make it say what it doesn't say?

Have you read '1984'?

EllanVannin Wed 10-Jun-20 12:54:36

I think I've got that book somewhere at the back of a cupboard.

The cost of building and erecting various statues would be money best spent elsewhere. They only cause ructions whoever it is as many many people have played their parts in whatever they've done but never get recognised for posterity.

Dinahmo Wed 10-Jun-20 12:51:26

Romola Thanks for the compliment. It was the nick name of a small tortoiseshell cat that I had many years ago, who was named after Alice's cat.

Thank you also for your comment.

Whitewavemark2 Wed 10-Jun-20 12:49:13

maizie I looked in depth at the history of the Caribbean including Jamaica as part of my degree?

Good stuff.

Smileless2012 Wed 10-Jun-20 12:47:54

We're all entitled to our point of view WWmk and Maizie; we don't all have to agree with one another's do we.

Romola Wed 10-Jun-20 12:46:42

Very interesting, Dinahmo (and you have a great nickname). What you said about many of us benefiting from the riches of those slave traders or sugar planters is so true.
Now, we must as a society acknowledge this, by making explicit the history of these men. I'm tending to think that putting the statues in museums will let people forget them. Maybe keeping them in our midst, with explanations, would be a more effective reminder.

Anniebach Wed 10-Jun-20 12:45:38

Thank you Maizie, it’s for my elder granddaughter who loves the book and film , no way is she racist , one of her closest friends before they went to university was the son of a
Gurkha army captain .

MaizieD Wed 10-Jun-20 12:35:55

No, it doesn't make you a racist, Annie, don't be daft.

I loved the book when I first read it many years ago, but since researching the Jamaican side of my ancestry and doing a lot of reading around the history of the island I don't find Gone With The Wind quite as compelling these days...

MaizieD Wed 10-Jun-20 12:30:47

We'll just bang on together, then, Wwmk2 grin

Lexisgranny Wed 10-Jun-20 12:30:37

Thank you for all your thought provoking views. I remember my history teacher on my first day at high school telling us that the main reason for learning history was so that we did not repeat the mistakes made by our forefathers. I think that this remark is very apt concerning slavery.

Anniebach Wed 10-Jun-20 12:25:35

I am cross stitching a quote from Gone With The Wind, am I
a racist !

Whitewavemark2 Wed 10-Jun-20 12:23:03

maizie I keep banging on about the use of the Orwellian quote and how it is entirely out of context, but no one seems to get it.