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marble falls

marble falls's Journal
marble falls's Journal
April 5, 2018

Georgia Town's Meeting on Confederate Pride Quickly Devolves Into Racist Spectacle

Georgia Town's Meeting on Confederate Pride Quickly Devolves Into Racist Spectacle

Two white councilmen tried to silence a Black member offended by one's use of the n-word.
By Liz Posner / AlterNet
April 5, 2018, 5:43 AM GMT

https://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/georgia-towns-meeting-confederate-pride-quickly-devolves-racist-spectacle

Local council members of Griffin, Georgia, a suburb outside Atlanta, held a meeting last week to declare April Confederate History Month and April 26 as Confederate Memorial Day for the city. But the in-favor vote by the majority-white council was not nearly the most offensive moment of the meeting, as the Washington Post reports.

During a public comments portion of the meeting, a white former council member named Larry Johnson reminisced about the town’s racial history, using the n-word three times.

“There were white folks, and there were black folks when I was growing up,” Johnson said, addressing Rodney McCord, a Black member of the council. “There was white trash—my family—and there was n-—town. I lived next to n—town.”




“You lived next to what town?” McCord asked Johnson in disbelief.

Johnson replied: “N—town, son. I’m telling you son, now that changed. I’m no longer white trash…”

“Hold on a second,” McCord interrupted.

“Now, if that’s offensive, I apologize for being offensive,” Johnson said to McCord. “Rodney, I don’t use that word anymore."

“You just used it right then,” McCord replied.

The white chairman of the board then tried to cut McCord off, insisting he let Johnson speak. “Mr. McCord, please let him get to the point so we can move on,” Douglas Hollberg said.

After McCord pointed out the bitter irony of Johnson using racist language at a meeting intended to celebrate white supremacy, Johnson responded: “My skin is white, my neck is red, and I was born in Southern bed. Nothing wrong with that. I hope that doesn’t offend anybody.”

Before he left the podium, Johnson invoked a line frequently used by pro-Confederate apologists—that the Civil War wasn’t fought over slavery but states’ rights.

Georgia is one of several Southern states currently debating what role it should play in memorializing the Civil War. While some cities are fighting the state to remove Confederate war monuments that are highly offensive to local African American communities, other jurisdictions have embraced new tokens of Confederate pride, like Griffin's newly-declared Confederate History Month.

H/T Washington Post

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About marble falls

Hand dyer mainly to the quilters market, doll maker, oil painter and teacher, anti-fas, cat owner, anti nuke, ex navy, reasonably good cook, father of three happy successful kids and three happy grand kids. Life is good.
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