And down come the monuments to the Confederacy....

Definitely.

I've read the mafia would buy politicians by "leaking" a false story to reporters, or having their own work as reporters. The story would print, the public figure would sue, and the case settled out of court. That was how bribes moved in the money loop. The media company would receive a "philanthropic" gift to cover their losses. I reckon vandalism can boost the value of a piece, certainly it's rarity. I'll look for the specific cases I'm thinking about.
 
I haven't found the corporate example yet, I'll start over. I'm still looking for the mafia bribe story, but I did find this: Primerica, a pyramid scheme, whose parent company are Citigroup, paid billions in life insurance policies to 9/11 victims.

http://www.businessinsider.com/citigroup-primerica-ipo-2010-4

COINTELPRO/PATCON are preparing their partners in the city and university circles for escalated violence, by artificially jacking up the values of policies on historic landmarks.
 
[h=1]As others tear down Confederate monuments, Alabama unveils a new one[/h]
As cities across the country are tearing down and relocating Confederate monuments, a county in southern Alabama on Sunday unveiled a new one.Several hundred people attended a dedication ceremony for the "Unknown Alabama Confederate Soldiers" at Confederate Veterans Memorial Park in Crenshaw County, Alabama, 55 miles (88 kilometers) south of Montgomery.

More at: https://www.yahoo.com/news/confederate-monument-unknown-soldiers-unveiled-alabama-222028915.html
 
Some of the statues are generic dedications to common confederate soldiers.

If I disagree with the Vietnam War, should I take a bulldozer to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial?

If one disagrees with the Korean War, should that person punch a Korean War vet?
 
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Its cool quoting 1984, but this one doesn't apply in our society.
Huxleyan describes our mainstream society. You only see Orwell, when your views become marginal. The happy middle ground is always Huxleyan, but on the fringe, out there in the "borderlands", its Orwellian.
 
From Zero Hedge:





Ajax-1 Aug 28, 2017 11:01 PM
All statues, street signs and and memorials to the Rev. MLK must be removed from punlic property due to the governing principle of "Seperation of Church and State". If the government wont do it, it's up to the people to do it. TEAR IT DOWN, TEAR IT DOWN, TEAR IT DOWN, TEAR IT DOWN, TEAR IT DOWN, TEAT IT DOWN, TEAR IT DOWN, TEAR IT DOWN, TEAR IT DOWN, TEAR IT DOWN.
 
[h=1]As others tear down Confederate monuments, Alabama unveils a new one[/h]
As cities across the country are tearing down and relocating Confederate monuments, a county in southern Alabama on Sunday unveiled a new one.Several hundred people attended a dedication ceremony for the "Unknown Alabama Confederate Soldiers" at Confederate Veterans Memorial Park in Crenshaw County, Alabama, 55 miles (88 kilometers) south of Montgomery.

More at: https://www.yahoo.com/news/confederate-monument-unknown-soldiers-unveiled-alabama-222028915.html

NEW CONFEDERATE MONUMENTS ARE QUIETLY GOING UP ACROSS THE U.S.

New Confederate statues and plaques are appearing across the country, and authorities are powerless to act because many are being built on private land.

The white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August inspired a wave of revulsion toward monuments honoring the slave-owning Confederacy.

After "racist" (quotation marks mine) groups gathered in the Virginia college town to protest the planned removal of a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee, demonstrators in Durham, North Carolina, reacted by taking down Confederate soldiers' monuments, while authorities in towns and universities across the country removed statues from public land.

But those who honor the Confederacy have been quietly working to preserve, and even increase, the number of Confederate monuments.

gettyimages-835826394-1.jpg

An 8-foot statue of a Confederate soldier in Lee Park, in Pensacola, Florida, on August 20.
JOE RAEDLE/GETTY IMAGES


In the small town of Orange, on the Texas-Louisiana border, the privately funded Confederate Memorial of the Wind is nearing completion. Stretching across a half-acre, the monument’s 13 pillars, each representing a Confederate state, rise from a circular base. It will eventually be surrounded by poles flying Confederate battle flags.

In Chickamauga, Georgia, last year, a new statue to a Confederate soldiers was raised, funded by the Sons of Confederate Veterans, a society that aims to keep the memory of the Confederacy alive.

Local chapters of the group have placed plaques for Confederate soldiers killed in minor skirmishes in Tennessee, and the group is fundraising for a National Confederate Museum on the grounds of its headquarters in Columbia, Tennessee, with construction set to start in 2018.

Monuments have also gone up this year on the spot of the battle of Aiken, South Carolina; Crenshaw County Park, Alabama; and, in 2016, in the town of Dahlonega, Georgia.

more..http://www.newsweek.com/new-confederate-monuments-are-quietly-going-across-us-690798
 
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