I mean, I don't care about the nazis in this case, but I'd agree that despite the risks of galvanizing the far right that many confederate monuments should be destroyed. Even ignoring the whole "regardless of whether they owned slaves or not, they were indeed defending slavery" thing. They're symbolic of treason against the union as a whole, and glorify the men who nearly brought about its destruction. That we haven't been more thorough with it in the past century astounds me.
So I suppose "I don't care that much about the far right, but sure, if the south wants to base its heritage around the events during and leading up to the American civil war, fuck the south?" I guess that's what I'm saying.
I get where you're coming from, and I can't even really fully deny that's the right word to use in certain circumstances, but, and this thread is the first time I've ever heard it come up in casual conversation, when you use the word "Treason" to describe the history of the south, as a southerner it really pushes my buttons. And this comes from a person who generally considers confederacy worship to be on the silly side of things.
I'll be honest though, it seems like it's the rest of the country that can't get past painting us as these truck driving, stars and bars flag toting, gun carrying racists. There are individuals that are like that, yes, but the region is much more diverse than that and to be honest, I've found much more similarity in my travels than difference. People are the same everywhere and yet when you want to make the south this place of "others", "backwards hicks", "racists", and "traitors" I'm not surprised that some people get defensive. That some people grab onto that thing which others hate and double down on their resistance to the criticisms.
On the other hand, I'm not innocent either, but it's always of the areas I haven't seen for myself yet. I've visited a lot of the country, but the big northeast cities and the west coast are the only areas still left out of that. Funnily enough, those are the areas I still have stereotyped opinions of. New York is too big, too crowded and too full of crime to ever want to visit. California is too full of hippies and drug users and people who want to limit my ability to call people hippies and drug users. The Pacific Northwest (namely Seattle) is full of hipsters.
That's not to say any of this is wrong. The stereotypes exist for a reason, but it doesn't paint the whole picture either. I've run into far too many New Yorkers who love the city (although oddly enough go on a lot of vacations to get away from the city, which is where I run into them
) and paint a beautiful picture of it to completely discount it as a lost cause. California, for all its faults, does lead the country on some important issues politics wise. And again, it's another place that people love. I've met so many transplants from California whose only long term plan is to "someday move back." And Seattle... apparently has nice weather? I joke. Again, it's one of those places that's obviously successful and thus a victim of its own success. It drives me away simply because I can't imagine paying that much to just live there, but I'm sure the people are just as diverse as anywhere else. (Also of note, I've met very few people FROM Seattle, which tells me one of two things. Either it's nice enough nobody needs to leave for vacations, or it's expensive enough people can't afford vacations.
I would say distance is a factor, but I've met more people from Alaska and Hawaii than Washington state.)
Where I've seen, in or out of the country, people are the same, but when you start poking at the differences, even where minor, or not originally considered a core feature to that person's existence, suddenly it becomes a big deal. Much bigger than if you'd just let it be. Example: I will viciously fight a British person over whether to call it a biscuit or a cookie.