Medicine Hat News

Torch-wielding group protests Confederat­e statue removal

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CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Va. A group that included a well-known white nationalis­t carried torches and chanted "you will not replace us" at a weekend protest in Virginia over plans to remove a monument of a Confederat­e general.

The protesters on Saturday evening called on officials to halt the removal of a Gen. Robert E. Lee statue in Charlottes­ville and were swiftly condemned by the city's mayor, who said the event appeared to hearken “back to the days of the KKK,” the Daily Progress newspaper reported (http://bit.ly/2qEzja6 ).

Among those at the protest were Richard Spencer, a while nationalis­t who popularize­d the phrase “alt-right” and is a leading figure in a fringe movement that has been described as a mix of racism, white nationalis­m and populism.

“We will not be replaced from this park,” Spencer told the crowd at a different rally held hours earlier in Charlottes­ville on Saturday. “We will not be replaced from this world. Whites have a future. We have a future of power, of beauty, of expression,” he said.

Spencer, an outspoken supporter of President Donald Trump, hosted a postelecti­on conference in the nation's capital last November that ended with audience members mimicking Nazi salutes after Spencer shouted, “Hail Trump, hail our people, hail victory!” Spencer also has advocated for an “ethno-state” that would be a “safe space” for white people

Charlottes­ville Mayor Mike Signer said in a statement that Saturday’s protest was either “profoundly ignorant” or meant to instil fear in minorities “in a way that hearkens back to the days of the KKK.”

“I want everyone to know this: We reject this intimidati­on,” Signer said in a statement. "We are a welcoming city, but such intoleranc­e is not welcome here.”

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