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The UN Calls It Cultural Genocide Against Whites

The United Nations considers it a matter of international law:

[I]t is prohibited to commit any acts of hostility directed against historic monuments, works of art or places of worship which constitute the cultural or spiritual heritage of peoples.

But since the UN won’t speak up for American whites, we will. Here are monuments — every one representing the heritage of whites — that have come down since the death of George Floyd. All these purged heroes are in addition to the scores of Confederate monuments and memorials to Christopher Columbus that have also come down.

Senator Edward Ward Carmack (D-TN), a rival to the “mother of the Civil Rights Movement,” Ida B. Wells, in Nashville, TN. Destroyed by vandals on May 30. (Credit Image: Kenneth C. Zirkel via Wikimedia)

Philadelphia Mayor and Police Chief Frank Rizzo, in Philadelphia, PA. Removed by the city on June 3. (Credit Image: RegBarc via Wikimedia)

Segregationist Dearborn Mayor Orville L. Hubbard, in Dearborn, MI. Removed by the city on June 5. (Credit Image: Anne B. Hood via Wikimedia)

Jerry Richardson, former player in, and owner of, the NFL; and founder of the Carolina Panthers. His statue in Charlotte, NC, at the entrance of Bank of America Stadium, where the Carolina Panthers play, was removed on June 10 by the team itself. (Credit Image: Screengrab via YouTube, video by The Charlotte Observer.)

Caesar Rodney, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, in Wilmington, DE. Removed by the city on June 12. (Credit Image: McGhiever via Wikimedia)

John McDonogh, businessman and supporter of the American Colonization Society, in New Orleans, LA. Destroyed by vandals on June 13. (Credit Image: Infrogmation of New Orleans via Wikimedia)

“The Pioneer” on the University of Oregon campus in Eugene, OR. Toppled and defaced by vandals on June 13, put into storage by the University on June 14. (Credit Image: Daderot via Wikimedia)

“The Pioneer Mother” on the University of Oregon campus in Eugene, OR. Toppled and defaced by vandals on June 13, put into storage by the University on June 14. (Credit Image: Akendall via Wikimedia)

Thomas Jefferson at Jefferson High School in Portland, OR. Destroyed by vandals on June 14. (Credit Image: Travis Thurston via Wikimedia)

Juan de Oñate y Salazar, conquistador and Spanish colonial governor. Removed by Río Arriba County on June 15. (Credit Image: A d v a n c e d Source P r o d u c t i o n s via Wikimedia)

Juan de Oñate y Salazar in Albuquerque, NM. Removed by the city on June 16. (Credit Image: Chris English via Wikimedia)

June 16, 2020, Raleigh, NC: Workers with Carolina Stone Setting Company remove the statue of Josephus Daniels from Raleigh’s Nash Square. (Credit Image: © TNS via ZUMA Wire)

John Sutter, a California Gold Rush pioneer, in Sacramento, CA. Removed by Sutter Health (which owns the property where the statue was) on June 16. (Credit Image: Ronbo67 via Wikimedia)

Diego de Vargas, Spanish colonial governor, in Santa Fe, NM. Removed by the city on June 18. (Credit Image: Deb Nystrom via Wikimedia)

George Washington in Portland, OR. Destroyed by vandals on June 18. (Credit Image: Joe Mabel via Wikimedia)

Francis Scott Key in San Francisco, CA. Destroyed by vandals on June 18. (Credit Image: King of Hearts via Wikimedia)

Ulysses S. Grant in San Francisco, CA. Destroyed by vandals on June 18. (Credit Image: Daderot via Wikimedia)

Calvin Griffith, former owner of the Minnesota Twins, in front of Target Field in Minneapolis, MN. Removed by the Twins on June 19. (Credit Image: Heather Greene via Wikimedia)

Plywood marks the spot where a statue of former Minnesota Twins owner Calvin Griffith stood outside Target Field in Minneapolis, MN. (Credit Image: © TNS via ZUMA Wire)

A memorial to George Preston Marshall stands on the grounds of Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium in Washington. Marshall owned the Washington Redskins from 1932 to 1969. The stadium served as the Redskins home between 1961 and 1996. It was removed by Events DC on June 19. (Credit Image: © Chuck Myers / ZUMA Wire)

Thomas Jefferson in Decatur, GA. Removed by the city on June 19. (Credit Image: Eric_W_Kennedy via Wikimedia)

Father Junípero Serra, Roman Catholic Spanish priest and friar of the Franciscan Order, in San Francisco, CA. Destroyed by vandals on June 19.(Credit Image: Burkhard Mücke via Wikimedia)

Father Junípero Serra in Los Angeles, CA. Destroyed by vandals on June 20. (Credit Image: Visitor7 via Wikimedia)

Father Junípero Serra at the grounds of Mission San Luis Obispo de Tolosa in San Luis Obispo, CA. Removed by the church on June 22. (Credit Image: MARELBU / Wikimedia)

Father Junípero Serra in Sacramento, CA. Destroyed by vandals on July 4. (Credit Image: Nathan Hughes Hamilton via Wikimedia)

Father Junípero Serra in Ventura, CA. Removed by the city on July 26. (Credit Image: Ken Lund via Wikimedia)

The “Forward” statue in Madison, WI. Destroyed by vandals on June 23. (Credit Image: Carptrash via Wikimedia)

John C. Calhoun in Charleston, SC. Removed by the city on June 23. (Credit Image: AudeVivere via Wikimedia)

Thomas Jefferson on the grounds of Hofstra University in Hempstead, NY. Removed by the university on June 23. (Credit Image: Paul Berendsen via Wikimedia)

Hans Christian Heg, a Union officer in the Civil War and abolitionist, in Madison, WI. Destroyed by vandals on June 23. (Credit Image: Daderot via Wikimedia)

Unionist Civil War Monument in Denver, CO. Destroyed by vandals on June 25. (Credit Image: Daderot via Wikimedia)

Kit Carson, frontiersman and military officer, in Denver, CO. Removed by the city on June 26. (Credit Image: Daderot via Wikimedia)