From Southern Poverty Law Center <[email protected]>
Subject SPLC applauds federal report calling for removal of Confederate symbols from military property
Date September 22, 2022 6:31 PM
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Friend,

Members of a federal Naming Commission tasked with changing the names
of nine military installations that honor Confederate figures
recommended in their final report to Congress this week that the
Defense Department rename, modify or remove hundreds of items that
honor the Confederacy on military property by January 2024.

Our commemorative landscape in the U.S. reflects and shapes our
nation's values and should reinforce our commitment to
democracy, freedom and justice. The branches of the United States
military are the most vital spaces to demonstrate these privileges.

In three reports, the Naming Commission has identified
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 more than 800 items honoring the Confederacy on military
property. The fact that they are located in 20 states and Washington,
D.C. - as well as Germany and Japan - reveal just how
deeply rooted white supremacy culture has been within military ranks.

We appreciate the comprehensive work of the Naming Commission. And now
it is time to promptly act to rename and remove these assets -
starting immediately with the nine Army bases honoring Confederate
leaders. The first report of the commission, released in August,
included recommendations

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 for new names for these nine bases. There is no reason for
further delay.

The 1910s and 1960s saw the biggest spike in the dedication of
Confederate memorials associated with the military, substantiating
evidence that these memorials went up as part of an organized
propaganda campaign in in support of the Jim Crow era that
followed Reconstruction and as a backlash to the civil rights
movement.

As a result, taxpayer dollars
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 are being used today to support Confederate memorials in our
national parks, in our Capitol, in our military, and in veterans
cemeteries. This does not include the 2,000-plus Confederate
memorials that sit on public property

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 across the U.S. that are also maintained with taxpayer dollars.
These memorials are documented in the SPLC's Whose
Heritage?

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 report, which tracks public symbols of the Confederacy across
the U.S.

People of color should never have had to serve on Confederate-named
military bases - a constant, painful reminder of the white
supremacy and racism that has stained our democracy since this
country's inception. Now that the Naming Commission has released
its final report, it is time to do the right thing.

Starting with the nine Army bases named in the report, we urge all
branches of the military to immediately remove undeserved honors of
treasonous men who took up arms against the United States to maintain
the enslavement of Black people.

Sincerely,

Your friends at the Southern Poverty Law Center
 

 

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