These Confederate flag supporters are literally up in arms over a Georgia proposal to honor MLK
STONE MOUNTAIN, Ga.—A small group of Confederate supporters toting assault rifles and battle flags scaled a mountain with a long southern history on Saturday to denounce a proposed monument to Martin Luther King Jr.
They oppose building a memorial to King on the top of Stone Mountain, a peak outside of Atlanta that is the largest Confederate monument in the country. Known as the Confederate Mount Rushmore, it has portraits of general Stonewall Jackson and other rebel icons etched into the mountain’s face.
On a bright, sunny day Saturday, about 40 demonstrators here waved confederate flags at the mountain’s peak, in a town that is 75% African-American and in a spot where Ku Klux Klan members once burned crosses.
The Southern Poverty Law Center, a nonprofit that tracks hate groups, said in the weeks leading up to yesterday’s rally that it was being sponsored and advertised by the KKK. But the protesters swore they had no association with the Klan.
“It doesn’t have to do with race at all,” insisted Michele Dariano, who drove up from Florida for the event, as she clutched a Confederate battle flag in each hand. “This is not a hate flag. If you’re going to hate on something, learn about it first.”
Wearing shirts declaring “White Lives Matter” and “Confederate Pride,” they marched through the sprawling state park that surrounds the mountain, escorted by a contingent of police officers.
One woman, pushing a child in a stroller, said she wanted to honor her great-great-grandfather, who fought for the Confederacy. “Martin Luther has a place in history, but it sure isn’t here,” she said, asking not to be named.
The proposed monument to Dr. King, a small bell that would sit on the crest of the mountain, would reference his “I Have a Dream” speech, in which he declared, “let freedom ring from Stone Mountain of Georgia.”
But the freedom bell idea hasn’t only seen opposition from Confederacy fans—civil rights groups like the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, which King founded, have also opposed it, suggesting instead that the Confederate carvings be sandblasted off the face of the mountain.