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What Trump gets wrong about Confederate statues, in one chart

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Confederate monuments are and always have been monuments to white supremacy.
At a Tuesday afternoon press appearance, President Trump defended the alt-right protest on the campus of the University of Virginia Friday night — at which demonstrators carrying tiki torches gave Nazi salutes and chanted slogans including, “Jews will not replace us!” — as being about a defense of Southern heritage.
The rally-goers, the president says, were there to prevent Charlottesville’s government from taking down a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee in the city — which he thinks is a perfectly reasonable cause to rally on behalf of:
Trump is correct that the protest was nominally about protecting a statue. But the notion that somehow means the protest wasn’ t about racism is flat wrong.
To see why, check out the following chart, from a report by the Southern Poverty Law Center, an organization that monitors American far-right groups. It shows the dates that various monuments to the Confederacy were installed. You’ ll notice two peaks of monument building — one around the turn of the 20th century, the other about 50 years later:
What do these time periods have in common? Racial conflict.
As the SPLC report explains:
It’s not an accident that these statues were mostly built when the South was busy establishing Jim Crow and defending it from the civil rights movement. This is because the purpose of Confederate monuments, as Princeton historian Kevin Kruse argues on Twitter, is not to serve as pure historical markers — but to glorify the Confederate cause. They assert that a war fought on behalf of slavery was a just one, that the people who fought it were morally upright, and that white supremacy should be cherished as part of Southern “heritage.”
That’s why Trump’s equivalency between Confederate statues and one of George Washington misses the mark. Washington was a slave owner, yes, but the meaning of a Washington statue is not necessarily pro-slavery or pro-white supremacy — whereas that’s exactly the point of the vast majority of Confederate memorials in the United States.
Once you understand this point, it becomes obvious why neo-Nazis and white supremacists would rally to the defense of Confederate memorials. The only outstanding question is why the president of the United States would do the same.

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