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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Wed Aug 16, 2017, 08:13 AM Aug 2017

The nation can only weep - The Washington Post Editorial Board

TUESDAY WAS a great day for David Duke and racists everywhere. The president of the United States all but declared that he has their backs.

When a white supremacist stands accused of running his car into a crowd of protesters, killing one and injuring 19, Americans of goodwill mourn and demand justice. When this is done in the context of a rally where swastikas are borne and racist and anti-Semitic epithets hurled, the only morally justifiable reaction is disgust. When the nation’s leader does not understand this, the nation can only weep.

On Saturday, after the murder of an innocent protester in Charlottesville followed marches that included armed men and Nazi salutes, President Trump’s instinct was to blame both sides. Widespread criticism followed, including the resignations of business leaders from a White House advisory council and condemnation from political leaders of both parties. On Monday, Mr. Trump read a prepared statement condemning white supremacists and racism, delivering it in a manner suggesting he neither wrote nor endorsed the words. On Tuesday, he removed any doubt: His initial reaction, putting Nazis and those protesting them on equal moral footing, is how he really feels.

“I think there’s blame on both sides. You look at — you look at both sides,” Mr. Trump said to reporters in Trump Tower, adding that there were “very fine people, on both sides.” We’ve all seen the videotape: One side was composed of Nazis, Klansmen and other avowed racists chanting “Jews will not replace us.” The other side was objecting to their racism.

Yes, there are good and moral Americans who oppose the removal of statues of Confederate generals. Yes, there are reasonable Americans who fear that slaveholding Founding Fathers will be the next target. Notwithstanding Mr. Trump’s comments Tuesday, we don’t find it difficult to distinguish between a monument to George Washington, say, and statues to Confederate generals that were erected in the 20th century with the goal of maintaining white supremacy.

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-nation-can-only-weep/2017/08/15/d9bd9a10-8202-11e7-902a-2a9f2d808496_story.html

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The nation can only weep - The Washington Post Editorial Board (Original Post) DonViejo Aug 2017 OP
Tell the Washington Post Editorial Board to stop normalizing treason! procon Aug 2017 #1

procon

(15,805 posts)
1. Tell the Washington Post Editorial Board to stop normalizing treason!
Wed Aug 16, 2017, 08:59 AM
Aug 2017
"...here are good and moral Americans who oppose the removal of statues of Confederate generals."



Wrong. Those Confederate generals were traitors who led armies against the legitimate government of the United States of America. Anyone who thinks these men were heroes needs to remember that they tried to destroy OUR country and impose the horrors of slavery on all of us.
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