The extermination of White Southern culture continues unabated in the South - a legacy of The Halfrican and his divisive anti-White presidency.

https://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/...onuments-starts-uncivil-war-words-dallas

July 21, 2017

Less than five miles from Dallas City Hall -- in a South Dallas community that's home to mostly black and Latino residents -- rests a three-quarter-acre tract of land where at least 55 Confederate soldiers are buried.

Not many people know it's there.

Located at the corner of Electra and Reed streets, right off Malcolm X. Boulevard, the cemetery's been there for more than a century.

This also happens to be one spot Dallas officials are looking at as a potential location for the Robert E. Lee statue now in Oak Lawn's Lee Park and the Confederate War Memorial in Pioneer Park Cemetery downtown.

Nothing has been decided yet. It's just an idea. And I'll come back to it after I explain why we need to talk about where Confederate bodies are buried. ((BS - it's already been decided))

Blame Mayor Mike Rawlings if you want.

The public conversation he wanted to start about what Dallas should do with the two Confederate statues in city parks didn't take long to go south. It ripped the bandage off an old wound about the institution of slavery and the intentions of those who want to honor those who fought on the losing side of the Civil War.

It may get worse before it gets better.

And it has to get better: After I wrote about the mayor's request to get a new group focused on racial reconciliation in Dallas to put this on its agenda, a rhetorical civil war broke out.

Both sides grabbed their modern-day bayonets -- social media -- and dug in.

One camp, led by a growing cadre of social justice activists, wants to see all symbols of the Confederacy wiped away or hauled off to a museum.

The other camp, including organized groups such as the Sons of Confederate Veterans, doesn't want the city to touch any of the tributes. They say the old monuments and school names should be left in place because they reflect America's -- and Dallas' -- history.

Now you understand why the city of New Orleans, which recently uprooted all four of its Confederate statues after the City Council there declared them a public nuisance, nearly exploded in violence over this.

We don't want that hostility in Dallas. That's why the mayor's strategy makes sense: He has city officials looking to see how other cities, states and schools have responded to Confederate symbols. And he's calling for a public discussion before any formal decision is made.

But folks on both sides, including many I respect, don't want a protracted fight.

The Rev. Michael Waters, a senior pastor of Joy Tabernacle AME Church and one of the leaders of Faith Forward Dallas, said it's clear what the city should do.

"The fact that bringing down monuments to treason and slavery must be debated is itself the height of white supremacy," Waters wrote on my Facebook page. "What is there to debate?"

He's joined by historian Michael Phillips, author of White Metropolis: Race, Ethnicity, and Religion in Dallas, 1841-2001.

"It's time to exorcise the ghosts of the Confederacy that haunt Dallas," Phillips wrote in an article for The Dallas Morning News.

Phillips is gathering signatures -- at least 32 so far -- from area scholars and religious leaders on an "Open Letter" he plans to give to the mayor, City Council and Dallas school district officials, calling for the removal of all Confederate symbols.

"Monuments in public spaces represent what the city, county, state or nation seeks to represent as its core beliefs," the letter reads. "Monuments work to shape identity."

He said every Confederate monument "standing today loudly proclaims that ... the enduring values of this place, this city, and this people is white supremacy."

But John McCammon, 1st Lt. Commander of the Texas Division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, fired back.

"That is a false narrative," McCammon told WFAA-TV. "It is in no way celebrating slavery."

McCammon is against the push to remove monuments or erase Confederate names from schools. "History should not be erased, good or bad," he said.

That brings us back to the Confederate Cemetery in Dallas. As city cultural and parks officials began looking at how other cities and states have been dealing with Confederate monuments, they saw the cemetery in South Dallas as a natural fit.

Dallas County once owned the land as part of a six-acre tract southeast of the historic Oakland Cemetery; but in 1904, the county set aside three-fourths of an acre for the burial of ex-Confederate soldiers. It deeded the land to the city in 1936, and 40 years later, the park department assumed maintenance responsibilities.

Moving the Confederate statues here seems like a reasonable option -- again, if we can get to that point.

"It's so early," said Jennifer Scripps, director of the city's office of cultural affairs and one of the staffers leading the research on this. "But many cities have done similar things."

Makes sense to me. So does the public art staff's recommendation that the Confederate artworks at Fair Park -- the Confederate Medallion and The Confederacy statue -- be left alone because they are part of "the historical document of the history of Texas."

No matter what the city decides, there's no way the opposing camps will ever agree.

The most we can hope for is that they remain civil.


"To compel a man to furnish funds for the propagation of ideas he disbelieves and abhors is sinful and tyrannical." -- Thomas Jefferson

We are all Rhodesians now.