DancingBear
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2001
- Messages
- 6,167
Sorry, I missed that. I know Bonfamille's closed, and I've heard they no longer have live music in the French Quarter lobby; any other visible operational changes that anyone is aware of?
Cool-Beans said:That's because it's flippin sweet.
tomandrobin said:It was definately a PC thing. Dixie = South = Slavery . I am not sure how people can make an argument for such things, but they do.
Just a name game, but apparently enough people or groups complained about the name.
Or just to be informed of history. I grew up reading the journals of my great grandfather who fought in the Union Army. Its always amazed me how people can disconnect the symbols from what they truly represent. The Old South was everything that America is not nor ever should have been. Plantation homes are not something to be celebrated.In this case it probably helps to be the descendant of a slave to understand.
Another Voice said:Or just to be informed of history. I grew up reading the journals of my great grandfather who fought in the Union Army. Its always amazed me how people can disconnect the symbols from what they truly represent. The Old South was everything that America is not nor ever should have been. Plantation homes are not something to be celebrated.
Daydreamer said:I think this thread had taken a wrong turn somewhere. I understand that the word "Dixie" does have negative conotations and it is Disney's perrogative to remove it. If I were running the company I would certainly choose to do so to avoid the negativism.
That being said, I don't understand the post about the "Old South" was everything that America is not nor ever should have been. While there were many things about the "Old South" that were wrong, not everything represented by the "Old South" was negative. Or maybe I'm wrong in which case we should immediately tear down Splash Mountain as I'm pretty certain it is about as "Old South" as you can get.
Another Voice said:Plantation homes are not something to be celebrated.
beck0321 said:ARRRRRRRRRGGGGHHI am not EVEN going to say what I want to say about this statement for fear of starting some stupid political debate. So, um, yeah....
Sorry for that outburst...
Another Voice said:Thats why I deliberately used the word "celebrated".
To show or use a plantation manor as nothing but a pretty house is wrong. It tells an incomplete story; it intentionally ignores the too high a price that was paid for that grandeur. A plantation hotel, by necessity, has to remove all the meaning and all the history from the place. It's turned into just another building - an architectural statement that leaves out the real meaning of the place.
There are times when its important to talk about the whole truth. All that we are is what we have learned from the past. Some crimes are so horrible that their effects reverberate down through centuries. The pain of correcting those wrongs can last just as long. If we choose to ignore those lessons, then we are bound to suffer all over again.
History matters. Not everything in life should be used as a decor.
sotoalf said:But surely owning a plantation home in 2006 is different from staying in a theme park replica, no? After all, Disney used to promote this resort as a Old South getaway, and this promotion was conspicuous in what it omitted about its history.