gtpeach
Cyburbian
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I agree with much of what you said.
However, the stuff named after Byrd is a different situation. The good things he did later in life don't make up for the wrongs he did when he was younger. It is one thing to screw up a few times, but it is another to promote hate as he did. It would be like building a statue to Albert Speer recognizing his contributions to City Planning.
I'm just not that familiar with him. It's funny because even though I was raised in the south (Virginia), I seem to have missed a lot of the romanticization (why isn't this an actual word? I want to use it all the time!) of the confederacy. The little I do know about Byrd, I'm not sure that there is much that's personally redemptive. His change in views seems to have come from political pragmatism versus actual moral conviction. So I think it again goes back to the question of what the average person who sees the memorial would associate him with if no context is provided elsewhere.