John Hood: The People never spoke on statues – Greenville Daily Reflector

Posted: November 25, 2021 at 12:34 pm

Although some pundits and grifters may claim otherwise, theres nothing new about populism. It comes in waves, often but not always in response to sharp economic downturns, and is driven by outrage against the mistakes or misdeeds of political elites.

Sometimes that populist outrage is well-earned and its consequences beneficial. But at other times, the flames serve as little more than propulsion for demagogues seeking to become the new political elites in place of the old. George Orwell had their number. So did The Who, who invited listeners to meet the new boss same as the old boss.

If you go looking for clear definitions of the policy content of populism, youll come away disappointed. But theres a common rhetorical denominator: Populists tend to say things like the People have spoken even though they are actually in the minority and the People have done no such thing.

Its currently fashionable to denigrate right-wing populism, of the sort that produced the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol. Although Im no slave to fashion my closet is full of clothes older than my grown children I have repeatedly criticized such populist impulses myself, not only when expressed as conspiracy theories about stolen elections but also when directed against free trade, entitlement reform, and other causes that in my view cannot be abandoned by an American conservatism worthy of the name.

Today, however, I will focus on left-wing populism, of the sort that has produced its own violence and chaos but nowhere near the level of condemnation it deserves.

The riots of 2020 alone resulted in dozens of deaths and north of $1 billion in property damage. Of course, most people protesting the homicide of George Floyd were only expressing political views. They werent rioters. By refusing to maintain order, however, state and local governments allowed some protests to devolve into riots. It was a colossal error.

This manifest failure to enforce basic rules of conduct in public spaces had antecedents. Some happened right here in North Carolina. On Aug. 24, 2017, a mob led by anarchist and communist activists toppled the Confederate monument that once stood in front of Durhams old courthouse. Thanks to some combination of clumsiness and purposeful malfeasance by local law enforcement, no one was ever really held responsible for the crime.

Almost exactly one year later, another mob (including some of the same activists) tore down the Silent Sam statue on the Chapel Hill campus of the University of North Carolina. Again, there were no serious consequences for those responsible. Again, the mob was rewarded by having the statue removed permanently rather than restored to its original location, as it should have been, until such time that it might be removed by proper authorities employing legal means.

As I wrote at the time, I was never sold on keeping those statues permanently in place. I dont think past generations get to decide in perpetuity what persons or images should populate campuses, courthouses, and other public spaces. Confederate monuments have a history of their own, one that at best mixes familial desire to honor fallen ancestors with Lost Cause mythology and white supremacy.

Should Silent Sam and comparable statues and memorials have been moved elsewhere or just dismantled? That was a legitimate question. It was not, however, answered by The People, but by a self-anointed few who figured theyd get away with it. They were right.

Most North Carolinians didnt agree. They opposed removing the Silent Sam statue, which was on state property. That remains the prevailing national sentiment about the larger issue, as far as I know. In a 2020 ABC News/Washington Post poll, for example, only 43% of respondents favored removing statues honoring Confederate generals from public places.

Think the majority is wrong about this? Then persuade them otherwise. But dont take the law into your own hands and cloak yourself in populist claims that the People have spoken. They didnt.

John Hood is a Carolina Journal columnist.

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John Hood: The People never spoke on statues - Greenville Daily Reflector

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