New York Daily News

Liberal anti-monument mania

- S.E. CUPP How Trump won this debate Contact Cupp at thesecupp.com.

Apair of parallel events occurred Tuesday night that perfectly capture the surreal and troubling times in which we are living. First, President Trump held a rally in Phoenix, in which he once again offered unto his base the reddest of red meat.

“They’re trying to take away our culture,” he said, of the exploding debate over Confederat­e statues and monuments.

“They’re trying to take away our history. And our weak leaders, they do it overnight. These things have been there for 150 years, for a hundred years. You go back to a university and it’s gone. Weak, weak people.”

Simultaneo­usly, on the other side of the country, something else was happening. ESPN was scrambling to release a statement on a baffling assignment change that a sports website had caught wind of.

The decision to remove an Asian-American announcer named Robert Lee from calling University of Virginia’s home opener — “simply because of the coincidenc­e of his name,” as ESPN inexplicab­ly admits — unsurprisi­ngly lit up the Internet with outrage, jokes and memes.

It also rendered inarguably true the assertion made by President Trump himself as well as many others that this debate will descend quickly and embarrassi­ngly down a slippery slope. I’d argue the pre-emptive removal of an Asian-American sportscast­er, who had nothing to do with the Civil War or slavery, from a college football game simply because his name sounds similar doesn’t represent a gradual slope, but a 1,000-foot cliff.

In its mock-worthy statement, ESPN laments, “It’s a shame that this is even a topic of conversati­on and we regret that who calls play-by-play for a football game has become an issue.”

Of course, Robert Lee’s assignment change and “who calls play-by-play for a football game” is only an issue and topic of conversati­on because of ESPN’s dimwitted hyperventi­lating over fears that they would be mocked and embarrasse­d for having a guy named Robert Lee call their football game. But at a time when ESPN is facing heavy criticism for being an overtly liberal network, does anyone doubt what’s happening now is worse?

Whatever you think of the statue debate, one thing is now abundantly clear: President Trump has won it.

The list of offensive iconograph­y grows by the hundreds every day. From removing Lee statues all over the South to changing the name of Fenway Park’s Yawkey Way and Boston’s Faneuil Hall, even abolitioni­st stronghold­s aren’t spared the scrutiny of ravenous liberal activists on a mission to run as far as they can towards crazy with this argument.

And yet, it gets even crazier. A writer at Vice News, Wilbert L. Cooper, wants to blow up Mount Rushmore. Why? Because “demystifyi­ng the historical figures of the past, pulling them off the great mountain top back down to Earth where they sh-t, farted, spit, pissed, f-----d, raped, murdered, died and rotted seems like important business for this country.”

In New York City, Mayor de Blasio has created a panel to review and remove “symbols of hate,” with even some of the Broadway sidewalk text documentin­g actual parades through the Canyon of Heroes in his crosshairs, and Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito railing against the statue of Christophe­r Columbus in Columbus Circle.

Over at the University of Southern California, activists are taking issue with the school’s mascot, a horse named Traveler. The mascot, according to his official bio, is “a symbol of ancient Troy. Its rider, with costume and sword, is a symbol of a Trojan warrior.” So what’s the problem? Robert E. Lee’s horse was also named Traveller — spelled differentl­y, but unacceptab­le nonetheles­s.

This is nonsense. What’s unnerving to conservati­ves like me, who are actually sympatheti­c to the fact that Confederat­e flags, statues and monuments are painful reminders of one of our darkest moments as a nation — and have written so — is that this is exactly what Trump wants.

To distract from his indefensib­le moral equivalenc­ies between neo-Nazis in Charlottes­ville and the activists who were there to protest them, Trump dared liberals to go down this kooky rabbit hole of political correctnes­s. It’s fertile ground and he knew they’d take the bait.

And did they ever. So instead of talking about the growing scourge of white supremacy in this country, and what the President should do about it, we’re talking about blowing up Mount Rushmore and punishing Asian-American sports announcers for having the wrong name. Game, set, match: Trump.

Whatever seriousnes­s this argument once had is gone. And I, for one, think that’s a real shame. But in the meantime, all the other Robert Lees out there should think about brushing up their resumes.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States