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American History
Related: About this forumOn the night of August 11, 2017, an estimated 200 Nazis marched up the Lawn at UVa.
ALERT TOP STORY
March and rally led to changes both subtle and deep at UVa
Bryan McKenzie Aug 11, 2021
An estimated 200 white supremacists and neo-Nazis marched through the University of Virginia, including on the Lawn, on Aug. 11, 2017, in a prelude to the Unite the Right rally in downtown Charlottesville.
It was four years ago that some 200 tiki torch-toting, slogan-shouting white supremacists and neo-Nazis tore a page from the Nazi Nuremberg rallies of the 1930s and marched about the Grounds of the University of Virginia.
Along the Lawn and up and down the Rotunda steps, reciting anti-Semitic and racist chants, they marched. At the statue of Thomas Jefferson, they verbally and physically assaulted the students surrounding the statue, swinging their lit torches like shillelaghs and filling the air with pepper spray.
The march occurred on the eve of the Aug. 12, 2017, Unite the Right rally, and the symbolism and violence of both events shattered the sense of security at UVa and forced the university community to look inward. ... Condemnation came quick.
It is fundamental to the moral fabric of any society to condemn beliefs and behavior that are so odious they threaten the very essence of that society. And so we do, wrote then-UVa Rector Frank M. Conner III, in an Aug. 13, 2017, message to students, staff and faculty. The actions of those who visited evil upon us are nothing short of white nationalist and white supremacist terrorism intended to intimidate our community. They will not succeed. We will not surrender.
{snip}
March and rally led to changes both subtle and deep at UVa
Bryan McKenzie Aug 11, 2021
An estimated 200 white supremacists and neo-Nazis marched through the University of Virginia, including on the Lawn, on Aug. 11, 2017, in a prelude to the Unite the Right rally in downtown Charlottesville.
It was four years ago that some 200 tiki torch-toting, slogan-shouting white supremacists and neo-Nazis tore a page from the Nazi Nuremberg rallies of the 1930s and marched about the Grounds of the University of Virginia.
Along the Lawn and up and down the Rotunda steps, reciting anti-Semitic and racist chants, they marched. At the statue of Thomas Jefferson, they verbally and physically assaulted the students surrounding the statue, swinging their lit torches like shillelaghs and filling the air with pepper spray.
The march occurred on the eve of the Aug. 12, 2017, Unite the Right rally, and the symbolism and violence of both events shattered the sense of security at UVa and forced the university community to look inward. ... Condemnation came quick.
It is fundamental to the moral fabric of any society to condemn beliefs and behavior that are so odious they threaten the very essence of that society. And so we do, wrote then-UVa Rector Frank M. Conner III, in an Aug. 13, 2017, message to students, staff and faculty. The actions of those who visited evil upon us are nothing short of white nationalist and white supremacist terrorism intended to intimidate our community. They will not succeed. We will not surrender.
{snip}
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On the night of August 11, 2017, an estimated 200 Nazis marched up the Lawn at UVa. (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Aug 2023
OP
underpants
(186,631 posts)1. To this day, Albemarle Co. considers this in every decision they make
I heard do from a speech by an Albemarle county board member at a convention in Cville.
GreenWave
(9,167 posts)2. Are you saying they are guarding their words?
underpants
(186,631 posts)3. No. It caught them unprepared
Now, as they take any measure they stop and consider how it might be taken advantage of by the Nazis (my word).