"The bad guys don't deserve statues", Taylor Swift

The singer asks Tennessee leaders to get rid of the monuments of white supremacists.

"Coming from Tennessee, it makes me sick that there are monuments in our state that celebrate racist historical figures who have done evil things," wrote 30-year-old Taylor Swift on her social media. "Edward Carmack and Nathan Bedford Forrest were despicable figures in the history of our state and should be treated as such."

Carmack was the editor of a newspaper and an American senator. A segregationist, he published editorials that incited crowds to attack civil rights journalist Ida B. Wells. The Carmack statue, which was erected in front of the Capitol building in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1927 and was demolished by protesters on May 30.

Film actress, songwriter, singer, musician

Last Monday, Tennessee said it would replace the monument because of the law, a move Taylor Swift described as "wasting state funds and a missed opportunity to do what is right."

The star also asked for the removal of a monument to Nathan Bedford Forrest, general of the Confederate army and first great wizard of the Klu Klux Klan, in the building of the State Capitol, as well as the annual celebration which celebrates it, according to Insider.

The interpreter of "Bad Blood" went directly to the Capitol Commission and the Tennessee Historical Commission to plan to bring down the statues of these racist figures.

Cities like San Diego, Jacksonville, Louisville and others have already removed these monuments.

On Twitter, she asked her fans to go to the polls in the next U.S. presidential election in November and vote in favor of the change:

"Racial injustice is deeply rooted in local government and government, changes MUST take place. For policies to change, we must elect people who will fight police violence and racism of all kinds."

The statue of a slave trader thrown into a river

Video by Clemence chevallet