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SYMBOLS OF HATE


             The Charlottesville Unite the Right rally took place more than 150 years
             after the end of the Civil War. In this conflict, the South (also known as the
             Confederate States of America) fought for its right to exist as a separate
             nation where slavery would remain legal. The North fought to end slavery and
             to keep the United States one united nation.
                 Racism remains a reality in the twenty-first-century United States,
             and Confederate symbols are controversial. Some southerners claim the
             Confederate flag and symbolic depictions of famous Confederate generals are
             an important representation of the South. They feel that removing Confederate
             monuments undermines the South’s history and culture. In some states, it
             is illegal to take them down. Other Americans believe Confederate symbols
             emphasize an offensive and violent history of oppression based in slavery,
             racial discrimination, and prejudice. Since the election of Barack Obama in
             2008 as the nation’s first black president and with the election of conservative
             Donald Trump as president in 2016, the debate has intensified.
                 Violent attacks against black Americans have demonstrated the power of
             symbols related to race relations in the United States. One prominent example
             is the 2015 mass shooting at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church
             in Charleston, South Carolina, where a gunman killed nine black Americans
             attending a bible study session. The gunman was twenty-one-year-old
             self-described white supremacist Dylann Roof. He chose the church for its
             historical significance as one of the oldest black congregations in the South.
             The church had also played a meaningful role in the American civil rights
             movement of the 1950s and 1960s. After the shooting, pictures of Roof posing
             with a Confederate flag surfaced online. Many Americans were outraged by
             the connection to acts of violence directly associated with ideologies (belief
             systems) from Confederate history. In response, many states and cities
             across the South removed the Confederate flag and other symbols of the
             Confederacy from public lands and buildings. The tragedy forced the nation
             to take a closer look at the continued presence of a glorified history of the
             Confederacy and what it means for all citizens in the South—and of the larger
             United States.











         8        Exposing Hate
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