Graz, Austria is actually know as the "City of Human Rights" and capital punishment is illegal in the European Union. Schwarzenegger actually asked for this out of a sign of respect for his homeland (Yep, he is foreign-born and thus not eligible to become president, no matter how hard Orrin Hatch tries (
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=33618).
The removal of the name just serves to back up my belief that municipalities should wait to honor an individual until they are in the ground before naming a building/street/monument of any kind after them.
Tennessee's campus is littered with streets named after living people, one being Johnny Majors Drive, who was fired as head coach. There is always plenty of time left for Pat Summit (though I hihgly doubt it, but you never know. Who on USC's campus back in '68 thought he would turn out the way he did?) Phil Fulmer, Peyton Manning or Chamique Holdsclaw to get involved in some kind of illegal or shameful situation. I am thankful that Leonard Little Lane or Dwayne Goodrich Drive is not a byway on my campus. Or how about Onterrio Smith Street?
Remember that the cafeteria in the Capitol and many other red blooded Americans began to call French Fries (an American original
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_fries), "Freedom Fries" at the beginning of Gulf War II: Electric Boogaloo? Why? Because the French didn't back the "Coalition of the Willing." (Thanks Poland and Ukraine!!) Or French Toast to "Freedom Toast." For a complete story:
http://www.cnn.com/2003/ALLPOLITICS/03/ ... irq.fries/
Or how about during WW I and WW II, when Americans took to calling dachshunds "Liberty pups." Or what about "Liberty Dogs/Sausage" instead of frankfurters? Why? Because they were of Germanic origin.
(
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dachshund)
Not a sermon. Just a thought.