January
31, 2020
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
Confederate Monuments and the Totalitarian Agenda:
Silent Sam and Inconvenient History
Friends,
All across the Southland today efforts have been mounted by “woke”
social justice warriors—in most cases spearheaded by violent and destructive
mobs composed of radicalized Millennials—to tear down or at least remove all
monuments to Confederate veterans. But removing monuments to those who fought
and died in 1861-1865 is just a first step in a broad national effort, a
national campaign to rid America of all symbols of an
“inconvenient history” which does not further a cultural Marxist totalitarian
agenda—a troublesome history that does not confirm and affirm an imposed
redefinition of our history to fit the latest fanatically progressivist
narrative.
Thus, in New Orleans, in Memphis, in Charlottesville, and in
Chapel Hill we have witnessed frenzied and continuous assaults by noisy mobs
directed at memorials to those veterans, followed by pusillanimous reactions
from local authorities. Those monuments, which have stood for many years
in public spaces, are reminders that the impetus to rewrite
our history is not just an academic exercise, but rather a significant aspect
of an immense ideological war being waged in America.
The objective is to completely recast history, to sanitize it, as
it were, or even obliterate it, so as to buttress and offer support
for the now-dominant current progressivist template: if the history—if the
facts—don’t support your view, well, then, just change the history, change the
facts. Veracity be damned. Countervailing research, which is an obstacle in
this process, is denied or explained away, or increasingly, decried as “racist”
or an example of hated “white supremacy.” The vast majority of citizens in
every poll favor keeping monuments in their original locations, but this has
not deterred the small groups of Leftist fanatics.
The University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) case—about the monument to the “boy
soldiers,” known as “Silent Sam,” which stood on campus—has provoked
tremendous debate in the Tar Heel State. Brought down in August 2018 by a
violent mob composed of members of Antifa, “Smashing Racism,” and other
assorted Marxists, debate over the monument’s fate has swirled heatedly since
then. North Carolina has a Monuments Protection Law (G.S.100-2.1), enacted in
2015, admitting only a few exceptions for monument removal or change of
location. But that law lacks a specified civil or
criminal penalty for its violation and depends on the respective governing
authority whether or how it will be enforced.
In 2018 the North Carolina Department of Administration, acting at
the behest of Governor Roy Cooper (D), attempted to have the three impressive
Confederate monuments on Capitol Square in Raleigh removed to the Bentonville
Battlefield. The effort was rebuffed by the North Carolina State Historical
Commission, and those monuments remain on the square.
However, the situation for monuments on county court house grounds
(subject to the purview of county commissioners) and at UNC (governed by its
Board of Governors) is different. In most cases, it was the United Daughters of
the Confederacy (UDC) who donated monuments to North Carolina counties, and it
is they who are presently involved in appeals relating to local efforts in
Chatham County and Winston-Salem to rid those jurisdictions of monuments to
Confederate veterans. Those legal efforts are ongoing.
The UNC case is more complex—and more heated. After the toppling
of “Silent Sam” both the North Carolina UDC and Sons of Confederate Veterans
(SCV) vigorously demanded that it be returned to its original location at
McCorkle Place on campus, a decision that fell to the university Board of
Governors (BOG). The board, fearing the kind of protracted violence and
demonstrations which the school had witnessed during 2018 into 2019, wished to
see the monument located elsewhere, and several alternative solutions were
proposed—none of which satisfied anyone.
A thorough judicial and legal review of the situation by the SCV’s
legal counsel and the fact that only a minority of the twenty-four members of
the BOG favored returning Silent Sam to its original location, stymied all
efforts to restore the monument. Because of this impasse serious negotiations
between the SCV and the board were undertaken, a total of nearly nine months of
discussions.
Last November 2019 the SCV, acting also for the UDC, and the board
announced an approved settlement: the SCV would take possession of the monument
and move it to a new location (not in proximity to a UNC system campus); in
turn, $2.5 million, from donor funds, would go to a trust to administer and
properly display the monument in its new location; $74,499 would eventually go
to the UDC.
Although the social justice radicals were outraged and immediately
launched a plethora of lawsuits and media attacks intended to reverse or halt
the settlement, and some members of the SCV also felt the arrangement was a
surrender of sorts, “Silent Sam” was saved and preserved from uncertainty and probable obscurity (which would have assuredly happened otherwise). In the future it will
once again be proudly displayed with appropriate curation and protection, for
all North Carolinians to see and understand what it symbolizes.
Was this an ideal solution to what had happened seventeen months
ago in Chapel Hill? Is this the model that should be followed elsewhere? No, it
was not: the situation—the circumstances of this particular case of “Silent
Sam”—was unique. But the result is that the monument has been saved. And that
is critical and significant in an age where every monument, every symbol, every
marker to “inconvenient history” is met with hysterical outcries for removal,
banning, or destruction.
Our civilization—our inheritance—is perishing for lack of
stouthearted defenders who are prudent and think strategically. Too many of
those supposedly on our side are fainthearted and fear for their reputations
and media attacks, or perhaps possess little understanding of the powerful
forces we face. A particular battle, a specific case, may not always be won
immediately, completely and outright; sometimes strategic success, even a
strategic (if temporary) redeployment may be necessary—to permit us
to survive when greatly outnumbered and to allow us to fight, and win, another
day.
I use the example of the Seven Days battles outside Richmond in
1862; General Lee did not win a complete victory over George McClellan, but he
did save the Confederate capitol. Strategically, he and his small army lived to
fight another day.
So will defenders of our
heritage.
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