| Return Create A Forum - Home | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| True Left | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| Return to: Colonial Era | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| #Post#: 67-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: July 2, 2020, 11:40 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| OLD CONTENT | |
| https://revcom.us/i/438/800_TrumpLyncher-article.jpg | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVQomlXMeek | |
| Note the section starting how the Republican Party (in 1896 it | |
| was the leftist party), which had many former slaves and ethnic | |
| cooperation allied with the Populist party, which was mostly | |
| Americans of European descent and these people were mostly | |
| farmers. The new Republican-Populist alliance was the Fusion | |
| Party that promptly started to sweep popular support and | |
| elections. This angered the Democratic Party (then the | |
| racist-heavy right wing) and they staged a coup... thus leftists | |
| were not armed well enough then... they should be NOW! | |
| More information here: | |
| www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/08/wilmington-massacre | |
| /536457/ | |
| Local North Carolina conservatives have considered those | |
| perpetrating this event as local heroes, and recently changed | |
| tone to blame the Dems (now the party with strong leftist | |
| elements) of racism. | |
| --- | |
| www.huffpost.com/entry/lynchings-black-americans-reconstruction- | |
| eji-report_n_5eea6f94c5b6d4397ade568a | |
| [quote]White mobs and individuals lynched at least 2,000 more | |
| Black Americans than previously documented, according to a new | |
| report from the Equal Justice Initiative. | |
| The report, released Tuesday, documents confirmed lynchings | |
| during the Reconstruction era, from 1865 to 1876, after the end | |
| of the Civil War and Black Americans� emancipation from slavery. | |
| The group�s previous report on the subject, from 2015, detailed | |
| 4,500 racial terror lynchings from 1877 to 1950 � adding up to | |
| nearly 6,500 confirmed lynchings of Black people in the U.S. | |
| from 1865 to 1950. | |
| EJI notes that thousands more lynchings �may never be | |
| documented,� defining lynchings as when Black people were | |
| �attacked, sexually assaulted and terrorized by white mobs and | |
| individuals� who were largely �shielded from arrest and | |
| prosecution.� | |
| The new report details attacks like one from 1865, when six | |
| Black men were lynched in North Carolina after demanding a white | |
| landowner pay them for their work. And the following year in New | |
| Orleans, white mobs attacked people marching for Black voting | |
| rights, killing an estimated 33 Black people. | |
| �We cannot understand our present moment without recognizing the | |
| lasting damage caused by allowing white supremacy and racial | |
| hierarchy to prevail during Reconstruction,� wrote EJI Director | |
| Bryan Stevenson in a news release. | |
| ... | |
| The report notes that white perpetrators of violence against | |
| Black people during Reconstruction were �almost never held | |
| accountable,� and many were even �celebrated.�[/quote] | |
| NEVER FORGIVE. NEVER FORGET. | |
| --- | |
| www.yahoo.com/news/racial-violence-pandemic-red-summer-090452290 | |
| .html | |
| [quote]Racial strife flaring across the United States. Black | |
| Americans standing up to societal structures in unpredictable | |
| ways. And people enduring months of a deadly pandemic infecting | |
| millions worldwide, shuttering businesses and heightening fears | |
| of a lengthy economic downturn. | |
| That was 1919, during what would later be coined the "Red | |
| Summer," when communities across America were reeling from white | |
| mobs inciting brutality against Black people and cities were | |
| still wrestling with a third wave of the so-called Spanish flu | |
| pandemic that emerged the previous year. | |
| The story line parallels with today: violence against Black | |
| people, leading to mass demonstrations and calls to end systemic | |
| racism, converging with a months-long coronavirus pandemic. Such | |
| commonality is not lost on historians and scholars of African | |
| American history. | |
| ... | |
| What happened during the Red Summer of 1919? | |
| The general mob-led violence against Black people actually began | |
| before the summer in localized incidents. | |
| In the book "Red Summer: The Summer of 1919 and the Awakening of | |
| Black America," author Cameron McWhirter described what led up | |
| to a deadly riot in Jenkins County, Georgia, in April, when | |
| Black churches were burned and Black men killed. | |
| It was just the start: "In coming months, similar horrors would | |
| afflict cities and towns across America. The violence that April | |
| Sunday was only the beginning of what would become known as the | |
| Red Summer of 1919, when riots and lynchings spread throughout | |
| the country, causing havoc and harming thousands � yet also | |
| awakening millions of blacks to fight for rights guaranteed | |
| them, but so long denied." | |
| ... | |
| Ward said that white people were responding to the "ever-present | |
| white fear of a loss of social status and dominance" and were | |
| "resentful of this disruption of social, economic and political | |
| order." | |
| In addition, the influx of African Americans into northern | |
| cities continued as the Spanish flu spread in 1918 before the | |
| pandemic subsided in the summer of 1919, and whites were blaming | |
| Black migrants for the spread of illness. | |
| Historical accounts also described how white military members, | |
| who had returned to Washington after the end of World War I, | |
| seized on sensationalist rumors of Black men assaulting white | |
| women, which was amplified in D.C.'s newspapers. An estimated 40 | |
| people were killed that July in the nation's capital, with | |
| hundreds of federal troops deployed to stamp out the unrest. | |
| ... | |
| In recounting those events, The Washington Post wrote that jobs | |
| were scarce at the time, and many whites felt slighted that a | |
| small number of Blacks could secure low-level government jobs. | |
| "Unlike virtually all the disturbances that preceded it � in | |
| which white-on-black violence dominated � the Washington riot of | |
| 1919 was distinguished by strong, organized and armed black | |
| resistance, foreshadowing the civil rights struggles later in | |
| the century," according to The Post. | |
| Some of the worst multi-day violence occurred in Chicago, where | |
| about two dozen Black people and 15 white people were killed. | |
| The uprisings were sparked after a Black teenager on a raft, | |
| Eugene Williams, drifted into a whites only section of Lake | |
| Michigan and drowned after a white man began throwing rocks at | |
| him, the Chicago Tribune reported. | |
| From April to November, some 30 riots broke out across the | |
| eastern U.S., with hundreds of accounts of beatings, lynchings | |
| and the burning of churches and buildings. As a result of the | |
| violence, the Ku Klux Klan also saw a resurgence. | |
| ... | |
| As bloody as that summer was, it failed to result in any | |
| protections for African Americans, and if anything, Ward said, | |
| "that reign of racial terror, where again the exculpatory work | |
| of the white press, police, grand juries and others ensured that | |
| perpetrators were protected rather than punished, undoubtedly | |
| prolonged the period of American apartheid." | |
| Saje Mathieu, a history professor at the University of | |
| Minnesota, added that some of the violence of 1919 was in many | |
| ways milder in comparison to the "absolute devastation and | |
| destruction" of the massacres in Tulsa, Oklahoma, two years | |
| later and in Rosewood, Florida, in 1923. | |
| The fight for racial justice in 2020 follows a series of | |
| high-profile incidents of Black Americans being killed at the | |
| hands of police or former law enforcement and of Black Americans | |
| having to affirm their place and existence while doing ordinary | |
| things and often facing the threat of police being called on | |
| them. | |
| Mathieu said the blatant racism of 1919 reverberates in other | |
| ways today, including by white women who are caught on viral | |
| videos questioning a Black person's agency and yet don't see | |
| themselves as exhibiting racism. Social media users label them | |
| as a "Karen."[/quote] | |
| NEVER FORGIVE. NEVER FORGET. | |
| #Post#: 68-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: July 2, 2020, 11:42 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://us.yahoo.com/news/1898-wilmington-massacre-essential-lesson-163016733.h… | |
| [quote]The 1898 Wilmington Massacre Is an Essential Lesson in | |
| How State Violence Has Targeted Black Americans | |
| In the summer of 1865, just after the Civil War, Union | |
| commanders in the battered port city of Wilmington, N.C., | |
| appointed a former Confederate general as police chief and | |
| former Confederate soldiers as policemen. | |
| The all-white force immediately set upon newly freed Black | |
| people. Men, women and children were beaten, clubbed and whipped | |
| indiscriminately. A Union officer with the Freedmen�s Bureau | |
| maintained a ledger of daily police assaults: A Black man | |
| whipped 72 times. A Black woman dragged for two miles with a | |
| rope around her neck. A Black man, �his back all raw,� beaten by | |
| police with a buggy trace. | |
| �The policemen are the hardest and most brutal looking and | |
| acting set of civil or municipal officers I ever saw. All look | |
| bad and vicious,� the Union officer reported. | |
| For generations, police and other white authority figures have | |
| perpetuated white supremacy and privilege by assaulting Black | |
| Americans. Slave patrols were an early form of policing. White | |
| police enforced racist post-Civil War Black Code laws and 20th | |
| century Jim Crow segregation. They tolerated, and sometimes | |
| participated in, lynchings of Black men. | |
| Today, the image of a white police officer in Minneapolis | |
| pressing his knee against George Floyd�s neck as he pleaded for | |
| mercy has opened a window on America�s unbroken history of | |
| brutality against African-Americans by white men in uniform. | |
| One of the most terrifying examples erupted more than a century | |
| ago, when white supremacist soldiers and police helped hunt down | |
| and kill at least 60 Black men in Wilmington in 1898. The | |
| murders were part of a carefully orchestrated coup that toppled | |
| a multi-racial government in the South�s most progressive | |
| Black-majority city. | |
| Like many police assaults against Black people in American | |
| history, the goal was more than just punishment and humiliation. | |
| It was to prevent black citizens from exercising their | |
| constitutional rights. Today, as American celebrates | |
| Independence Day it is an opportune moment to reflect on | |
| America�s troubled racial history and how to move forward. | |
| The 1898 coup capped a months-long White Supremacy Campaign in | |
| North Carolina designed to strip black men of the vote and | |
| remove them from public office forever. The prime target was | |
| Wilmington, where black men served as councilmen, magistrates | |
| and police officers in a city with a thriving black middle class | |
| and some 65 black doctors, lawyers and educators. | |
| (Today in North Carolina, conservatives in the state legislature | |
| have continued to try to squash the Black vote through voter | |
| suppression laws and racial gerrymandering schemes that have | |
| been stuck down by federal courts as unconstitutional.) | |
| The 1898 coup, plotted by white politicians and businessmen, | |
| would not have been possible without the city�s white soldiers | |
| and police, who led white vigilantes on a killing spree on Nov. | |
| 10, 1898. This came after white supremacists had bullied the | |
| white police chief into firing the city�s 10 black policemen. | |
| The soldiers served in two all-white state militias in | |
| Wilmington manned and commanded by white supremacists. Both | |
| units ostensibly reported to the state�s governor, but in fact | |
| served as the private militias of the white supremacists who | |
| directed the coup. | |
| Like politicians in the aftermath of George Floyd�s killing, the | |
| coup leaders pressured the governor to call out the militias � | |
| the National Guard of the day � on the pretext that blacks were | |
| rioting. In fact, it was whites who were rioting, led by | |
| soldiers and police. They burned a Black owned newspaper and | |
| shot Black men down in the streets, many of them simply trying | |
| to get home safely. | |
| The militiamen had served in the Spanish-American War in the | |
| summer of 1898 and had not yet been mustered out of federal | |
| service. That meant U.S. soldiers were unleashed against | |
| law-abiding Black citizens of Wilmington � 122 years before | |
| President Trump threatened to deploy the U.S. military against | |
| street protesters. | |
| Like the white vigilantes who were indicted for shooting Ahmaud | |
| Arbery in Georgia after accusing him of burglary, white | |
| vigilantes in Wilmington in 1898 shot Black men accused during | |
| the White Supremacy Campaign of raping white women and stealing | |
| white jobs. | |
| As part of the coup, white supremacists banished leading Black | |
| and white political allies from Wilmington after forcibly | |
| evicting them from office and replacing them with coup leaders. | |
| Militiamen escorted them to the train station at gunpoint. In | |
| the weeks after the coup, more than 2,100 African-Americans fled | |
| Wilmington, turning a black-majority city into a white | |
| supremacist citadel. | |
| It was the most successful and lasting coup in American history. | |
| It instituted white supremacy as official state policy for half | |
| a century and prevented Black citizens from voting in | |
| significant numbers until passage of the Voting Rights Act in | |
| 1965. Two years before the coup, 126,000 black men registered to | |
| vote in North Carolina. Four years after the coup, the number | |
| was 6,100. | |
| After the coup, no Black citizen served in public office in | |
| Wilmington until 1972. No Black citizen from North Carolina was | |
| elected to Congress until 1992. No one was prosecuted or | |
| punished for the killings and violence. President William | |
| McKinley ignored pleas from Black leaders to send in federal | |
| marshals or U.S. troops to protect Black citizens. | |
| The coup was the natural outgrowth of North Carolina�s � and | |
| America�s � long history of relying on white police to | |
| perpetuate white supremacy amid fears of Black uprisings. | |
| In 1831, white supremacist newspapers in North Carolina | |
| published hysterical stories warning, falsely, of an army of | |
| well-armed slaves marching from Virginia to Wilmington to kill | |
| white people, torch the city, and launch a national slave | |
| rebellion during Nat Turner�s famous Virginia slave uprising. | |
| Scores of innocent slaves were lynched after being seized by | |
| white police and vigilantes in North Carolina towns. In | |
| Wilmington, four slaves accused of plotting a �diabolical� | |
| uprising were rounded up by police and decapitated by a white | |
| mob. Their severed heads were mounted on poles along a public | |
| highway known as �Niggerhead Road,� a name that endured until | |
| the 1950s. | |
| More than 60 years after Nat Turner�s execution, his slave | |
| revolt was cited by some white supremacists in Wilmington as | |
| justification for the militia and police violence required to | |
| put down a purported black riot in 1898. | |
| After the coup, the city�s fired Black policemen were replaced | |
| by white supremacists, most of whom had participated in the coup | |
| and murders. White police enforced new city policies that | |
| replaced Black workers with whites. Police often used brute | |
| force to ensure that newly passed Jim Crow laws were obeyed by | |
| Black citizens. | |
| During the 1898 campaign, white police stood by as nightriders | |
| burst into black homes in and around Wilmington, whipping Black | |
| men and threatening to kill them if they dared register to vote. | |
| On Election Day in November 1898, vigilantes beat Black voters | |
| and stuffed ballot boxes in full view of white policemen. | |
| Just a week ago in June 2020, three Wilmington police officers | |
| were fired after a recording emerged in which they used racial | |
| slurs as one officer vowed to �go out and start slaughtering� | |
| black people and �wipe �em off the f�-ing map.� | |
| A Democratic Party Hand Book, published in the summer of 1898 by | |
| what was then the party of white supremacy, laid bare the | |
| lasting intentions of the men who plotted Wilmington�s white | |
| coup: �This is a white man�s country and white men must control | |
| and govern it.�[/quote] | |
| NEVER FORGIVE. NEVER FORGET. | |
| #Post#: 256-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: July 11, 2020, 3:14 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ljvMws31Sw | |
| #Post#: 1152-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: September 13, 2020, 11:41 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2020/10/the-next-reconstruction/61… | |
| [quote]The conditions in America today do not much resemble | |
| those of 1968. In fact, the best analogue to the current moment | |
| is the first and most consequential such awakening�in 1868. The | |
| story of that awakening offers a guide, and a warning. In the | |
| 1860s, the rise of a racist demagogue to the presidency, the | |
| valor of Black soldiers and workers, and the stories of outrages | |
| against the emancipated in the South stunned white northerners | |
| into writing the equality of man into the Constitution. The | |
| triumphs and failures of this anti-racist coalition led America | |
| to the present moment. It is now up to their successors to | |
| fulfill the promises of democracy, to make a more perfect union, | |
| to complete the work of Reconstruction. | |
| They came for George Ruby in the middle of the night, as many as | |
| 50 of them, their faces blackened to conceal their identities. | |
| As the Confederate veterans dragged Ruby from his home, they | |
| mocked him for having believed that he would be safe in Jackson, | |
| Louisiana: �S�pose you thought the United States government | |
| would protect you, did you?� They dragged him at least a mile, | |
| to a creek, where they beat him with a paddle and left him, | |
| half-dressed and bleeding, with a warning: Leave, and never | |
| return. | |
| ... | |
| As the historian Barry A. Crouch recounts in The Dance of | |
| Freedom, Ruby warned that the formerly enslaved were beset by | |
| the �fiendish lawlessness of the whites who murder and outrage | |
| the free people with the same indifference as displayed in the | |
| killing of snakes or other venomous reptiles,�[/quote] | |
| This description is accurate. Indifference, not hate, is the | |
| attitude of rightists. Only leftists are capable of hate. | |
| [quote]The last thing most white Americans wanted was to be | |
| dragged through a bitter conflict over expanding the boundaries | |
| of American citizenship. They wanted to rebuild the country and | |
| get back to business. John Wilkes Booth had been moved to | |
| assassinate Abraham Lincoln not by the Confederate collapse, but | |
| by the president�s openness to extending the franchise to | |
| educated Black men and those who had fought for the Union, an | |
| affront Booth described as �**** citizenship.� | |
| Lincoln�s successor, Andrew Johnson, viewed the Radical | |
| Republican project as an insult to the white men to whom the | |
| United States truly belonged. A Tennessee Democrat and | |
| self-styled champion of the white working class, the president | |
| believed that �Negroes have shown less capacity for government | |
| than any other race of people,� and that allowing the formerly | |
| enslaved to vote would eventually lead to �such a tyranny as | |
| this continent has never yet witnessed.� Encouraged by Johnson�s | |
| words and actions, southern elites worked to reduce the | |
| emancipated to conditions that resembled slavery in all but | |
| name. | |
| Throughout the South, when freedmen signed contracts with their | |
| former masters, those contracts were broken; if they tried to | |
| seek work elsewhere, they were hunted down; if they reported | |
| their concerns to local authorities, they were told that the | |
| testimony of Black people held no weight in court. When they | |
| tried to purchase land, they were denied; when they tried to | |
| borrow capital to establish businesses, they were rejected; when | |
| they demanded decent wages, they were met with violence. | |
| In the midst of these terrors and denials, the emancipated | |
| organized as laborers, protesters, and voters, forming the Union | |
| Leagues and other Republican clubs that would become the basis | |
| of their political power. Southern whites insisted that the | |
| freedmen were unfit for the ballot, even as they witnessed their | |
| sophistication in protest and organization. In fact, what the | |
| former slave masters feared was not that Black people were | |
| incapable of self-government, but the world the emancipated | |
| might create. | |
| From 1868 to 1871, Black people in the South faced a �wave of | |
| counter-revolutionary terror,� the historian Eric Foner has | |
| written, one that �lacks a counterpart either in the American | |
| experience or in that of the other Western Hemisphere societies | |
| that abolished slavery in the nineteenth century.� Texas courts, | |
| according to Foner, �indicted some 500 white men for the murder | |
| of blacks in 1865 and 1866, but not one was convicted.� He cites | |
| one northern observer who commented, �Murder is considered one | |
| of their inalienable state rights.� | |
| The system that emerged across the South was so racist and | |
| authoritarian that one Freedmen�s Bureau agent wrote that the | |
| emancipated �would be just as well off with no law at all or no | |
| Government.� Indeed, the police were often at the forefront of | |
| the violence. In 1866, in New Orleans, police joined an attack | |
| on Republicans organizing to amend the state constitution; | |
| dozens of the mostly Black delegates were killed. General Philip | |
| Sheridan wrote in a letter to Ulysses S. Grant that the incident | |
| �was an absolute massacre by the police � perpetrated without | |
| the shadow of a necessity.� The same year, in Memphis, white | |
| police officers started a fight with several Black Union | |
| veterans, then used the conflict as a justification to begin | |
| firing at Black people�civilians and soldiers alike�all over the | |
| city. The killing went on for days. | |
| These stories began to reach the North in bureaucratic | |
| dispatches like Ruby�s, in newspaper accounts, and in testimony | |
| to the congressional committee on Reconstruction. Northerners | |
| heard about Lucy Grimes of Texas, whose former owner demanded | |
| that she beat her own son, then had Grimes beaten to death when | |
| she refused. Her killers went unpunished because the court would | |
| not hear �negro testimony.� Northerners also heard about Madison | |
| Newby, a former Union scout from Virginia driven by �rebel | |
| people� from land he had purchased, who testified that former | |
| slave masters were �taking the colored people and tying them up | |
| by the thumbs if they do not agree to work for six dollars a | |
| month.� And they heard about Glasgow William, a Union veteran in | |
| Kentucky who was lynched in front of his wife by the Ku Klux | |
| Klan for declaring his intent to vote for �his old commander.� | |
| (Newspapers sympathetic to the white South dismissed such | |
| stories; one called the KKK the �phantom of diseased | |
| imaginations.�) | |
| ... | |
| �I saw in various hospitals negroes, women as well as men, whose | |
| ears had been cut off or whose bodies were slashed with knives | |
| or bruised with whips, or bludgeons, or punctured with shot | |
| wounds. Dead negroes were found in considerable number in the | |
| country roads or on the fields, shot to death, or strung upon | |
| the limbs of trees. In many districts the colored people were in | |
| a panic of fright, and the whites in a state of almost insane | |
| irritation against them.� | |
| When Schurz returned to Washington, Johnson refused to hear his | |
| findings. The president had already set his mind to maintaining | |
| the United States as a white man�s government. He told Schurz | |
| that a report was unnecessary, then silently waited for Schurz | |
| to leave. | |
| ... | |
| In his �Swing Around the Circle� tour, Johnson gave angry | |
| speeches before raucous crowds, comparing himself to Lincoln, | |
| calling for some Radical Republicans to be hanged as traitors, | |
| and blaming the New Orleans riot on those who had called for | |
| Black suffrage in the first place, saying, �Every drop of blood | |
| that was shed is upon their skirts and they are responsible.� He | |
| blocked the measures that Congress took up to protect the rights | |
| of the emancipated, describing them as racist against white | |
| people. He told Black leaders that he was their �Moses,� even as | |
| he denied their aspirations to full citizenship.[/quote] | |
| Does this remind you of anyone? | |
| [quote]Black Americans today do not face the same wave of terror | |
| they did in the 1860s. Still, George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and | |
| Ahmaud Arbery were only the most recent names Americans learned. | |
| There was Eric Garner, who was choked to death on a New York | |
| City sidewalk during an arrest as he rasped, �I can�t breathe.� | |
| There was Walter Scott in North Charleston, South Carolina, who | |
| was shot in the back while fleeing an officer. There was Laquan | |
| McDonald in Chicago, who was shot 16 times by an officer who | |
| kept firing even as McDonald lay motionless on the ground. There | |
| was Stephon Clark, who was gunned down while using a cellphone | |
| in his grandmother�s backyard in Sacramento, California. There | |
| was Natasha McKenna, who died after being tased in a Virginia | |
| prison. There was Freddie Gray, who was seen being loaded into | |
| the back of a Baltimore police van in which his spinal cord was | |
| severed. There was Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old in Cleveland with a | |
| toy gun who was killed by police within moments of their | |
| arrival.[/quote] | |
| NEVER FORGIVE. NEVER FORGET. | |
| #Post#: 2444-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: November 23, 2020, 2:35 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v771c6cx-Pg | |
| #Post#: 3085-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trump disapproval | |
| By: Starling Date: January 3, 2021, 5:42 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Want to understand Trump? Look at George Wallace | |
| https://www.houstonchronicle.com/opinion/outlook/article/Want-to-understand-Tru… | |
| https://s.hdnux.com/photos/75/70/55/16223074/3/500x0.jpg | |
| Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace is shown in this Oct. 19, 1964 | |
| file photo speaking in Glen Burnie, Md. at a rally supporting | |
| then Republican presidential candidate Sen. Barry Goldwater. | |
| [Goldwater was a Jew] | |
| Wallace, the one-time firebrand segregationist who was paralyzed | |
| by a would-be assassin's bullet as he campaigned for the | |
| presidency in 1972, died Sunday, Sept. 13, 1998. He was 79. | |
| [quote] | |
| In late September 1968, presidential election polls showed that | |
| third-party candidate George Wallace's campaign was surging. | |
| With the support of a quarter of white voters, Wallace was | |
| within single digits of the Democratic nominee, Vice President | |
| Hubert Humphrey. Wallace's dominance in Southern states | |
| threatened to prevent any candidate from securing an electoral | |
| college majority, which would throw the November election into | |
| the House of Representatives. | |
| His was an extraordinary rise. In his inaugural speech as | |
| Alabama governor just five years earlier, Wallace had promised | |
| �segregation today, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.� | |
| He then gained national attention by personally standing in a | |
| schoolhouse door at the University of Alabama to block the | |
| admission of two black students. | |
| By 1968, he seldom used explicitly racist language but instead | |
| demanded �law and order� and railed against �crime,� �drugs,� | |
| �welfare mothers,� �forced busing� and �big city thugs.� He | |
| created the racially encoded language that still haunts our | |
| politics. | |
| So when President Trump whips up rallies with his thinly veiled | |
| racist attacks on brown-skinned immigrants, Muslims and | |
| unpatriotic blacks, it is not a new development. The racial | |
| divide has been a political tool for those willing to use it for | |
| 50 years. As former President Obama pointed out in his Sept. 7 | |
| speech: �It did not start with Donald Trump. He is a symptom, | |
| not the cause. He's just capitalizing on resentments that | |
| politicians have been fanning for years.� | |
| In 1968, the white backlash to the civil rights movement and the | |
| �60s urban riots drew voters to Wallace. But others took note - | |
| particularly Richard Nixon's campaign advisor Kevin Phillips | |
| who, in his book �The Emerging Republican Majority,� saw the | |
| potential of a major partisan realignment. Over the next six | |
| years, President Nixon adapted a more subtle version of the | |
| Wallace message, appealing to what he called �the silent | |
| majority.� In the years that followed, white voters in the once | |
| solidly Democratic South became the bedrock of the GOP. | |
| The Republican Party's Southern strategy initially focused on | |
| shifting voters with a segregationist bent to the party, but it | |
| proved adaptable to other whites uneasy with the increasing role | |
| of minorities in American life and politics. These appeals | |
| resurfaced many times over the years, most memorably in the | |
| infamous Willie Horton ad during George H.W. Bush's 1988 | |
| campaign, but also in the symbolism of Ronald Reagan's decision | |
| to make his first 1980 campaign appearance at the Neshoba County | |
| Fair in Philadelphia, Miss. - where three civil rights workers | |
| were murdered in 1964. With the election of Obama and a growing | |
| awareness that whites will eventually be a minority in America, | |
| the ground for such appeals has stayed quite fertile. | |
| When Trump descended from Trump Tower in 2015, he immediately | |
| set himself apart from the gaggle of GOP presidential contenders | |
| by replacing the coy racial language of his predecessors with an | |
| unfiltered bullhorn. He has railed against prominent black | |
| leaders and athletes, talked about brown-skinned immigrants as | |
| murderers and rapists, and insisted dark-skinned Muslims | |
| constitute such a threat that we need to ban travel from entire | |
| countries. | |
| Wallace's bid for the presidency faltered in its final weeks, | |
| but a very small shift of voters in four states would have | |
| deadlocked the race. Wallace poured gasoline on the fire of | |
| racial division first, but Trump managed to carry that flame all | |
| the way into the White House. Who would have predicted that 50 | |
| years after the 1968 election, polls would show that more than | |
| half of Americans think their president is a racist? | |
| Many factors have contributed to today's tribalistic politics, | |
| but race remains the bedrock of that division. Transcending | |
| racism is essential if our government is to break out of its | |
| current paralysis. If we do not succeed and Wallace's legacy of | |
| dividing us by race continues to shape American political life, | |
| then perhaps he won after all. | |
| [/quote] | |
| JJ had an excellent essay on Dixie that included a section on | |
| Wallace. | |
| #Post#: 3097-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: guest5 Date: January 4, 2021, 12:58 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote]Many factors have contributed to today's tribalistic | |
| politics, but race remains the bedrock of that division. | |
| Transcending racism is essential if our government is to break | |
| out of its current paralysis.[/quote] | |
| That sentence alone gives me some hope that Americans will get | |
| their act together and save America before it's too late. If | |
| only more Americans spoke like this and used similar | |
| vocabulary.... | |
| #Post#: 4387-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: February 21, 2021, 9:33 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| What I was saying earlier: | |
| https://www.yahoo.com/news/regret-inform-history-not-save-132700762.html | |
| [quote]I regret to inform you all that history will not save | |
| America from itself | |
| I know you've been hearing this proclamation on network news and | |
| reading it in columns for years. | |
| "History will judge us." "History will repudiate Donald Trump | |
| and the January 6 rioters." | |
| ... | |
| This sounds good, but there is a danger in the notion that | |
| history will reveal the truth of our moment and sort the good | |
| from the bad. | |
| ... | |
| The past does not change, but our telling of it does. Americans | |
| are famous for concealment by omission. It is only in the last | |
| year or two that there has been widespread awareness of the | |
| Tulsa Massacre of 1921, for example, when racists destroyed | |
| "Black Wall Street" and murdered the people who lived there in a | |
| fit of organized rage. | |
| That was only one of our country's multiple genocides against | |
| Black Americans, but we don't talk about a lot of those. They | |
| aren't pleasant, and they do not fit in with the narrative that | |
| America is the longest standing multi-racial democracy in the | |
| world. | |
| Just as it was easier for Americans in the past to forget the | |
| importance of the Tulsa Massacre, it could be easier for | |
| Americans in the future to forget about the ugliness that led to | |
| the January 6 attack on The Capitol. | |
| It's also possible that future Americans could manipulate the | |
| events around January 6. We already saw that happen immediately | |
| after the attack. Some right wing media tried to pin the blame | |
| on Antifa and polling indicates that now that what half of | |
| Republicans believe. It's quite possible that future generations | |
| could believe that as well.[/quote] | |
| In short, history is written by the victors. To assume history | |
| will agree with us is to assume we will win. Instead of assuming | |
| we will win, we should focus on making sure we actually win. | |
| But no, "Americans" are not famous for concealment by omission. | |
| Westerners are. "Americans" did not find it easy to forget the | |
| Tulsa Massacre. Americans were the victims in the Tulsa | |
| Massacre! It was the Western occupiers, who massacred those | |
| Americans, who also found it easy to forget it. | |
| #Post#: 5217-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 1, 2021, 10:29 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.yahoo.com/news/white-mobs-rioted-washington-1848-113301086.html | |
| [quote]White mobs rioted in Washington in 1848 to defend | |
| slaveholders' rights after 76 Black enslaved people staged an | |
| unsuccessful mass escape on a boat | |
| ... | |
| On the night of April 15, the Pearl left Washington. Seventy-six | |
| Black men, women and children, having quietly left area farms, | |
| hid beneath the deck. Drayton and Sayres steered the ship down | |
| the Potomac River. They were bound for Philadelphia, where | |
| slavery was illegal. | |
| The fugitives did not get far. Owners soon noticed their absence | |
| and formed a posse to find them. The posse, aboard a steamboat, | |
| overtook and commandeered the Pearl as it entered Chesapeake Bay | |
| on April 17. The next day, the fugitives and their white | |
| abettors were marched through Washington and thrown in the city | |
| jail. | |
| ... | |
| Furious at the conspirators� challenge to the social order, | |
| Washington�s white population wanted to punish someone. With | |
| Drayton and Sayres awaiting trial behind bars, white | |
| supremacists turned against the abolitionist press. | |
| ... | |
| The nights of April 18 and 19, thousands gathered outside the | |
| National Era�s offices. They gave speeches and spread a false | |
| rumor about journalists� involvement in the Pearl escape. The | |
| protesters� leaders reportedly included U.S. government clerks. | |
| Soon the protesters turned violent. They threw rocks at the | |
| building the first night and intended to destroy it the second. | |
| ... | |
| James K. Polk, the nation�s president, both defended slavery and | |
| enriched himself by it. He enslaved more than 50 people on his | |
| Mississippi cotton plantation. While editing his letters, the | |
| final volume of them just published, I often read his complaints | |
| about escapes from there. Like other slave owners, he relied on | |
| relatives and paid agents to capture, return and physically | |
| punish the fugitives. | |
| After the Pearl escape, Polk shared the rioters� belief in white | |
| supremacy and their indignation at resistance to enslavement. He | |
| also shared their hostility toward abolitionists and pro-reform | |
| newspapers, blaming those in his diary for the whole incident: | |
| �The outrage committed by stealing or seducing the slaves � had | |
| produced the excitement & the threatened violence on the | |
| abolition press.� | |
| ... | |
| Captains Drayton and Sayres suffered for their efforts. | |
| Convicted of illegally transporting slaves, they remained | |
| incarcerated until President Millard Fillmore pardoned them in | |
| 1852. | |
| Even worse off were the people they had helped escape. | |
| Abolitionists bought a very few their liberty, but nearly all | |
| returned to slavery. Many were sold farther south, more distant | |
| than ever from their dream of freedom.[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 6315-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: May 12, 2021, 1:57 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://us.yahoo.com/news/anti-white-watch-racist-answer-085222376.html | |
| [quote]Anti-White Watch, a platform �dedicated to documenting | |
| bias, policies, hate, and violence directed at ethnic-European | |
| people worldwide.� Its main web portal maintains a heat map and | |
| database of alleged anti-white incidents�focusing on accounts of | |
| brutal violence supposedly enacted by non-white perpetrators, | |
| pulled from across the web by admins and readers. It also | |
| catalogues numerous alleged hate-crime �hoaxes,� incidents that | |
| many on the right believe malicious actors�often assumed to be | |
| liberal elites�either inflate or fully fabricate in order to | |
| stoke racial tensions for their benefit, and to slander white | |
| people as racists. | |
| �They try to both minimize the apparent threat from the far | |
| right,� Kurt Braddock, an expert on white-supremacist | |
| communication and radicalization strategies at American | |
| University, told The Daily Beast, �and to make it seem like the | |
| real threat to America is minorities.� | |
| ... | |
| White bigots started fabricating accounts of violence allegedly | |
| committed by non-white people, especially Black men, at least as | |
| far back as the antebellum era. Initially, these tales served as | |
| a justification for America�s uniquely brutal form of slavery, | |
| and wider racist legal framework. After the Civil War, the same | |
| sort of fear-mongering anecdotes were repurposed to support | |
| segregation and other forms of oppression, as well as brutal | |
| reprisals against any non-white person who (literally) so much | |
| as looked at a white person wrong. | |
| ... | |
| These new efforts seem to be modeling themselves on the | |
| Anti-Defamation League[/quote] | |
| Reminder: | |
| http://aryanism.net/blog/aryan-sanctuary/droptheadl/ | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| Next Page |