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To: City of Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed

Take It Down Now: Eternal Flame of the Confederacy Monument

The message of this monument shows that racism still exist and keeps people of color down and seen as inferior. This burning flame showing the confederacy lives on and is praised is unacceptable. We know the history, having children see this make them feel less than before they even realize what the monument fully means. Remove this degrading monument immediately so my kids can grow up knowing that they mean something and are important to society.

Why is this important?

On Saturday, August 12th, white nationalists marched through Charlottesville, communities and the University of Virginia campus, rallying around a statue of the Confederacy and carrying torches evoking a history of violent racial terrorism. The next day in Charlottesville they killed in the name of their white supremacist symbols. Protesters were rammed by a car killing someone in a terrorist attack. These symbols were not chosen randomly. Confederate monuments have been erected and remain as a direct rebuke to the recognition of the full humanity of Black people. Confederate monuments were built and given places of honor in public space as gains in this recognition have been made and it is the commitment to the reversal of this recognition of humanity that draws white nationalists to these symbols.

These symbols of white supremacy have always been memorials to the cause of slavery and the denial of humanity to Black people. Now they are being weaponized to rally white supremacists. We have the power to diffuse these modern-day lynch mobs by removing these statues altogether, instead of giving white supremacists a rally point.

Confederate statues and named institutions are more than mere symbols of a heritage but instead, they are an assertion of the continued imposition of white supremacy and its current political power. Terrorists in Charlottesville understood this and were willing to kill in the name of this, we must be determined to persist in the face of this white supremacist terror.

Removing all Confederate statues would be one step among many in sending the message that we are no longer honoring white supremacy at a societal level. We've already many communities take the step to address these monuments in cities like Tampa and New Orleans. Join with me today and pledge to work to remove all Confederate statues or names from our community.

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Updates

2021-06-27 20:32:28 -0700

100 signatures reached

2020-07-03 22:31:07 -0700

50 signatures reached

2020-06-04 05:33:39 -0700

25 signatures reached

2018-04-08 01:33:26 -0700

10 signatures reached