USA TODAY US Edition

‘They must go immediatel­y’

- Maria Svart Maria Svart is national director of the Democratic Socialists of America.

Our strength as a people is our diversity and shared desire to build strong communitie­s that help us thrive and live with dignity.

The violence we saw in Charlottes­ville, Va., is a terrible reminder that white supremacy is an ongoing and dangerous threat. Symbols of the Confederac­y were erected mostly during two waves of white backlash in the 20th century to the historic expansion of black freedoms.

For that reason alone, they must go immediatel­y. When local authoritie­s refuse to take them down, we stand in solidarity with activists of color who feel compelled to do it themselves, as a group did Monday toppling a Confederat­e monument in Durham, N.C.

But removing them is not enough, just as denouncing neo-Nazis is not enough. We must confront the fact that we have a racially divided labor market, with a police and prison system that criminaliz­es poverty and fails to keep us safe while the billionair­es profit. To prevent crime, we need services that improve all people’s lives.

The key problem with these monuments is that they sustain a racist narrative used to build support for economic violence through public policy.

Remember President Reagan’s “welfare queens,” or the “superpreda­tors” of President Clinton? These racist myths subtly attack black people but actually harm us all. President Trump is merely the latest rich politician to pit us against each other, with his talk of Mexican “animals” out to rape, steal jobs and push opioids. The 1% uses these stories to explain why the 99% is working longer hours for low pay or suffering without health care. Blame “those others!”

When Trump talks about the “alt-left” or violence on “many sides,” he promotes a neo-fascist cancer on our democracy. Pundits denouncing it on the news won’t protect us. Instead, we must build a multiracia­l, working-class grassroots movement demanding local, state and national policy changes; demanding a voice on the job and a fair share of the fruits of our labor; and demanding an end to the isolation, hopelessne­ss and division that come when we let the capitalist class control our lives.

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