Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Hate remains, but don’t glorify it

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Changing street names inHollywoo­dwon’t get rid of hate, that’s for sure.

There will always be vile bigots. Changing street names, getting rid of monuments and Confederat­e flags, none of that will put the haters out of business.

But bigotry and hatred should not be honored. And having a street named after a person honors that person.

So with the city ofHollywoo­d voting to rename three streets named after Confederat­e generals, I say “good riddance.” And what took them so long to do it?

The Sun Sentinel lastweek told howoneHoll­ywood resident, Benjamin Israel, kept the street renaming issue alive for a couple of years when commission­ers tried to simply ignore doing the right thing. They finally agreed to the change, with a final vote set for next month.

After the story about Israel appeared in the paper, among the texted responsesw­as one so vile and racist— in less than 10words, African-Americans and Jews got trashed— that I don’t have enough bleeps and asterisks to get the garbage into print.

Takemyword for it, the note just proves bigotry isn’t going anywhere.

But at leastHolly­wood is saying they don’twant to insult their residents by having street names that honor a short-lived era inwhich slaverywas considered fine and dandy. For those who still want to glorify the Confederac­y, fine. Do it in your own home. Or on the back of your pick up truck. But it shouldn’t be in the faces of residents on street names.

If youwant to say this is political correctnes­s run amok, go ahead. But you’rewrong.

It is notOKto be abusive or bigoted, even if our incompeten­t president gives you the idea that you can act like that. If showing decency to your neighbors is being politicall­y correct, that’s fine. Call it whatever youwant.

What is stunning in all of this is that among the three streets being renamed, one was named forNathan Bedford Forrest. His greatest claim to famewas not only being a Confederat­e officer, hewas also the first grand wizard of theKu Klux Klan.

According to a story in MiamiNewTi­mes, Forrest was outragedwh­en he saw black men inUnion uniforms after the Confederac­y took control of Fort Pillowin 1864. Forrestwas so upset, he ordered their mass slaughter, even after they surrendere­d. Almost 300 died.

And instead of being ashamed, Hollywood public officials, for years, allowed a street honoring him to be in their city. Giveme a break.

ButHollywo­od finally got the message, as did the rest of the country, withConfed­erate monuments and flags other remnants of an ugly era being removed.

Confederac­y enthusiast­s say this is erasing history. Nobody is rewriting history. The Confederac­y will always be a part of America’s past. But it belongs in history books or museums. We can’t change what happened, butwe should darn well learn fromit.

Maybe it’s justme, but I still cringe when I see a bumper sticker of a Confederat­e flag on a vehicle. To me, it’s an inyour-face statement of intoleranc­e, but if youwant to deface your car or truck like that and showpeople what you believe, go ahead.

At leastHolly­wood is making a statement about tolerance. It sure took them long enough, but at least it’s being done.

Gary Stein can be reached at gstein@sunsentine­l.com, or 954-356-4616. On Twitter@SSEditoria­l.

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