From Military.com:
“Top Marine Orders Confederate
Paraphernalia to Be Removed from All Bases”
As states continue to grapple
with the passionate debate over whether to display statues and other tributes
to Confederate leaders, Marines have been told the materials won't be tolerated
on any of the Corps' installations. Commandant Gen. David Berger last week
instructed top Marine leaders to remove Confederate-related paraphernalia from
the service's bases worldwide. The directive is one of several forward-leaning
initiatives Berger said he is "prioritizing for immediate execution."
In his memo, a copy of which was obtained by Military.com, Berger also ordered
leaders to find ways to move more women into combat jobs, to review the
possibility of yearlong maternity leave for female Marines, and to extend
parental leave policies to same-sex partners. The commandant's order came about
a week after a congressional hearing on the rise of extremism in the ranks. A
recent survey of active-duty troops by the independent Military Times also
found signs of white supremacy are on the rise. Maj. Eric Flanagan, Berger's
spokesman, did not specify the types of Confederate paraphernalia the general
wants stripped from Marine Corps bases. "Last week, the Commandant of the
Marine Corps directed specific tasks be reviewed or addressed by Headquarters
Marine Corps staff," Flanagan said. "Many of the tasks were published
on Twitter Friday. Other tasks not published previously are mostly
administrative matters." Official policy decisions, changes or
implementation plans will be published in appropriate orders or service-wide
messages, he added. The debate over Confederate materials and names on military
installations has swirled for years. Ten Army bases are named after leaders of
secessionist states, a point of contention for many -- especially after a 2015
racially motivated attack on a South Carolina church thrust the debate over
honoring Confederate history onto the national stage. The attack prompted
fierce debate over whether state and local governments should remove statues,
street names and other references to Confederate leaders. Major retailers
announced they would no longer sell Confederate flags. But the military's
response to Confederate names, flags and other materials was less clear. The
Defense Department didn't take any immediate action on the issue, Military
Times reported at the time, opting to leave it up to individual services to
address. Richard Kohn, a history professor who studies peace, war and defense
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said Berger appears to be
modernizing the Marine Corps. Ridding military installations of Confederate
materials is long overdue, he said. "We have the need within the country
to try and create as much unity as possible and to suppress white nationalism
and racism within the ranks of the military because, every once in a while, it
crops up and causes an issue," Kohn said. Several Marines have recently
been punished or booted out of the military over racist social media posts, and
lawmakers are pushing the Pentagon to better track extremism in the ranks. Since
the Marine Corps' major installations opened after the turn of the 20th
century, Kohn said they're unlikely to have overt nods to Confederate leaders. A
2017 study by the Congressional Research Service found there were no Navy or
Marine Corps bases named for Confederate military leaders. The Navy Department
follows a procedure for naming streets, facilities and structures on its bases
for deceased members of the sea services or those who made significant
contributions to the Navy and Marine Corps. Names of internal portions of
buildings can be assigned at the discretion of the local base commander. But
even as one member of the Joint Chiefs makes a stance to rid his service's
bases of Confederate paraphernalia, Kohn said it's unlikely to result in the
Army renaming those 10 bases that have drawn criticism. "I think the Army
would worry about alienating the local population," he said. "...
Most of the people joining the military are from areas where these bases are
... so the recruiting people might say, 'You know, you really don't want to do
that.'"
^ Every US Military Branch within
the US and worldwide needs to replace everything named after a Confederate and
ban all Confederate symbols including the Confederate flag. The symbols should
not be destroyed, but kept in museums so that people know just how racist this
country was. Honoring Confederates is just like honoring the Nazis (both had horrible
issues with different races) and should not be tolerated. The Confederates lost
the war in 1865 and their descendants lost the Jim Crow racism in the 1960s. It’s
time the US Military and the US as a whole rejects the Confederate legacy once
and for all. ^
https://www.military.com/daily-news/2020/02/26/top-marine-orders-confederate-paraphernalia-be-removed-all-bases.html
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