Chattanooga Times Free Press

Memphis mayor attacked over statue removals

- BY RYAN POE USA TODAY NETWORK-TENNESSEE

Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland posted “Merry Christmas!” on his Facebook page Monday and wished people “a blessed holiday season filled with goodwill and peace.”

In the wake of the sudden removal Wednesday evening of two Confederat­e monuments from downtown parks, the social media response to his glad tidings was less than peaceful, lacked goodwill and was hardly in keeping with the spirit of the season.

One probably anonymous commenter on Facebook said he hoped the mayor would watch his family die before dying himself and following them “to hell.”

In another negative comment, one of several, commenters “Mike Junior” — who helped clean graffiti off the Forrest statue in 2015 — called the city a “cesspool full of crime and violence” and said he hoped the mayor, a “worthless Pig,” would have “coal in his stocking.”

Powerless to prevent removal of the statues of Confederat­e Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest from Health Sciences Park and President Jefferson Davis from Fourth Bluff Park, some supporters of the statues are trolling the city and mayor online. The attacks via social media, emails and phone calls range from name-calling — Strickland is a fascist to some people, a communist to others — to criminal threats against him and his family.

“We’ve received a fair number of vulgar posts — almost exclusivel­y from out-of-towners,” said city spokesman Kyle Veazey, who manages the city’s social media accounts.

Memphians overwhelmi­ngly responded to the removal of the statues with an outpouring of love for their city, he said.

In her review, twice-deployed, now-retired U.S. Army soldier Lori Luster said she was proud of her city for its takedown of the statues of “traitors to the country.”

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