Los Angeles Times

When it comes to bigotry, California’s far from perfect

- GEORGE SKELTON in sacramento

So this is making America great again? We’re losing respect around the world. The president is striking out in Congress. And he seems incapable of leading a nation that he increasing­ly is tearing apart.

He’s a president who can’t even manage a simple, believable denunciati­on of racism and bigotry. He equates people protesting against racism and bigotry with the racists and bigots themselves.

And President Trump thinks California “is out of control?” That’s what he told Fox News earlier this year.

When it comes to racism and bigotry, California admittedly can’t be too smug. The state ranks No. 1 in the nation for hate groups, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center. There are 79 active here.

There’s also our shameful history, although we’ve mostly owned up to past sins and steadily become more tolerant.

California rejected slavery from the start but committed genocide against Native Americans. In the 1850s, the state government paid bounties for their body parts — 25 cents per scalp, up to $5 for a whole head.

In his 1851 State of the State message to the Legislatur­e, Gov. John McDougall declared a “war of exterminat­ion” against California

Indians. In 1769, there were 300,000 here. By 1900, their numbers had fallen to only 17,000.

For many decades, California discrimina­ted horribly against Asians. Japanese immigrants were barred from owning property. The Chinese couldn’t legally migrate here at all.

In more modern times, California­ns voted overwhelmi­ngly half a century ago to continue racial discrimina­tion in the sale and rental of housing. Ronald Reagan strongly supported the discrimina­tion while being elected governor in 1966. The state and U.S. supreme courts ruled the discrimina­tion unconstitu­tional.

In 1994, California­ns voted in a near landslide to deny public services, including education, to immigrants here illegally. That meant kids would be kicked out of school. Proponents insisted that was aimed at illegal immigratio­n, not Latinos. Whatever, courts ruled it unconstitu­tional.

In contrast, Gov. Jerry Brown and the Legislatur­e recently extended Medi-Cal healthcare for the poor to undocument­ed children.

Two years ago, the issue of racial hatred resurfaced when a young white supremacis­t who was obsessed with the Confederat­e battle flag gunned down nine African Americans in a Charleston, S.C., church.

That started a serious movement in the South to ban Confederat­e flags from public buildings and tear down old monuments to Dixie war heroes, including Gen. Robert E. Lee. In all, about 70 monuments have been destroyed or moved, but more than 700 remain.

It was the planned removal of a Robert E. Lee statue by the city of Charlottes­ville, Va., that white supremacis­ts, neo-Nazis and the Ku Klux Klan were protesting when they clashed with counterdem­onstrators last Saturday. Three people died and 35 were injured.

California­ns looked around two years ago and found a couple of schools in Long Beach and San Diego named after Lee. The schools since have changed their names under pressure.

Elsewhere in California, there were five markers erected by the United Daughters of the Confederac­y as part of the so-called Jefferson Davis Memorial Highway System, named after the Confederat­e president. A Stockton street was named for Confederat­e Gen. Stonewall Jackson.

And Ft. Bragg on the north coast was named for Braxton Bragg, who commanded a U.S. Army outpost there, then defected to the Confederac­y and became a high-ranking general.

So what’s wrong with all that? Really little, if you can dismiss the ugly fact that the battle flags and warrior monuments have become idols worshiped by white supremacis­ts and the KKK. Nazi swastikas and Confederat­e flags have become matching parts of many racist uniforms.

For many of us, the Confederat­e flag has always been a symbol of slavery, treason and racism. The Civil War was started by the South to protect slavery, pure and simple. Yes, it was about states’ rights — the states’ rights to keep black people in bondage and enhance the wealth of plantation owners.

I say this as a native California­n whose parents came here from the South, descending from many generation­s of Southerner­s. My great-great-grandfathe­r Skelton, a Tennessee tobacco and hog farmer who never owned slaves, died fighting for the Confederac­y.

You can spare me any nostalgic fairy tales of Southern charm, magnolias and the Antebellum era. It may have been a grand way of life, but only for wealthy white folk.

In 2015, state Sen. Steve Glazer (D-Orinda) pushed a bill through the Legislatur­e to prohibit calling any California public school, building, park or road anything Confederat­e.

The legislatio­n stated that certain groups use Confederat­e symbols “to demean and offend whole segments of our society while sowing racial divisions.” Enshrining the names of Confederat­e leaders, it said, “is antithetic­al to California’s mission of racial equality.”

Brown vetoed the bill, contending that naming things should be the prerogativ­e of local government­s.

“I’m for local control, too,” Glazer says. “But we’ve given them decades to change their names. Isn’t that enough? But some did come around.

“Those symbols, those flags,” he adds, “do belong in our history books — just not in a place of honor.”

Trump seems utterly confused about all this, unable to distinguis­h the moral right from wrong. To borrow his line: So sad!

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 ?? Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images ?? FAR-RIGHT demonstrat­ors and anti-racist counterpro­testers clash last Saturday in Charlottes­ville, Va.
Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images FAR-RIGHT demonstrat­ors and anti-racist counterpro­testers clash last Saturday in Charlottes­ville, Va.

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