Elennsar
Colonel
- Joined
- May 14, 2008
- Location
- California
Just to avoid misunderstanding, I was not judging any action, I was referring to the use of the word "traitor" as opposed to the word "rebel".
You can say "I admire him. He is a rebel." but not "I admire him. He is a traitor".
But that use makes people go out of their way to avoid acknowledging that treason as a legal offense is not necessarily an unadmirable quality. If what Washington was doing was right, does the fact he was defying the will of his "rightful sovereign" somehow turn a fight for liberty into a bad thing?
Why don't we agree to disagree? I won't complain when someone calls R.E.Lee and company "heroic Americans." and you don't bug me when I call them traitors?
I can only speak for myself, but:
I don't mind if people think Lee was heroic. At all.
But alking about the historical Lee is far more interesting to me than the fictional saint.
Put it simply, do we see Lee as less well mannered because he actually could tell a dirty joke?
I don't.
If we applied the logic people use to object to calling Lee a traitor because of the Constitution's definition of treason to that, however, we couldn't talk about Lee's wonderful sense of humor without repeated nonsensical "defenses" of Lee being too pure to be human. And he would be very boring if we couldn't talk about his sense of humor.
