Hastur wrote:It's true.
The problem is with the museums. They only accept conserved items now. I blame the politically motivated meddling in museum mission statements. They are now to focus more on "education and compelling storytelling" and less on collecting stuff. You can guess what kind of stories the leftists in charge wants to be told.

It needs to be stopped. The linked Op-Ed is a good example of the push back that is under way. The minister in charge is from the Green party. They are the most culturally marxist of them all.
Don't the museums handle the conservation process themselves, then? How are/can politicians be meddling in that? It's common sense that a museum should not simply take artifacts directly from the ground, dust them off abit and then put them on a shelf in a non-climate controlled, non-moisture controlled storage facility. At worst it will mean the artifacts decay faster than they'd do laying in the ground, at best they decay at the same rate. No point in collecting something only to let it rot on a shelf.
Destroying historical artifacts also occurs in Danish museums, and has been become more of an issue lately, but it's limited to incredibly common, usually late modern (18th cent onwards) artifacts. Not ancient or even medieval artifacts, or artifacts with a well-established provenence. As recently as twenty years ago, alot of local yet state/municaply-funded museums didn't have any sort of admittance policy of artifacts. If a family was cleaning their garage or attic and found some old plates, clothes irons or broken dolls.... they brought that down to the local museum. That's what gets trashed today mostly. Today, if someone comes in with an early 20th century clothes iron, or one of those billions of stone age daggers or axes we got, we simply tell them to keep it.
The idea of destroying
unique historical artifacts, particularly ancient metalwork like the one in the picture, would not be considered defensible. It's not neccesarily sign of leftist, cultural self-hate, though. The Liberal-Conservative/Neo-Liberal government we have today declared a massive spending cut on all of the Danish museums, including historical museums and archives. They're focused on making museums more "profitable", as in rewarding museums by how many tickets they can sell each year. Has meant cutting costs for research work by the museums' archaeologists and historians. While admittance strategies did need to change, destruction of exiting artifacts, even if they're just granny's old clothes iron, is new with the change to a more Liberal (classical and neo-) government.
Fame is not flattery. Respect is not agreement.