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Originally Posted by Escape Artist
What kids learn nowadays is revisionist history, and now CRT, apparently. Statues commemorating great leaders and icons were not erected to intimidate but to preserve and honor those who sacrificed for causes they believed in. The South was in too much pain and disarray after the war to think about statues. Those are usually things you do as a society in hindsight not to mention being able to afford to make such things at a time when the South was reeling from the after effects of the war.
As was already mentioned on here, the Union army rampaged through the South without mercy. They were not gentle or kind to the conquered which I'm sure contributed to the lingering resentment of Southerners and a stubborn resistance to change as mandated (there's that word again) by the victors.
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" Statues commemorating great leaders and icons were not erected to intimidate"
Sorry, but you are incorrect.
Why Were Confederate Monuments Built? : NPR