The Militant - July 17, 2000 --Racist flag moved from South Carolina capitol
Text version 
the Militant
about this site directory of local distributors how to subscribe new and in the next issue order bundles of the Militant to sell
news articles editorials columns contact us search view back issues
The Militant this week
FRONT PAGE ARTICLES
St. Paul meat packers gear up for union vote
Union supporters counter bosses' propaganda
 
Rightist Buchanan firms grip on Reform Party
 
Court rejects Nebraska antiabortion legislation
 
PRI loses Mexico vote for first time in 71 years
FEATURE ARTICLES
Good response to socialist petitioning in Washington
 
Meeting in Havana calls world youth festival in Algeria
 
forums
calendar
Submit Letter to the editor
Submit article
submit photo
submit forum
submit to calendar


A socialist newsweekly published in the interests of working people
Vol. 64/No. 28July 17, 2000

 
Racist flag moved from South Carolina capitol
 
BY LAUREN HART  
COLUMBIA, South Carolina--Until July 1 of this year, workers at the Columbia Farms poultry plant could see the Confederate battle flag waving above the state capitol from the plant's parking lot. Many of the poultry workers are Black, and a lot of them participated in the historic march of 50,000 on Martin Luther King Day last January to demand the flag come down.

"It won't be there in a year," one worker told this reporter in February. At noon on July 1 the racist symbol that had flown above the state house since 1962 came down.

A short time later, another version of the battle flag was raised on a pole at the Confederate soldiers monument, directly in front of the state house on a busy downtown street. This was the "compromise" promoted by the governor and adopted by the state legislature earlier this year, as pressure mounted, including from a tourism boycott called by the NAACP.

"They're just putting it closer to my face," declared Leon Harper, who works in a restaurant near the state house. "It should be in a museum." Harper was one of hundreds of people who rallied on the south steps of the capitol before noon to protest the fact the flag will still fly on the state house grounds. That action was called by the Assembly of African-American Leaders.

Hundreds more took part in a silent march through downtown called by the NAACP earlier in the morning. The civil rights group has decided to continue its tourism boycott until the flag is removed entirely from the state government center.

A similar number of people rallied in support of the flag throughout the morning on the north side of the capitol, where the Confederate soldiers monument is located. At noon, a couple dozen of them marched around the dome provocatively chanting, "Off the dome and in your face."

As the pro-flag rally continued, clumps of anti-flag protesters mingled with those waving Confederate flags--some quietly observing and others blowing whistles and responding to the rightists.

Andrew Hughes, a University of South Carolina student who came to see the flag come down, expressed the view of many protesters when he stated, "It's a first step, but it shouldn't be anywhere on the state house grounds."



Front page (for this issue) | Home | Text-version home