I feel like I need to chime in with my unique perspective.
As most of you know I am a Museum guy and now the Director of a Museum. From that side it kills me to see a displayable airframe used in such a way. I would have preferred to see something like this end up at a park or something, or even with those guys who make tables out of airplanes. I have a good friend in Baltimore who was a crew chief on one of these and he would be sick.
I also live 14 miles north of Ground Zero, so seeing crashed planes in a city gives me a bit of a sour stomach. I don't expect everyone to know that feeling but since I missed being in Tower 2 that bad day by a phone call that morning it freaks me a little bit. I can't speak directly for , but I'm sure most members of the CDF who have lost crew would feel the same way, and it a bit insensitive.
But I am also a Photographer and believe in the 1st Amendment, and free speech for artists.
Quote:
In the 1971 case of Cohen v. California, U. S. Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan II succinctly summarized the inherent subjectivity of determining artistic merit when he stated, "one man's vulgarity is another's lyric." Given that works of art often evoke such diverse and passionate responses, it is not surprising that artistic expression is the target of so many censorship efforts.
by Michael Lebron
The commitment to freedom of imagination and expression is deeply embedded in our national psyche, buttressed by the First Amendment, and supported by a long line of Supreme Court decisions.
Quote:
The First Amendment is based upon the belief that in a free and democratic society, individual adults must be free to decide for themselves what to read, write, paint, draw, see and hear. If we are disturbed by images of violence or sex, we can change the channel, turn off the TV, and decline to go to certain movies or museum exhibits.
We can also exercise our own free speech rights by voicing our objections to forms of expression that we don't like.
ACLU
IMHO It all comes down to this... Many of us on WIX live in an amazing place called the United States of America, where we might not support others ideas or actions, but if they are protected by our Constitution, I for one will die to protect them. I lived in Philly back in 05, it's really a great town. The choice of this "Art" display in Philly is controversial, and it is making people talk. When people talk, hopefully they think.
Thinking is good.
IBTL