The same principle can be applied to all of our current issues: Do you care about other human beings? If you answered yes then you must be able to distinguish the importance of people over inanimate objects like monuments, Chief Wahoo, the Redskins name, or Confederate flags.
Those things hurt other people but it does not hurt you in any way if they vanish.
If tradition is more important than the way those things negatively impact other Americans then you actually don’t care about those people. You only care about your sentimentality and "the way things have always been," which doesn't make them right.
If you call yourself a Christian then you are to follow Jesus’s example of unconditional love for others. If he could die for others then you can give up mere symbols for others.
The Protestant church does not believe in the worship of or need for symbols.. They are seen as being akin to idols. As a Protestant, my church has no statues or symbols of Jesus and yet I do not forget Him.
I do not need a monument of Hitler to remember the horrors of WWII. I can read about it in a book or remember my father's service to his country. Nothing can erase the past.
I do not need a monument of Hitler to remember the horrors of WWII. I can read about it in a book or remember my father's service to his country. Nothing can erase the past.
Native Americans and Black Americans have been the most mistreated people living in this country since Europeans arrived—and are the poorest as well. How about we give them a break? Really, it won’t change your life in any way.
This can apply to other traditions like saluting, the National Anthem, the American flag, putting you hand over your heart—-they are just symbols---nothing more.
Wearing masks is in a different category but the principle is the same: Do you care about other people more than your convenience? Either you do or you don’t.
Now you can call me a snowflake, but if this offends you than you are a snowflake, too, since the term refers to someone's oversensitivity to another persons needs or viewpoint. It’s not an insult to me. It means I care.