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Title: Confederate monuments are the real ‘Lost Cause’
Source: The Herald
URL Source: http://www.heraldonline.com/opinion/article148052619.html
Published: May 6, 2017
Author: Jonathan Capehart
Post Date: 2017-05-06 10:50:09 by Willie Green
Keywords: None
Views: 11683
Comments: 49

Confederate-era war memorials and monuments to the traitors who fought against the Union to uphold slavery have no place on public land. You know, property paid for and maintained by taxpayers. Every day they remain standing is a celebration of racism and an affront to core American values. That’s why I applaud what’s happening in New Orleans right now.

After public hearings, a city council vote and court battles, the Crescent City has finally begun the process of removing four monuments. On Monday, Mayor Mitch Landrieu, D, announced the removal of the Battle of Liberty Place Monument, an obelisk honoring hate. Death threats were made against the contractor. David Duke, that paragon of tolerance, took to Twitter to decry the company “willing to take shekels to tear down priceless New Orleans & American history.” The work is considered so dangerous that the people involved in the removal hid their identities and wore flak jackets while under the protection of police.

“First statue erected to honor members of white supremacist organization who killed New Orleans’ racially integrated police force,” reads the top line of the press release from Landrieu’s office. Landrieu was even more blunt when I talked to him on Wednesday about removing Confederate memorials.

“They were put up during a very narrow point of time, four years of our formal 300-year history, as though they reflect the whole history of the city of New Orleans,” Landrieu told me. “In effect, they were put up by people, the same group of people called the ‘Cult of the Lost Cause.’ And the Lost Cause was the cause of the white supremacy in the South. Those monuments don’t reflect who we ever have been.”

Private funds were used to pay for the monument removals. And Landrieu is keeping the list of donors anonymous. His decision is understandable. "It has been a challenge to make sure that we're able to make sure that the people that are engaged in this are safe and that our police officers are safe as well," he said.

The three other monuments slated for removal are the Robert E. Lee statue at Lee Circle; the Jefferson Davis statue on Jefferson Davis Parkway; and the General Beauregard equestrian statue at the entrance to City Park.

“As a matter of who was Robert E Lee, he never stepped foot in the city of New Orleans,” Landrieu said, pointing out that Union soldiers actually camped at Lee Circle. “This monument was not put up to represent, to revere Robert E Lee, it was put there to represent the cause that he fought for, which in our opinion, was not what New Orleans has ever represented.”

Noting that the Lee statue is “on the most prominent space” in his city, Landrieu put the monument’s location into perspective. “It would be like putting King George where the Washington Memorial is or Robert E. Lee where Lincoln is,” he said with a chuckle. “That’s what was done in the city of New Orleans, and that’s just wrong. It’s not an appropriate historical reflection of where the people of New Orleans have ever been.”

Landrieu says these monuments need to be put in their “proper context.” But he hasn’t focused yet on what that might look like because of the work to remove them in the first place. “If there are some smart people around the country that revere these monuments, if they want to come forward with a plan and the money and the strategy to do that, we’ll be more than happy to talk,” Landrieu offered. He mentioned Washington and Lee University and the Jefferson Davis Society in Mississippi as possible homes for the discarded memorials. “They could put them in context. That’s different from telling the people of the city of New Orleans that they have to keep them on property owned by the people of the city of New Orleans. The people of the city of New Orleans have spoken. And now, we have a right to do with our property the way we want.”

To play devil’s advocate, I asked the Crescent City mayor what he would say to those protesters who argue that these monuments are part of their heritage. Landrieu got to the heart of the matter. “You can’t change history. Taking down a monument doesn’t change history,” he said. “Here is the truth: The Confederacy was on the wrong side of history. Denying humanity to our fellow American citizens, engaging in a Civil War that killed 600,000 people. We ought to be able to look back on that . . . and say, ‘You know what, the Confederacy was wrong.’ And our cities ought to reflect the values of the places that [those monuments are] in.”

New Orleans is still rebuilding after being almost completely destroyed “when the levees broke” during Hurricane Katrina in 2005. “We’re building the city back. We’re not building it back the way it was. We’re building it back the way it should have been if we’d gotten it right the first time,” the city’s 61st mayor told me. And then Landrieu compellingly connected the memorial removals to the overarching effort to rebuild the city.

“As a matter of growth . . . the city of New Orleans is small for a reason, and Atlanta and Houston are big for a reason,” he explained. “Demographic trends in the country and in the world show that people are moving back to inclusive cities. They want culture. They want diversity. They want richness. So the future of New Orleans depends on us being open, not closed. And being welcoming, not exclusive.”

“Those monuments are exclusionary, they’re not inclusionary. They’re not reflective of everybody,” he said, arguing that those memorials tell “a very, very different story” to children about their future in New Orleans. And his concern for the harm those monuments cause goes well beyond the hit to youthful self-esteem. “The attitude that maintains them is the same attitude that’s gonna cause New Orleans to die.”

That won’t happen as long Landrieu and the people of New Orleans stare down the likes of Duke and others who have taken up permanent mental residence in the 19th century.


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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 13.

#1. To: Willie Green (#0) (Edited)

Some of these monuments belong in private museums (if they want them).

Others, like the Lee monument, are more suited to public museums.

They don't need to be destroyed (like statues of Lenin and Stalin were after the USSR fell). But they also don't need to occupy the most prominent places in the public parks and around legislatures and city halls either.

The Confederacy is long gone and buried. These monuments and those hideous Confederate battle banners (even if contained in a state flag) need to finally go away. Mostly because they're tacky and crude.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-05-06   11:19:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Tooconservative (#1)

These monuments and those hideous Confederate battle banners (even if contained in a state flag) need to finally go away

Yeah,who needs all those disgusting displays of individualism,freedom of choice,and self-reliance?

If you honestly believe that Mr Lincoln's War was about slavery you are a freaking retard.

sneakypete  posted on  2017-05-06   11:41:01 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: sneakypete, Vicomte13 (#4)

Yeah,who needs all those disgusting displays of individualism,freedom of choice,and self-reliance?

And all those slaves in the South who were legally three-fifths of a person (for the purpose of allotting extra seats in the House to slave states), where was the slave's freedom of choice or self-reliance or individualism?

You can't call a slave three-fifths of a person to get more political influence and still consider them purely property.

The Three-Fifths Clause was always an inherent contradiction in the Constitution.

Representatives and direct Taxes shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included within this Union, according to their respective Numbers, which shall be determined by adding to the whole Number of free Persons, including those bound to Service for a Term of Years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all other Persons.

Article I, Section 2, Clause 3

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-05-06   11:47:18 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Tooconservative (#5)

And all those slaves in the South who were legally three-fifths of a person (for the purpose of allotting extra seats in the House to slave states), where was the slave's freedom of choice or self-reliance or individualism?

Pretty selective historical recall there,bubba.

Why no mention of the slaves in the North?

Is it because of your ignorance of history,or just a bias against the south?

sneakypete  posted on  2017-05-06   13:12:30 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: sneakypete (#9)

The presence of slavery anywhere in the United States, and its legal toleration, made the United States an evil nation until it was abolished.

But the secession and warfare waged by a part of the nation to preserve that evil institution makes that part of the nation's history in that period, and in the stubborn, perverse and evil segregation period that followed afterwards, gave that portion of the nation a particularly dark blemish.

Vicomte13  posted on  2017-05-06   17:15:01 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 13.

#14. To: Vicomte13 (#13)

The presence of slavery anywhere in the United States, and its legal toleration, made the United States an evil nation until it was abolished.

It wasn't just in the US, but existed in much of the world, if not most of it. Europeans likely did not capture African negros. They likely bought them from African tribes that had captured neighboring hostile tribes, or otherwise decided on some basis to forfeit the freedom of whomever they deemed warrented it. I'd think it far more equitable for european traders to buy slaves rather than bring a small army to capture them themselves.

Slavery was already dying in the US at the outbreak of the CW. The importation of slaves had long since been discontinued as a matter of law, and I think it was in the Confederate Constitution. Economically and politically slavery would have ended in time without any civil war.

(But I think we already had this conversation, didn't we?)

But the secession and warfare waged by a part of the nation to preserve that evil institution makes that part of the nation's history in that period, and in the stubborn, perverse and evil segregation period that followed afterwards, gave that portion of the nation a particularly dark blemish.

Unfortunately, there's no shortage of moral blemishes on the USA, and one need not look back 150 years to see it. One need only open his eyes to present day America.

Pinguinite  posted on  2017-05-06 17:44:47 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: Vicomte13 (#13)

The presence of slavery anywhere in the United States, and its legal toleration, made the United States an evil nation until it was abolished.

HorseHillary! There is not a nation in the pre-20th century world that didn't have slavery at one time or another,including Vatican City.

But the secession and warfare waged by a part of the nation to preserve that evil institution ..... T Once again you have your head up your ass. Most likely due to being miseducated due to political correctness. Mr.Lincoln's War had NOTHING to do with slavery,according to no lesser authority than Mr.Lincoln himself.

In FACT,Mr.Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation did NOT apply to slaves being held in the North,so it didn't free ONE SINGLE SLAVE. It's purpose was to encourage the slaves in the south to revolt and start murdering their masters so that Confederate officers would desert and go home to protect their families.

BTW,the VERY FIRST SLAVE CREATED IN THE NEW WORLD was by a resident of Jamestown,and HE WAS BLACK HIMSELF.

sneakypete  posted on  2017-05-06 20:22:20 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 13.

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