• Its_Always_420
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    537 months ago

    The Daughters settled in the former Confederate capital after Governor William Tuck, who spent his governorship fighting civil rights laws, offered the land. Virginia’s General Assembly approved the offer in 1950 and tacked on $10,000 toward construction fees. The deed, however, included stipulations: If the UDC doesn’t use the property for five years, it reverts to the Commonwealth. The UDC cannot sell the building, because the state controls the land; the group cannot move it, because it’s marble. If they ever couldn’t pay for upkeep, they would have to abandon the memorial.

    Their racist headquarters is eventually going to be seized by the state.

    • chaogomu
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      357 months ago

      They look around first and then slightly giggle as they use racist slurs of all stripes.

  • @SCB@lemmy.world
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    307 months ago

    This article is amazing. If you are just hopping to the comments, as we all often do, I urge you to read it.

    This kind of long-form, high-effort journalism is largely dead these days and you owe it to yourself to enjoy this read.

    Not only a look at the UDC, but a sideways indictment of the entire Southern culture of faux-friendliness and conflict avoidance, and how it reinforces Lost Cause, while also shedding light on the ingrained cultural reasons why people believe these crazy things.

    Really, really great writing.

  • @ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    It would be interesting to look at the decline of the UDC in the context of the decline of fraternal (sororal?) organizations in general. How much worse is the UDC doing than similar but non-controversial civic organizations are?

    • WashedOver
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      47 months ago

      Why stop at non-controversial when there are groups like Mothers for Liberty that are guilty of quoting Hitler in their news letters, that seem to draw more attention in these modern times where civility and conduct are long gone.