Post
by Will Williams » Mon Jun 03, 2024 7:14 pm
Will Williams wrote: ↑Sun Jan 19, 2020 4:27 pm
[...]
I haven't seen Chittum in years but we used to be fairly close friends. The review of his book was right, Tom wrote his book 25 years ago, not as a racist, but as a soldier. But, White Healer, don't put much stock in
anything from the JPFO.
...
I brought Tom to the "Ossipee ski lodge" all those years ago after we'd spoken in front of the Alamance County courthouse in Graham, NC, for our annual traditional wreath-laying at the Confederate Memorial on Confederate Memorial Day.
You might recall all the little carved swastika architectural details over the courthouse windows.
Here's an update. It seems the busybody niggers of the National Association of Colored People have failed to remove the wonderful Confederate Memorial from the traffic circle in front of the Alamance County courthouse in Graham, NC, thanks to local Whites who told them to get lost. For years our North Carolina NA members sponsored a well-attended wreath laying at the monument with speakers
Lawsuit ends over Confederate monument
outside North Carolina courthouse
Posted May 31
GRAHAM, N.C. (AP) — A lawsuit challenging a central North Carolina county's decision to keep in place its government-owned Confederate monument is over after civil rights groups and individuals who sued decided against asking the state Supreme Court to review lower court rulings.
The state Court of Appeals upheld in March a trial court's decision to side with Alamance County and its commissioners over the 30-foot (9.1-meter) tall monument outside the historic Alamance County Courthouse. The state NAACP, the Alamance NAACP chapter, and other groups and individuals had sued in 2021 after the commissioners rejected calls to take it down.
The deadline to request a review by the state Supreme Court has passed, according to appellate rules. Following the March decision, the plaintiffs “recognized the low probability of this case proceeding to a full trial," Marissa Wenzel, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said Thursday while confirming no appeal would occur.
The monument, dedicated in 1914 and featuring a statue of a Confederate infantryman at the top, had been a focal point of local racial inequality protests during 2020 following the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer.
A three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals panel agreed unanimously that the county had kept the statue at its longtime location in accordance with a 2015 state law that limits when an “object of remembrance” can be relocated.
Ernest Lewis Jr., an Alamance County NAACP leader, told WGHP-TV that his group is now encouraging people to vote to push for change.
“We have elected to focus our efforts instead on empowering our clients to advocate for change through grassroots political processes,” Wenzel said in a written statement Thursday.
Other lawsuits involving the fate of Confederate monuments in public spaces in the state, including in Tyrrell County and the city of Asheville, are pending.
https://www.wral.com/story/lawsuit-ends ... /21459549/
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