It's hard to know where to begin, with all the tangents being thrown out over the last few posts.
But, I'll comment on a couple.
Why aren't we condemning the African slave traders who sold them to Europeans? For one, it's probably too difficult to put faces and names to them now. So, who do you single out? Plus, I'm pretty sure none of those traders claimed any hypocritical allegiance to democratic ideals. I understand that isn't a complete response, but it's better than saying, "but...but...what about those guys?". Two wrongs don't make a right.
Statues. Some people think that by taking down statues of those with very questionable legacies, that we are somehow "erasing" them from history. That is a misrepresentation of their purpose. Statues are generally erected to commemorate and celebrate a person. But, many leave legacies that do not deserve commemoration. I'm sure people will understand why there are no statues erected to remember Hitler. One could respond that, "Andrew Jackson was no Hitler!" Sure, but that's hardly a ringing endorsement.
There's no chance that Hitler will be erased from history, even without a statue in his memory. He's in the history books and I'm sure Washington and Jackson will remain there also.
A couple of years ago, we had a big brouhaha in Halifax, Nova Scotia, over a statue of Edward Cornwallis. The indigenous people of NS - the Miꞌkmaq - reeeeally have a hate on for Cornwallis. He was the founder of the city and back in the 1930's somebody had a statue erected in his honour in a park downtown. The trouble is, the Miꞌkmaq didn't appreciate the English settling here and staged several raids, killing and kidnapping several colonists and troops. So, in response, he put a bounty on Miꞌkmaq scalps. It was a brief policy and I'm not sure if many were ever collected. Plus, the French were paying the Miꞌkmaq for English scalps...but that doesn't get talked about these days.
In the end, to prevent violence, the city took the statue down. At first, I didn't really agree with it. But, after thinking about it, I figured that if this is of any benefit to reconciliation with the Miꞌkmaq, it's worth it. Cornwallis is still in the history books...