The people?
Yes, as in, not the government.
Just how many people? What percentage of the population are these people?
Enough people.
Could they win their goals through the ballot box?
Statistically speaking, no. Statistically, the will of the American people, even on things where there is overwhelming consensus, has essentially
zero measurable impact on public policy:
https://www.newyorker.com/news/john-cassidy/is-america-an-oligarchyWhen we are lucky and the ruling elite want the same thing the public at large wants, great. But where we disagree, the public loses
every time.
It’s not the government demanding the statues be taken down, it’s the people.
Yes, they were racist assholes. They fought a fucking war against their own country for the right to keep slaves. It doesn’t get much more clear than that. (Remember, the US had already decided that slavery was bad.)
I do agree with you to a point about judging through a different lens. But does today’s lens not give us the right to say “no, we aren’t going to glorify this guy any more”??
In a "government of the people, for the people, by the people" what is the differentiation between "the government" and "the people"? Which people exactly are we talking about? All of the people? A specific group of people?
There are a lot more historical figures being judged than confederate leaders. We don't have to glorify them but I don't want to pretend they never existed either and I don't agree with destroying art, especially historical art. If people don't want it on public land then it should be moved into a museum or something, not toppled. And it should be decided by a vote, not by mob justice.
I was responding to your claim that it was like in
1984 where the Party kept doing things to subjugate the people. In that book, the government clearly is
not of, for, or by the people.
As I already said, I’m absolutely in favor of retaining the statues and moving them to museums or whatever. As I also said, however, they’re mostly not nearly as “historical” as people think, having been erected as retaliation for the civil rights movement.