Tuesday, June 15, 2021

The Saga of the Allendale Confederate Statue—to Remove, or Not to Remove It?

[“Check Out History of the All-black 92nd Infantry Division - Our Worst WWII Unit that Kept Getting Routed by Inferior Forces Even at the Very End of the War & Even When Facing Opponents Who Made Just Limited Attacks.”]

Part I: Confederate Statue in Allendale Will Most Likely be Voted— Removed—Tonight

By Grand Rapids Anonymous Monday, June 14, 2021 at 6:16:00 P.M. EDT GRA: The sjws have been persistent in their push to have the statue removed. When I first posted this last year, I predicted an eventual victory for the commies.

ALLENDALE TOWNSHIP, Mich. (WOOD) — A controversial statue of a Confederate statue will once again be debated at tonight’s Allendale Township board meeting.

A decision may finally be made about what to do with the statue, which stands in the Veterans Garden of Honor at 68th Avenue and Lake Michigan Drive. It depicts a soldier carrying a Confederate battle flag, standing back-to-back with a Union soldier. A slave child is at their feet holding a placard declaring the end of slavery.

People have been debating and protesting about it for a year. Last summer, the board voted that it would stay.

Last month, a citizen committee created by the board recommended that the statue be removed and replaced.

After having a few weeks to digest that recommendation, the board may vote tonight to accept or decline the recommendation, or push a decision to a later date.

The meeting begins at 7 p.m. at the Township Park Bandshell. It will stream live on woodtv.com.

--GRA

 

Allendale Board Thumbs Nose at blm/antifa—Votes to Keep Statue Permanently Tuesday, June 15, 2021 at 12:54:00 A.M. EDT

GRA: This looks like the final decision.

ALLENDALE TOWNSHIP, Mich. (WOOD) — A controversial statue of a Confederate soldier will stay put after the Allendale Township board voted to keep it during a meeting Monday night.

In a 5-2 vote, the board passed a motion for the statue to stay in its current location in the Garden of Honor and be repaired from any damage done to it over the past year.

The board’s decision goes against the recommendation of the citizen committee to remove and replace the statue. The committee, which was created by the board, gave their recommendation during last month’s meeting.

People have been debating and protesting about it for a year. Last summer, the board voted that it would stay.

Before and after Monday’s vote, community members on both sides of the debate weighed in during the public comment potions of the meeting.

A few board members mentioned that it’s the input from the public that helped shaped their decision for the statue to stay.

“After looking over all the viewpoints that have been expressed to me both during public comment and outside of public comment, it’s been made very clear to me that the majority of our residents wish for the Civil War statue to remain in the garden of honor,” Township Clerk Jody Hansen said.

Allendale Township Supervisor Adam Elenbaas was one of the two members to vote against the motion to keep the statue where it is. Instead, Elenbaas was in favor of relocating the statue to a local museum.

“I think there’s also a way to preserve history, simply by moving it,” Elenbaas said.

Before concluding the meeting, the board expressed interest in gathering more information on what it would entail to expand the Garden of Honor and potentially include an additional Civil War statue.

Activists and community members that have fought for the removal of the statue were upset over the board’s decision, saying they plan to have future demonstrations pushing for it to be taken down.

GRA: Excellent--the Board didn't break.

--GRA

 

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Gonna be trouble. Don't do what the negro says and gonna be trouble.