Because I don't like bad decorations? (A bad decoration is one that offends your visitors.)
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Replying to @ButMuhRussia @WesternIdentity
The Holocaust Museum is an edifying reminder of the past. But if you see a statue celebrating Hitler, you probably wouldn't favor it as a public decoration.
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Replying to @ButMuhRussia @WesternIdentity
And they have a legitimate point.
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays @ButMuhRussia
I think you're demonstrating perfectly why there is a problem with this. Everyone can be offended by everyone else's culture (one man's hero is another man's terrorist etc), the solution to this is to deweaponize "being offended". removing "offensive things" opens the floodgates.
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False. Unless you would favor a public statue of Stephen Paddock in Las Vegas. No two situations are alike.
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays @ButMuhRussia
Mongolians have a statue of ghegis Khan who they look up to Italian Americans look up to Columbus Mexicans honor Pancho Villa Natives honor Geronimo many are hero to some, evil to others theres millions of grey areas + w ur logic they'd all be torn down as they can offend people
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False. With my logic, the worst of them would sometimes be torn down if it satisfied the greater good. Slippery slope isn't thinking.
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You are really just making an argument against multiculturalism. The former states of the Confederacy should not be forced to live amongst those not accepting of their heros. The offended have a responsibility to move or go back home.
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I prefer a team model over an enemy model.
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