Not advocating for or excusing Trump, or the racists he panders to, in any way, but I do think that taking down the statue of Robert E Lee in Charlottesville was an unnecessary provocation. Just as the scars of slavery in the US are a long way from being healed, so are the scars of the Civil War. To many southerners, Lee is an emblem of the regional pride of an underdog culture. Pulling down that statue would have been seen by many southerners - by no means only the racists among them - as rubbing their noses in the defeat of the South by the Union.
This is secondary to the far more serious issue of racial tension in the US, but how far do you go when you start pulling down statues? There is a gold plated - gold plated ffs - statue of Union General Tacumseh Sherman on 52nd Street in NY. This is the man who "burned old Dixie down", laying waste to the entire infrastructure of the South. I don't think anyone is advocating pulling that down (though it's just around the corner from Trump Tower, so you never know!)
I get what you mean - I read an interesting article on the Confederate flag the other day (I'll have to dig it out) and I could see that flying it isn't necessarily racist, but many deem it that way. Much the same to me that if a skinhead is waving the union jack in my face I feel threatened, but I don't feel threatened if I am outside Buckingham Palace in a crowd of flag waving people.
