64°F
weather icon Clear

LETTER: And the statue, monument mob rages on

The attacks on statues and memorials have gone too far. First, the mob went after confederate generals, then moved onto presidents and now it’s Catholic saints. They expect people who lived 100 or 200 years ago to have considered every act of their daily lives and set those against today’s impossible standard. Societies erect statues to remember individuals who achieved great things, not because they lived mistake-free lives.

Government leaders try to appease hysterical behavior by removing statues from public places. Corporations buckle under the pressure, too. Disney, for example, is altering the Splash Mountain ride because fake animals sing “Zip-a-dee-doo-dah, zip-a-dee-ay. My, oh, my, what a wonderful day.” These lyrics come from their movie “Song of the South,” released in 1946 and now considered insensitive by some. Never mind that it’s a work of fiction, and millions of people have enjoyed the ride for years.

But history has taught us that mobs don’t stop when they’re appeased, they devour.

So the next time you want to cut the head off of a statue, or go along with a corporation that pacifies an angry crowd or want to throw paint on a memorial, try to remember the words of an ancient philosopher: “Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.”

Otherwise, the mob will go after his monuments, too.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
LETTER: Is there another Joe Biden out there?

Both the front-runner presidential candidates should step aside and give us some choices who are younger and have fresh ideas to get us out of the $35 trillion debt.

LETTER: Deciphering progressive jargon

I noticed recently that euphemisms are commonly used by progressives in order to make the agenda they support seem less harsh or unpleasant.

LETTER: Biden ignores the Supreme Court on student loans

Biden is constantly harping on how Trump is a threat to democracy and will be a dictator, eliminating our freedoms. It is Biden, however, who has proven himself the dictator who is threatening democracy.

LETTER: More on 1968

As a cop who was at not only at the 1968 Democratic convention at the Conrad Hilton on Michigan Avenue, but also the Chicago arson fires on the west side, I feel there were many reasons why the city was a tinderbox.

LETTER: Clark County cracks down on street vendors

A lot of us walk or jog in the summer nights when it cools down. The juice vendor was a wonderful break before starting the return half of our exercise. Alas, never more.