Dumping it in the river made it a focus of discussion. That was the whole idea.
It's a great pity they didn't leave the brilliant Jen Reid replacement in situ, to stimulate further discussion.
https://www.theguardian.com/artandd...e-colston-jen-reid-black-lives-matter-bristol
I've never read such a complacent whitewashing of slavery as the rest of your post! Whatever next, the holocaust; not as bad as it's cracked up to be?
Perhaps you could point out where in my post I have sought to whitewash slavery?
Slavery is an issue that has blighted humanity for probably our entire existence. Every ancient civilisation used slaves, indeed the practice was so widespread that you would have to conclude it was an ingrained characteristic, one of the most unpleasant of our species.
My observation was more than it is quite unfair to stand in judgement of anyone on the basis of the views and values we hold today, when those views and values were not held in their time. Nor should anyone be judged or defined on the basis of one thing.
You are quite right, many figures who made enormous amounts of money either directly or indirectly through slavery did indeed use it to build themselves country houses and so forth. Many made fortunes that made Colston's look like pocket change.
Do we remember their names?
Could the public in general name any one of them?
The reason that Colston became known was precisely because, unlike your stereotypical representation of the wealthy businessman, he chose to spend vast amounts of his wealth on projects intended to help the very disadvantaged people that you always claim to champion. So much so that the locals chose to erect a statue to his memory.
Perhaps the people who tipped his statue in the harbour shouldn't have stopped there. What about all the public buildings he paid for with money made from slavery, ought they not to be pulled down, rather than simply renamed?
This is our history. Some of it does not show us in a good light at all. But cancelling it is not the answer.
What is needed is for people to be presented with the unvarnished facts, good and bad so they can then weight them up and form an opinion.
In other words education rather than indoctrination.
You often quote all the bad things done by this country over the years, whether it be slavery, human rights or various other pet subjects of yours.
You rarely, if indeed ever, make the point that we were also in many cases the first people to recognise the error of our ways, and often led the world in abolishing these practices, slavery being a very obvious example.
Your observation about slave owners being compensated is a classic example of the sort of disingenuous nonsense that is often a feature of your posts.
The simple fact is that this was, in a practical sense, the only way that abolition was going to be achieved at the time. If this hadn't been done the reality is that the necessary legislation would have been delayed, possibly for years, and the suffering of the slaves would have continued.
I doubt that you are so ignorant that you are not perfectly well aware of this, and yet you choose not to qualify your ranting with any explanation of the difficulties encountered at the time in getting the legislation through, and the compromises necessary in order to do so.
I am quite sure many at the time found the idea of compensating slave owners extremely distasteful, but it was a necessary evil in order to accomplish the end of this vile practice.