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Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Corfa Coleman.
The U.S.
Coast Guard is reaffirming that the display of nooses and swastikas are displays of symbols of hate.
That's after a new Coast Guard policy appeared to downgrade the severity of the symbols.
From member station WHO and Norfolk, Steve Walsh reports.
As first reported by the Washington Post,
the Coast Guard released a new harassment manual which labeled things such as displaying the Confederate flag as merely divisive.
The manual also eliminates a standalone process for investigating instances of hate.
The Coast Guard pushed back at the idea that the policy had been weakened,
but late Thursday issued a new policy saying that nooses and swastikas and other symbols of hate must be removed from all Coast Guard facilities.
The Department of Defense has been going through a similar process of reviewing hazing,
bullying and harassment definitions across the military, but has not released a policy.
For NPR News, I'm Steve Walsh.
U.S.
Army Secretary Dan Driscoll is in Ukraine.