logo
Trump administration brings Confederate statues back to D.C.

Trump administration brings Confederate statues back to D.C.

Axios2 days ago
Two Confederate monuments are returning to Washington.
Why it matters: It's part of President Trump's push to reinstate names and symbols that were removed from public spaces after George Floyd's murder by police in 2020.
Driving the news: A statue of the Confederate general Albert Pike will return to its original location near Judiciary Square in October, the National Park Service announced Monday. It was wrenched down by protesters in 2020.
And a large Confederate memorial will return to Arlington National Cemetery in 2027, Defense Secretary Pete Hesgeth said. It was removed in 2023 as part of a congressional attempt to scrap Confederate imagery from the country's military sites.
What they're saying: "It never should have been taken down by woke lemmings," Hesgeth wrote of the Arlington Cemetery monument on X. "Unlike the Left, we don't believe in erasing American history — we honor it."
The move was celebrated by a group called Defend Arlington that has advocated for the statue's return, calling its removal "the ultimate cancel culture win."
The other side: "The idea of putting [the Arlington Cemetery monument] back up is just wrong," retired U.S. Army general Ty Seidule, who worked on the congressional committee responsible for removing Confederate symbols, told the Washington Post.
"[It's] the cruelest I've ever seen because it's a pro-slavery, pro-segregation, anti-United States monument."
Zoom in: Pike was affiliated with political parties known for their anti-immigrant stances, and advocated for them to adopt a pro-slavery position. Some contested accounts name him as a post-Civil War leader of the Ku Klux Klan.
Members of the D.C. Council began trying to remove Pike's statue in 1992.
The Arlington memorial was commissioned by the United Daughters of the Confederacy and erected in 1914. It includes images of an enslaved Black man following his owner into battle and an enslaved woman — which the cemetery's website refers to as a "Mammy" — holding a white officer's baby.
A Latin inscription refers to the "Lost Cause," a concept that "romanticized the pre-Civil War South and denied the horrors of slavery" and "fueled white backlash against Reconstruction," per the cemetery's site.
Catch up quick: Earlier this year, Trump directed the Interior Department to decide whether memorials or statues had been removed or changed "to perpetuate a false reconstruction of American history."
If so, they should be reinstalled without descriptions that "inappropriately disparage Americans past or living," per the order.
Trump also called for the return of federal monuments that had been "inappropriately removed" from D.C.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sanders shrugs off Vance as possible MAGA successor: ‘Doesn't matter to me who heads the Republican Party'
Sanders shrugs off Vance as possible MAGA successor: ‘Doesn't matter to me who heads the Republican Party'

The Hill

time16 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Sanders shrugs off Vance as possible MAGA successor: ‘Doesn't matter to me who heads the Republican Party'

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) on Sunday shrugged off the idea of Vice President Vance being the likely Republican frontrunner for the 2028 presidential elections. 'Neither Trump, nor he nor the Republicans of today have anything of significance to say to working class people,' he said on CNN's State of the Union with Dana Bash. 'Doesn't matter to me who heads the Republican Party,' he added. President Trump said on Tuesday that Vance would be the 'most likely' successor of the Make America Great Again (MAGA) Movement in 2028. 'So it's too early to talk about it, but certainly he's doing a great job, and he would be probably favored at this point,' Trump said. Bash reminded Sanders that Vance is from a working-class family in Ohio and could appeal to many voters in red states, but Sanders shrugged off the idea that the vice president could be a threat to Democrats in 2028. 'What they are trying to do is divide us up, 'you're a Muslim, you're undocumented, you're black, you're gay, let's divide everybody up so the rich can become richer'. Our job is to bring people together. Doesn't matter to me who heads the Republican Party,' he continued. Trump also said Tuesday that he would 'probably not' try to bridge a third term and touted the idea that Secretary of State Marco Rubio could run alongside Vance as vice president in 2028. In February, Vance was already seen as a favorite successor to Trump in a Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) poll. Sixty-one percent of respondents said they would support Vance as the future of the Republican party. Other Republican politicos and media personalities have been rumored to be thinking about campaigning in 2028, including Secretary Rubio, right-wing influencer Steve Bannon and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

Dangerous nostalgia: Trump wants to turn back time
Dangerous nostalgia: Trump wants to turn back time

The Hill

time16 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Dangerous nostalgia: Trump wants to turn back time

In the 1978 film 'Superman,' the hero performs many impossible feats, including traveling backward in time by flying around Earth at super speed. Donald Trump, who seems to fancy himself an all-powerful Super President, appears eager to go back in time as well in an effort to return America to 'the good old days' of his youth. Trump was born in 1946, eight years after Superman made his comic book debut. Discrimination based on race, sex and other characteristics was widespread and legal. Most schools taught children a whitewashed version of America's story, glossing over racism and largely ignoring the achievements of people of color. Movies usually portrayed Black people as slaves, servants, cowards, criminals or buffoons. Consequently, 'the good old days' for Trump — born rich, white and male — were 'the bad old days' for many people of color, women, LGBT individuals and those not born to wealth and privilege. Obstacles to advancement facing these Americans — among them my Black parents — were far greater than they are today. Trump grew up at a time when white men dominated the ranks of most professions and elected offices far more than they do now. Only about 34 percent of women were in the workforce in 1950, compared with 57 percent today. Key civil rights laws were not enacted until Trump was in his late teens and 20s. They include the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the 1965 Voting Rights Act and the 1968 Fair Housing Act, which together outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex and national origin in federally funded programs, employment, public accommodations, voting and housing. America has made great progress to become a more just and equitable society since Trump was born. But now the president is sparing no effort to roll back that progress and harm millions of Americans. Trump is obsessed with ending programs promoting diversity, equity and inclusion. He has falsely denounced DEI programs as illegal discrimination against white people and men, when in truth they simply open the doors to the American dream a little wider to take advantage of the talents of all Americans. Trump's Department of Education is investigating more than 50 universities for their DEI programs and has cut billions of dollars in federal funding to higher education, prompting schools to end DEI efforts in hopes of restoring aid. Trump has halted DEI programs in the federal government and demanded a halt to DEI in the private sector. The Republican majority on the Federal Communications Commission required that Paramount (parent company of CBS) and the movie studio Skydance agree to not operate DEI programs as a condition for approving the companies' $8 billion merger. The president seems to believe that white Americans — particularly white men — are hired for jobs based on merit, while many people of color and women are less qualified and get into college and jobs primarily because of DEI. He has forced highly qualified federal officials and members of the military who are not white men out of their jobs. Trump fired the chairman of the military's Joint Chiefs of Staff, Air Force Gen. CQ Brown, a Black man, after Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth vowed to end DEI in the military and claimed Brown placed a higher priority on DEI than on the effectiveness of the armed forces. The first women to head the Coast Guard and the Navy were both forced out of their jobs, as were women who served as the senior military assistant to Hegseth and the head of the Defense Health Agency. Trump successfully pushed Kim Sajet, the director of the National Portrait Gallery, to resign after denouncing her as 'a strong supporter of DEI' and fired Carla Hayden, the first woman and first Black person to head the Library of Congress. The president and the Republican-controlled Congress have turned back the clock on American progress in many other ways. The White House launched a program designed to deport millions of unauthorized immigrants, reminiscent of Operation Wetback, which deported an estimated 1 million people to Mexico in 1954, including some who were in the U.S. legally. The administration is seeking to increase U.S. oil, natural gas and coal production, along with nuclear power generation, by reducing environmental protection regulations imposed starting in the 1970s. Trump and Congress have also cut federal support for renewable energy programs enacted under the Biden administration. Trump has called global warming a Chinese hoax designed 'to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive.' The White House and Congress eliminated all $1.1 billion in previously approved funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which was created under a law enacted in 1967 to help fund PBS, NPR and their member stations. The Corporation soon announced that it would be shuttering. Nostalgia is a powerful emotion. It is understandable that Trump has fond memories of growing up rich in a world of white male privilege before most Americans alive today were born. But nostalgia should not drive public policy. Our country has achieved greatness because — until now — our leaders have been focused on the future, rather than fixated on recreating the days of their youth. Christopher Reeve's portrayal of Superman traveling back in time was great entertainment. But it was fantasy. We need a president who accepts reality and works to build an inclusive and equitable future for everyone in our diverse population.

Europe Casts Doubt on Trump-Putin Summit Without Ukraine
Europe Casts Doubt on Trump-Putin Summit Without Ukraine

Time​ Magazine

time17 minutes ago

  • Time​ Magazine

Europe Casts Doubt on Trump-Putin Summit Without Ukraine

European leaders said peace talks between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska next week are unlikely to succeed without Ukraine's involvement. 'The path to peace in Ukraine cannot be decided without Ukraine,' a statement signed by the leaders of France, Italy, the U.K., Germany, Poland, and Finland read. 'We remain committed to the principle that international borders must not be changed by force. The current line of contact should be the starting point of negotiations,' it continued. The public show of support for Kyiv came in response to Trump's announcement at the White House on Friday that he would hold a summit with his Russian counterpart to discuss a potential end to the war in Ukraine. The talks in Alaska will be the first time the leaders of the U.S. and Russia have met since 2021. Trump provoked a backlash from allies for excluding Ukraine from the meeting, but also for saying ahead of the talks that Kyiv would have to give up territory as part of a deal to end the fighting. 'We're going to get some back, and we're going to get some switched,' Trump said. 'There'll be some swapping of territories to the betterment of both.' Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky quickly denounced the idea of giving up territory to Russia in a video address on Saturday, vowing that Ukraine would not 'gift their land to the occupier' and warning that any peace talks that didn't involve Kyiv would 'bring nothing.' The statement from European leaders backed Zelensky on both counts. Zelenskyy responded by thanking European allies in a post on X on Sunday: "The end of the war must be fair, and I am grateful to everyone who stands with Ukraine and our people." Some reports indicate that Russia is demanding that Ukraine give up the Donbas region and Crimea in return for ending the war. Russia has already annexed Crimea and its forces occupy most of the Donbas and further swathes of eastern Ukraine. Matthew Whitaker, U.S. Ambassador to NATO, told CNN on Sunday that "No big chunks or sections are going to be just given that haven't been fought for or earned on the battlefield," without further elaborating. Three U.S. officials told NBC News that the White House is discussing inviting Zelensky to the summit, though decisions have not been finalized. The White House did not immediately respond to TIME's request for comment. European leaders have come to Ukraine's defense, condemning Russia's war in Ukraine and vowing to continue to provide military and financial support to Kyiv as necessary. Officials have also expressed a broader interest in including European leadership in peace negotiations due to concerns about the region's own security. 'We underline our unwavering commitment to Ukraine's sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity,' the statement added. 'We are united as Europeans and determined to jointly promote our interests. And we will continue to cooperate closely with President Trump and with the United States of America, and with President Zelenskyy and the people of Ukraine, for a peace in Ukraine that protects our vital security interests.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store