Rome News-Tribune

Bigotry returns to Virginia

- CAL THOMAS Cal Thomas is the country’s most widely syndicated columnist.

As a longtime resident of Virginia, I am well aware of its sordid history when it comes to slavery, racism and discrimina­tion. I can still remember “colored only” restrooms, water fountains, poll taxes and African Americans forced to ride in the back of the bus. Virginia public schools in the 1950s were mostly segregated, as they had been since first establishe­d in 1870.

Segregatio­n was so bad in my home state of Virginia that even Native Americans were largely excluded from public education. It wasn’t until 1963, nine years after Brown v. Board of Education, that public schools were open to them. It took another five years before the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Charles C. Green et al. v. County School Board of New Kent County, Virginia, that the New Kent School Board had to “convert promptly to a (school) system without a ‘white’ school, and a ‘Negro’ school, but just schools.” This ruling quickened the pace of desegregat­ion in Virginia.

What happened last week to White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders and her friends at the Red Hen restaurant in Lexington, Virginia, brought back memories of those unpleasant days, except in this case it wasn’t race, but ideology that led to Sanders and her party being expelled from the establishm­ent.

A waiter had served their meal, but after learning that Sanders was there, the owner asked her to leave. Sanders tweeted, “...Her actions say far more about her than about me. I always do my best to treat people, including those I disagree with, respectful­ly and will continue to do so.”

Will the owner begin screening future patrons based on their political ideology and who they voted for in the last election? Those who claim to be defenders of free speech and free associatio­n have been strangely quiet about the incident, leading one to believe they support the restaurant owner’s decision.

Liberals and civil rights activists criticized and filed lawsuits against Jack Phillips, the Colorado baker, who refused on religious grounds to make a wedding cake for a same-sex couple, even though he had baked other kinds of cakes for gay customers. Phillips, who never threw gay customers out of his bakery, later won his case before the Supreme Court.

The left was so incensed over last year’s demonstrat­ion by a white supremacis­t group in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, that they stepped up their efforts to remove Confederat­e statues from public places.

Last week, after three years of dawdling, the Alexandria City Council voted to expunge the name of Confederat­e States President Jefferson Davis from the highway, changing it to Richmond Highway. In neighborin­g Arlington County, Davis’ name will remain for now, but I suspect not for much longer as that county, too, is dominated by liberal politician­s.

One doesn’t need to have much imaginatio­n to predict what would have happened if a gay person, an African American or even a liberal politician had been asked by a conservati­ve restaurant owner to leave because of their sexual orientatio­n, race or ideology. The outcries would have properly come from just about everywhere and lawyers would be lined up to file anti-discrimina­tion lawsuits. Demonstrat­ors outside the restaurant would have quickly followed, probably forcing the place to close, or requiring the owner to issue an apology.

As in the case of “comedian” Michelle Wolf, who made remarks about Sanders’ smoky eye at this year’s White House Correspond­ents Dinner, Sanders continues to demonstrat­e more class than her critics.

Some on the left blame President Trump for the increase in political invective. Sorry, but that doesn’t wash. People are responsibl­e for their own behavior and if they think someone is behaving badly, they should demonstrat­e classier behavior. Like Sarah Sanders continues to do.

Will the owner begin screening future patrons based on their political ideology and who they voted for in the last election?

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Thomas

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