this post was submitted on 17 May 2025
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Sharing a video of the building while still aflame, Brad Gordon wrote: "If you don't understand why Black Americans are celebrating the symbolic dismantling of this monument to bondage and generational oppression — well, today, we simply don't care."

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[–] FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world 30 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (9 children)

This is one story where I can definitely understand the mixed feelings.

It is rightly satisfying watching a house of horrors go up in flames, particularly so when you're descended from the people who were tortured and brutalized there.

At the same time, it's easier to teach history to people when they can interact with it using their own senses, and absent that, it's much much easier to forget it ever happened in the first place.

[–] Themadbeagle@lemm.ee 36 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

While your sentiment is a good one, from experience of living around such historical sites, most I have seen are operated by people like United Daughters of the Confederacy. The street really goes both ways with historical sites and while they can be used as grand gestures to show a horrible past in physical form to some who may see it, it can also be used as a propaganda tool of "lost glory" as the dsughters put it.

There is a town not too far from where I live that has a long history that has tons of white washed messages by the Daughters. Its frankly gross, but many people in that town don't bat an eye because those same historical buildings are used to re-enforce their view of the world not change their perspective.

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