OCTOBER 26, 2020
** A Confederate monument stood at the steps of an Alabama courthouse for a century. Now it's in a cemetery. (Huntsville, Madison County. Removed after months of protests by BLM and "vandalism" (hate crimes). For some reason, it was removed at night. Why are so many statues removed under the cover of the night? Does that say something about the operation?
** Confederate monument looms over black neighborhood in Kansas City. It's here to stay. (Missouri. At the Forest Hill & Cavalry Cemetery. Of course, BLM folk have committed their hate crimes on it. It is on privately-owned land (owned by UDC) in the cemetery so, until BLMers and their white minions decide to "topple" it, it will stay. Wouldn't "toppling" a monument be considered a crime? Guess not if it is a Confederate monument.
And here I was thinking that BLM only wanted Confederate memorials removed from public spaces. Cemeteries were supposedly "safe" from these desires. Evidently, they will not be happy until every vestige is gone. What next? Rewriting history books? You Betcha.
What if someone were to "vandalize" a Martin Luther King Jr. monument or sign. Would that be vandalism or something else?
That Vandalism Is A Hate Crime. --Old Secesh
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