Posted on 07/24/2015 3:45:01 AM PDT by Timber Rattler
Some people are calling a religious group vandals and claim they broke the law when they dug up a patch of grass next to a Confederate generals grave in a Memphis park Wednesday.
Thursday, a man drove hundreds of miles to plant new grass.
When I saw this last night, my wife couldnt understand why I was shaking so badly, Scott Hudson of Lincoln County, Tennessee, said.
He watched WREGs story on a group who dug up a patch of grass next to Nathan Bedford Forrests statue and grave.
The group called the move symbolic, and said theyre standing up to racism while taking the first steps to remove Forrests statue and remains from Health Sciences Park.
Im going to repair the blatant disregard for this cemetery, Hudson said.
He was so outraged that he cut a piece of his own lawn, drove five hours and laid the patch down.
It just upset me to my core, because my great-grandfather R.C. Hudson fought in the Confederate Army, he said.
Isaac Richmond, who organized the digging demonstration, said Hudson not only wasted gas, but also his time.
Its not necessary. I think they are trying to symbolize that we are a bunch of vandals, he said.
Memphis Police has yet to say whether any laws were broken Wednesday.
Hudson isnt waiting on police to form his own opinion.
It was vandalism. There is no question about it, he said. It was vandalism, and it was illegal.
(Excerpt) Read more at wreg.com ...
+1
I am a northerner, but as soon as I saw that idiot Nikki Haley cave to these fanatics in South Carolina, I knew it was just the start.
**
Ditto!
Actually, Forrest was an interesting personality. The early Klan was a self-defense organization. When it turned bad, Forrest no longer supported it.
Attacking the graves and monuments of the past is a cowardly displacement activity. A displacement activity is when one takes out bad emotions against defenseless people or things: kicking a table, hitting a pet, &c.
If you don’t admire Forest, or the Confederate flags, then keep your opinion to yourself, or talk about it. But you have no right to vandalize, to interrupt a public speaker (in the guise of free speech!), or run someone off the road to his death.
In general, the kindest way to treat people is often merely to leave them alone. Simple enough. I wish also that our government would learn that lesson!
"He was a warm friend of the colored race, over whom he exercised remarkable influence"
Up date in my local paper today, Arkansas Dem-Gaz, Memphis City council going to sell the Forrest Statue and the National KKK wants to put in a bid.
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