The Federalist
 
_Leftists  At UVA Are Proving President Trump Right About Thomas Jefferson  
Statues_ 
(http://thefederalist.com/2017/09/13/leftists-uva-proving-president-trump-right-thomas-jefferson-statues/)
 

SEPTEMBER 13, 2017 By _Daniel  Payne_ 
(http://thefederalist.com/author/danielpayne/) 
 
Mostly  lost in the _general  hysteria_ 
(http://thefederalist.com/2017/08/17/trump-spoke-truth-sides-charlottesville-media-lost-minds/#.WZfLp2tcPv8.twit
ter)  surrounding President  Trump’s post-Charlottesville press conference 
a month ago was an excellent  question he posed. Regarding the growing 
demand nationwide to tear down  monuments to the Confederate States of America, 
he asked: “I wonder, is it  George Washington next week? And is it Thomas 
Jefferson the week after? You  know, you really do have to ask yourself, where 
does it stop?” 
His  remarks were characterized _by  historians _ 
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/retropolis/wp/2017/08/16/historians-no-mr-president-washington-an
d-jefferson-are-not-the-same-as-confederate-generals/?utm_term=.7b7e4c7436f2
) as “absurd” and  “unacceptable” and “ignorant” and _dismissed_ 
(https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/15/arts/design/trump-robert-e-lee-george-washington
-thomas-jefferson.html?mcubz=0)  as a “red herring.” At The Daily Beast,  
John Avlon _called_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/donald-trump-s-immoral-equivalence-between-george-washington-and-robert-e-lee)
  Trump’s comparison “
immoral” and  “dangerous.” At Slate, Jamelle Bouie _claimed_ 
(http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2017/08/17/trump_s_comparison_of_lee_s_statue_to_was
hington_and_jefferson_is_wrong.html)  Trump’s question was “dumb,” arguing 
 that statues of Washington and Jefferson were safe because “the reason we  
memorialize them is not because of their slaveholding.”

 
 
 
Well.  Earlier this week around 100 “students, faculty and community members
” gathered  at of the University of Virginia and “[covered] a statue of 
Thomas Jefferson in  a black shroud…adorning it with signs that dubbed the 
former president a  ‘racist’ and ‘rapist.’” The protesters derided the statue 
as “an emblem of white  supremacy,” and demanded that it be “
re-contextualized,” lambasting the people  who “fetishize the legacy of 
Jefferson,” 
calling on the community to “recognize  Jefferson as a rapist, racist, and 
slave 
owner.” 
Where  does it stop? It is perhaps asking a bit much of our progressive 
friends to  reflect on their slapdash dismissal of President Trump’s reasonable 
question. It  was a month ago, after all, and there have been plenty of 
fresh outrages to geek  out over since then. Just the same: where does it stop? 
That is not an unfair  question; in fact it is a presciently vital one. 
Four  weeks ago everyone knew that Trump’s simple and logical question was “
dumb.”  This week a bunch of protesters, among them faculty on the payroll 
of the  institution they were tacitly vandalizing, wound a statue of 
Jefferson in a  makeshift burial shroud and—what was the term 
again?—“memorialized 
him for his  slaveholding.” 
Where  does it stop? Not here, obviously. The mob at UVA did not issue a 
demand to tear  down the statues of Jefferson. But they surely will, probably 
sooner rather than  later. And why shouldn’t they? It has worked in 
countless other cities and on  numerous other campuses. Stockton University 
recently 
_removed a bust_ (https://www.thecollegefix.com/post/36307/)  of its 
namesake founder due to his  slaveholding past, while earlier this year 
Pepperdine 
University _tore down_ (https://www.thecollegefix.com/post/31002/)  a 
statue of Christopher Columbus  because the statue was, allegedly “a 
celebration 
of genocide and racial  oppression.” 
The  University of Virginia tends to regard itself with a bit more esteem 
than your  average public university, so it may hold out longer than other 
colleges. But  for how long? UVA president Theresa Sullivan, for one, issued 
an almost  too-tepid-to-be-true response to the vandalism, claiming she “
strongly  disagree[s] with the protestors’ decision to cover the Jefferson 
statue,” but  conceding: “That there is…activism [at UVA] should not be a 
surprise to any of  us.” 
This  is not the voice of a confident administrator, and if I were a 
betting man, I  would place a small but not insubstantial amount of money on 
protestors getting  the statue down at some point. When you start hanging signs 
on a monument that  read “rapist” and “racist,” it’s only a matter of time 
before you start calling  for the monument itself to go. 
All  of which is to say that Trump was right to ask his question, and his  
critics—histrionic, hysterical, unwilling to acknowledge just how unhinged  
activist progressivism has become in twenty-first-century America—were 
wrong.  Of course they’re going to come for the  other statues; that was a 
given. 
Whether they succeed in tearing them down  depends on the resolve and the 
integrity of the people who are in charge of such  decisions. “Where does it 
stop?” We’ll surely find out soon enough, one way or  the other.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to