GT_Aggie2015 said:
Hey Redpot, for the record, I didn't write that post. I simply quoted because I agreed as did the others who starred. For an expert historian get your facts straight. I also don't stalk you on twitter and only became aware of my UN in your tweet by a fellow Ag.
GT, my bad dude, I evidently got you crossways with Brian with an I. I think he was wanting to beef with me. I will fire one final shot in this proxy war and then call it a night.
Brian, I am not stalking your tweets nor would I even know how to, and even if I knew how to, the musings of anyone who feels self important enough to spam the internet with their worldly insights 148 characters at a time are about as far down on my list of priorities in my life right now as you can get (unless you have insight that might help me win my fantasy baseball league). The only reason I even knew who you were or what you tweetered about was someone posting screenshots/links here on this thread.
Just a couple of rebuttals for your response to my post and then you can kindly proceed to have a nice life without me in it, sir.
#1 - since you indicate your intention to remain cordial with Kellen, maybe you can ask him about his mother's family history and whether or not the professor got it wrong, instead of just calling me or anyone else "ignorant" for recognizing the facts that were clearly set forth in the letter (minus the typo regarding calling Sul Ross "Saul" which could possibly be an autocorrect). Seems to me like the person coming from the place of "ignorance" would be the person who admits to not knowing about Kellen's family history.
#2 - neither I, nor anyone here, is calling Kellen or any of Kellen's ancestors "terrible" people. Quite the opposite, some of his ancestors were great people who did incredible things for the State of Texas and the United States of America. We are a better place today due to the lives of men like Santos Benavides and Lawrence Sullivan Ross.
When I say Kellen should be proud of his ancestors and that anyone should be impressed with what they accomplished, that doesn't mean it's the fighting for the confederacy part that is worthy of praise. Obviously looking back at history through the lens of the present, fighting for the confederacy or owning slaves was a pretty ****ty thing to do. We can all agree on that now.
One thing you will learn for yourself in time is that the world changes, sometimes slowly, sometimes all at once, sometimes it totally flips upside down. This applies on both a macro level to society as a whole and in your own personal life. You will look back on decisions you made 20 years ago and not be able to fathom what was going through your mind when you made them. That personal experience helps provide context for how we view historical figures.
I get it, you don't have that experience yet, so it's not reasonable to expect you to understand. But this is why there are some of us that can look at men like Sul Ross or Thomas Jefferson or George Washington and not see a confederate soldier, a slave owner, or people that denied women equal rights with men.
We, living here in 2020, are not immune from this phenomenon. Without a doubt we are doing things right now that our descendants will look back on in 200 years and find repulsive and unimaginable. Hell maybe it's Twitter.