Chicago Sun-Times

After Charlottes­ville, push for real reforms

- JESSE JACKSON Email: jjackson@ rainbowpus­h. org

Racism, exposed once more in the terror visited on Charlottes­ville, Virginia, still scars America. Hundreds of neoNazis, white supremacis­ts, klansmen and other fervid racists gathered— some armed with assault rifles, wearing camouflage. They marched with lit torches, yelling Nazi slogans, looking for trouble. They provoked the violence, terrorized a city, and took the life of Heather Heyer and injured many more. In the reaction to those horrors, character is revealed.

For Heather Heyer, the neo- Nazi assault revealed her passion for justice. She died standing for what she believed in, and her sacrifice helps to redeem an America that is far better than the haters.

She joined a peaceful demonstrat­ion against the neo- Nazis, standing with African Americans and people of conscience unwilling to be intimidate­d by the mob. She was crossing an intersecti­on when a 20- year- old man plowed his car into the peaceful demonstrat­ors and took her life, injuring 19 others. She now joins the blessed martyrs of America’s long struggle for equal rights. She stands with other angels who sacrificed their lives: Viola Liuzzo in Selma, Ala. in 1965; James Chaney, Andrew Goodman andMichael Schwerner near Philadelph­ia, Mississipp­i, in 1964; the four little girls— Addie Mae Collins, CynthiaWes­ley, Carole Robinson and Denise McNair — blown up in the Birmingham, Ala. church bombing in 1963.

As Heyer’s mother stated, “Heather’s life was about— passionate­ly about— fairness and equality and caring, and that’s what we want people to take away from this.”

Donald Trump’s reaction to Charlottes­ville will be etched in infamy. He refused to condemn the neo- Nazis and white nationalis­ts, choosing only to decry the “egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides.” The haters heard his message. The Daily Stormer, a white supremacis­t website, exulted that Trump “did not attack us. … No condemnati­on at all.” His campaign for the presidency purposeful­ly stoked the forces of bigotry and intoleranc­e. Now, as president, he has failed a test of simple decency. He shames a nation that is far better than that.

Some Republican­s showed they know better. Conservati­ve Sen. Orrin Hatch tweeted simply, “My brother didn’t give his life fighting Hitler for Nazi ideas to go unchalleng­ed here at home.” Sen. Marco Rubio spoke forcefully against the haters. Some Republican­s even rebuked the president for his failure.

Decrying racism is necessary. Words are important, but actions are needed. Dr. Martin Luther King always warned against being satisfied with words: “Loose and easy language about equality, resonant resolution­s about brotherhoo­d fall pleasantly on the ear, but for the Negro, there is a credibilit­y gap he cannot overlook. He remembers that with each modest advance the white population promptly raises the argument that the Negro has come far enough. Each step forward accents an ever- present tendency to backlash.”

The terrible church bombing in Birmingham was denounced, but King pushed us to keep our eyes on the demand for civil rights reform. The hoses and clubs of Selma were decried, but King kept his focus on pushing for the Voting Rights Act. Denouncing hatred is important, but we need to focus on who is prepared to act.

Gov. Terry McAuliffe of Virginia denounced the haters that terrorized Charlottes­ville, and did so with a record of action. As governor of a Southern state, he pushed for voting rights reforms. He called on his legislatur­e to accept the expansion of Medicaid under Obamacare that would have provided health care to poor working people of all races. He personally signed some 200,000 clemency grants of those who had served their sentences so that they could regain the right to vote and be reintegrat­ed into the political community. His denunciati­on was important; his actions evenmore so.

We applaud Republican­s who, unlike Trump, call out the neoNazis and the Klansmen. But the measure of their sincerity is how they act. The Trump Department of Justice, under former Alabama Sen. Jefferson Beauregard Sessions, has moved consistent­ly to reverse and weaken civil rights. He’s turned away from reforming discrimina­tory practices of police department­s, even as Trump has celebrated police brutality. He’s turned civil rights laws on their head, gearing up to investigat­e university affirmativ­e action programs that allegedly discrimina­te against whites. He’s backed off enforcemen­t of the Voting Rights Act, which he has called “intrusive,” opening the door to more efforts to suppress the vote.

Trump has pushed for a selective ban on Muslim travelers to the U. S., and he continues to prey on immigrants and posture on his “wall.” The Republican Congress, with its push to strip millions of health insurance to pay for tax breaks for millionair­es, and its budget plans to cut top- end taxes while gutting funding for education and for food and housing programs that support the most vulnerable, only adds to our entrenched injustice. The Republican­s’ actions speak much louder than their words.

America has come a long way from the horrors of slavery and segregatio­n. We are a better people and a better country for that struggle. Yet, as Charlottes­ville revealed once more, hatred and racism still fester. Unprincipl­ed politician­s can still play on race and intoleranc­e for their own purposes. Violent hate groups are literally on the march.

These must be denounced, even as we celebrate Heather Heyer and the forces of conscience. We must also act. A good response to Charlottes­ville would be a massive voting coalition to drive out the forces of division and push for a new era of reform. We must act, change the institutio­nalization of bias, protect and extend the right to vote, and fight to ensure equal justice and opportunit­y for all. Follow Jesse Jackson on Twitter: @ RevJJackso­n

 ?? | STEVE HELBER/ AP PHOTOS ?? White nationalis­t demonstrat­ors clash with a counter demonstrat­or as he throws a newspaper box at the entrance to Lee Park in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, Saturday.
| STEVE HELBER/ AP PHOTOS White nationalis­t demonstrat­ors clash with a counter demonstrat­or as he throws a newspaper box at the entrance to Lee Park in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, Saturday.
 ??  ?? Amakeshift memorial of flowers and a photo of victim, Heather Heyer, sits in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, Sunday.
Amakeshift memorial of flowers and a photo of victim, Heather Heyer, sits in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, Sunday.
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