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Fla. School Will Remain Named after KKK Leader

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Ron Word, AP, Nov. 4, 2008

A Florida school board voted late Monday night to keep the name of a Confederate general and early Ku Klux Klan leader at a majority black high school, despite opposition from a black board member who said the school’s namesake was a “terrorist and racist.”

After hearing about three hours of public comments, Duval County School Board members voted 5-2 to the retain the name of Nathan Bedford Forrest High School. The board’s two black members cast the only votes to change the name.

“(Forrest) was a terrorist and a racist,” argued board member Brenda Priestly Jackson, who is black.

{snip}

The board listened to passionate arguments from those on both sides. More than 140 people crowded into the meeting room, with another 20 watching the meeting on a television in the lobby.

Many urged a name change, saying the Forrest name was an insult.

{snip}

Forrest High School, which has received two consecutive “F” grades on state assessment tests, opened as an all-white school in the 1950s. Its name was suggested by the Daughters of the Confederacy, who saw it as a protest to the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that eventually integrated the nation’s public schools.

But now more than half Forrest High’s students are black.

The issue has come up several times during the past half-century, but the School Board has never changed the name. Jacksonville has three other schools named after Confederate generals, but it also has schools named after civil rights icons.

{snip}

Original article

(Posted on November 5, 2008)

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Comments

1 — Anonymous wrote at 5:01 PM on November 5:

This is not a small victory.

Given that the school scores an ‘F’ twice because of stupid students, as a white man, I wouldn’t want the name of Forrest to be associated with failure.

Go ahead and change the name. How does ‘Obama The Great’ sound?

2 — gemalo wrote at 5:21 PM on November 5:

Did they think that changing the name would make it an ‘A’ school? I would bet that more than half the present students wouldn’t even know who Forrest was. They probably thought it was named for Forrest Gump.

3 — Wayne Engle wrote at 6:27 PM on November 5:

If it’s really time to “turn the page,” as the one black board member said, then let’s quit harping on slavery, Jim Crow, lynching (which did NOT happen only to blacks), and truly “move on from where we are.” Perhaps our new president elect, the Mulatto Messiah, will lead us out of this wilderness of dwelling on ancient grievances. But don’t hold your breath until he does.

4 — Anonymous wrote at 10:32 PM on November 5:

Who gives a flying rip at a rolling doughnut hole if they change the name of the Afrocentric institution ? But bringing Forrest name down in infamy with their skewed Afro-idiot logic won’t go . If the name must be changed ,then they had best find another reason and leave this brave man’s memory alone .

5 — Anonymous wrote at 10:39 PM on November 5:

Why would anyone even care about the name of their school? You’re there for three or four years, then you move on to college. It’s just a stop in one’s academic career, not a destination.

6 — Strider wrote at 10:40 PM on November 5:

I agree with the first comment. The student body now infesting the school is unworthy of Gen. Forrest’s name. “St. Obama” sounds about right, though Malcolm X, Rodney King, Al Sharpton, Alcee Hastings or Rae Carruth would work just as well.

7 — Simon Pure wrote at 12:06 AM on November 6:

And why not? Chicago has a city college named for Malcom X.

8 — BeenHereTooLong wrote at 12:12 AM on November 6:

Maybe Gen. Forrest would prefer that his name be removed from the school now because of the makeup of its student body. I think he would find it insulting for his name to remain attached to that school. I agree with the first poster, “Obama the Great High School” sounds good to me. Oh, for the likes of Generals Lee, Jackson, Forrest, Stuart, Johnston, Pendleton, Admiral Semmes, Col. John S. Mosby, and a host of others like them to be alive today at the head of a resurrected army of the Confederate dead. They would know what to do.

9 — Anonymous wrote at 12:46 AM on November 6:

This is very soon to become a hate crime punishable by decades in prison.

10 — Aware wrote at 2:15 AM on November 6:

Hooray! Good to see a right decision made for a change. The great commander’s name will grace their institution if nothing will.

“The issue has come up several times during the past half-century, but the School Board has never changed the name. Jacksonville has three other schools named after Confederate generals, but it also has schools named after civil rights icons.”

Thank God for the Forrest decision, the playing field has been leveled ( somewhat ).

11 — HH wrote at 6:20 AM on November 6:

Actually, I think Forrest would be horrified to have his name on a school half filled with backward Black failures.

12 — Mike wrote at 1:07 PM on November 6:

small victory. They should be more worried about the failing grades from the black sutdents and making the school better. Deo Vindice.

13 — Tom Iron wrote at 3:44 PM on November 6:

Forrest was the most interesting civil war general of them all. He was the only person on either side who started the war as a private and finished as a general. He lost everything during the war and and ended up his life as the president of a railroad. Pretty fair acheivement for any lifetime. And the blacks don’t want to be associated with a person like that? Says a lot about them I think.

Tom Iron…

14 — Fed Up wrote at 4:23 PM on November 6:

Thank GOD for a touch of sanity. If Blacks made as big a deal of Black kids doing drugs, committing crimes. Failing in school. Dressing in outlandish garb, acting more like circus freaks than rational human beings.

Every time I hear a Black whine about how Whites look down on their race… I have to laugh. The image we Whites have of Blacks is an image BLACKS create. Not that Blacks generally have enough brains (smarts) to understand that logic).


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