First they came for the Confederate monuments, but who knows where progressive efforts to erase history will end? It is a 'short hop from the unthinkable to the mandatory.'
“Keep Austin Weird” is a longtime city motto. Now the challenge for Texans may be to keep Austin Austin.
The
Texas capital has been reviewing names of streets, parks and public
buildings honoring major figures of the Confederacy. But last week the
city’s Equity Office also suggested that a broader secondary review
could encompass renaming anything honoring anyone with ties to slavery, including town namesake Stephen F. Austin. Austin, who died 25 years before the Civil War broke out, is remembered as the “Father of Texas” for establishing the first successful American settlements in 1825. Many places — cities, a county, colleges and schools — bear his name. But Austin promoted slavery in Texas and resisted abolition efforts by the Mexican government. The Equity Office considered it “within the spirit” of the anti-Dixie effort to include Austin as someone to exclude.
Democrats' war on their history
City spokesman David Green said, “no one sees this as an attempt to change the name of the city,”
even though that is exactly what was being suggested. And in the
progressive worldview it is a short hop from the unthinkable to the
mandatory, from concept to edict. Witness the evolution of then-Virginia
Gov. Terry McAuliffe’s thinking: in 2015 he said that “Robert E. Lee,
Jefferson Davis, these are all parts of our heritage,” and it would be best to “leave the statues and those things alone” on Richmond’s Monument Avenue. A brief two years later the more “woke” McAuliffe, eyeing a run for the presidency, called the statues "flashpoints for hatred, division, and violence” and said they should all come down.
Much of the
self-flagellation over these issues has arisen because Democrats are at
war with their own history. Southern slavery, Jim Crow and segregation
were Democratic institutions.
Democrats elevated Confederate memory, and now they are erasing it. The
statue of Robert E. Lee that the city of Dallas took down in 2017 was
unveiled by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936, who said at the
time that “all over the United States” Lee was recognized as “one of our
greatest American Christians
and one of our greatest American gentlemen.” If a Democrat said that
today they would be given a beat-down in the name of tolerance.
The
Austin Equity Office's suggestion also illustrates a point President
Donald Trump made a year ago, that erasing honors to the Confederacy is
only the starting point in a general assault on American memory. “Is it George Washington next week”
he said, “and is it Thomas Jefferson the week after?
You know, you
really do have to ask yourself, where does it stop?” Liberal historians tut-tutted at the president for even suggesting such an absurdity. But the vandals who attacked the Jefferson statue at the University of Virginia on his birthday proved Trump right.
So where does it end in Texas? Sam Houston was the first President of Texas and later a Unionist who lost his governorship over the secession issue. But he was a slave owner, so rename that city.
Thomas Saltus Lubbock was a Confederate officer, and Augustus Hill Garland was a Confederate congressman, albeit reluctantly, so their cities are also suspect. Arlington, Texas was named for Robert E. Lee’s Virginia home,
so scrub that. Plus, Corpus Christi, San Antonio and other city names
rooted in Christianity may be seen as exclusionary by progressives and
need rechristening. And don’t forget to investigate Odessa, “because Russia.”
Woke-ness invading the Alamo
Even the Alamo, the most sacred soil of Texas, is being “reimagined”
to deemphasize the heroic stand that took place there in 1836. Project
master planner and non-Texan George Skarmeas defended this approach,
saying "the events of 1836 were just one small chapter in 10,000 years
of history,” and “we cannot single out one moment in time.” But “Forget the Alamo” doesn’t quite have the same ring to it.
Old-school
liberals underestimate the ISIS-like desire of progressives to wipe out
history that does not pass ideological muster. Stephen Austin’s views
on slavery were complex and nuanced
like Jefferson’s, but so what? He is tainted by the American Republic’s
original sin, so for progressives that is case closed. Hopefully most
Texans will respond to having Austin’s name removed by saying, “come and take it.”
James S. Robbins, a member of USA TODAY's Board of Contributors and author of "Erasing America: Losing Our Future by Destroying Our Past,"
has taught at the National Defense University and the Marine Corps
University and served as a special assistant in the office of the
secretary of Defense in the George W. Bush administration. Follow him on
Twitter: @James_Robbins.