I agree completely.Darth Wong wrote: Yes, they should be honoured. However, this does not mean the rest of their lives become exempt from criticism.
It shouldn't; my complaint is primarily about personal attacks. Criticism and critique is inevitable in a democracy and just fine.I don't see why the former statement must erase the latter one or make it any less true.
I would still support such criticism, even while they are dead. My complaint is when it turns into an attack on the character of the person. "Strom Thurmond was a segregationist" -- Okay, that's established fact, say that, that's fine with me, nobody will dispute it. Why, though, go into insults, go into jubilation, over his death?A request which I find wholly objectionable, utterly without merit, completely unjustified by anything but crass appeals to militarist sentiment, and which I refuse to honour. If a veteran is a pedophile but dies, am I not allowed to criticize his disgusting behaviour now?
He can't respond to them, and it isn't like he's some universally reviled individual. So, I would submit, maintain a balanced view of the dead, particularly those who's actions are not ones which can be so easily and decisively morally judged to weigh the whole of their character towards good or evil: Critique what they did, and what they were a part of, but why should one go ahead and lay insults upon a grave? It just seems utterly gratuitous and disrespectful.