The Confederate flag resurged. The KKK burned a cross. Racial tensions flared in a Southern town.
ASHEBORO, N.C. The first unpleasant tug of history came before the election, when the yards around Dexter Trogdon Jr.s house started blooming with Confederate flags. Then last spring, the Ku Klux Klan announced plans to burn a cross in town. A man apparently irked with his black neighbor hung a noose in his yard, and Trogdon started hearing a disturbing new view from some white people: that slavery wasnt so bad for African Americans.
The 49-year-old bail bondsman knew racial division would be part of the picture when he moved back to this rural, majority-white town where he grew up. But there was one factor he did not expect: the presidential election.
We were actually getting better, said Trogdon, picking at his egg whites and fruit at Davids Restaurant, a throwback diner here, noting that the city had been making strides toward improving race relations. Until a year ago, when racism and bigotry seemed to rush out of the woodwork, especially here, in the South. That stuff came to a halt. ... If you live here, you can feel it. Its just the way people treat you every day.
More than a year after President Trump took office, many people of color are coming to terms with what his presidency has exposed, and what it has wrought, on matters of race.
Some white supremacists and white nationalists have seen the administrations first year as emboldening, leading them to hold rallies like the deadly August gathering of Trump-supporting neo-Nazis in Charlottesville or those in Portland, Ore., that preceded a fatal commuter train attack by a white man who was spouting anti-Muslim hatred at minority passengers.
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