Posted on 12/22/2002 9:47:10 AM PST by lowbridge
Even when racial issues are not overt, race is often used in more subtle ways by white Republican politicians to garner votes, said Culpepper Clark, an Alabama historian and author who specializes in the history of race in that state. And that, Clark said, is why Lott's comments are so threatening to Republicans.
"You don't have to be a racist to get votes by playing the race card," said Clark when asked about Alabama's two Republican senators, Richard Shelby and Jeff Sessions. "Both of those politicians and the entire Republican South know how to get votes, and getting votes means playing the race card. I don't think Trent Lott is any different in that respect. He was just stupid to say what he said. He said what was sub rosa and pulled it above ground. That's why the Republicans themselves can't deal with it now. He outed them."
(Excerpt) Read more at newsday.com ...
Lott problems call to mind record of others, like Allen
"...Among them: Allen's display in his Earlysville home of the Confederate battle flag and the noose he kept in plain view in his law office in Charlottesville as a supposed emblem of his commitment to law and order.
As a state delegate, he opposed a Virginia holiday for the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. because King was from Georgia, which, as Allen pointed out at the time, had yet to honor the civil-rights martyr.
Allen also voted against legislation dumping the racially offensive state song, "Carry Me Back to Old Virginia."
Heading to Congress for a single term, Allen opposed the 1991 Civil Rights Act, which was signed by the president's father.
Allen was a foe of legislation requiring bilingual voting material, a stance that presaged Virginia's court challenge, during the Allen governorship, to the federal "motor-voter" law.
No single gesture may have rattled blacks, as well as whites in both political parties, more than Allen's annual decree, as chief executive, of Confederate History and Heritage Month.... "
Freeper Regards from the northern neck of the Old Dominion...
The article indicates that the only way GOPs could avoid being called 'racists' is by not doing the above, also never ever mention 'welfare', sing Dixie, call the NAACP an anti-American and pro-communist organization or criticize any black official for the way he addresses a white female secretary. They must also vote exactly the way Jessie Jackson tells them to vote.
I hope freepers post more examples on this thread.
Jeff Shapiro is a liberal who despises anything that even remotely resembles even a center-right position. This piece is the most vicious one he's written in awhile. The battle flag and noose have not been issues for Sen. Allen in ages and Shapiro looks pathetically desperate by bringing them up now. The current Dem governor, as Shapiro well knows, also signed the Heritage proclamation. George Allen received 20% of the black vote according to Shapiro's own paper, so for Shapiro to claim it 'rattled' anyone is pure hyperbole.
The editorial page of the RTD holds up the work of Taylor Branch for justification of their position today that the GOP is now 'reaping what it sowed' when the GOP coddled racists [their claim]. Branch sees the world through a liberal prism and his work cannot be trusted. The RTD EB should understand that.
If, however, what Branch claims about the Republican party is true, then it is something in need of addressing. This does not mean we adopt the CBC agenda as our own. It means we do a better job of explaining why we disagree with it.
I grew up in a very southern Republican household and I saw nothing of any purge Branch claims occurred. My parents were deep-south Republicans because they viewed the Democrats as soft on Communism and they rejected the racism the southern Democrats peddled in the '40's and '50's. They continue to be Republicans to this day for the very same reasons.
Dec 22, 2002
The Context
History does not forget. The significance of Trent Lott's words lies in their context - in stories that many prefer to remain untold.
George Lee of Memphis began attending Republican National Conventions in 1940. In 1952 he seconded the nomination of "Mr. Republican" himself, Senator Robert A. Taft. Lee was an African-American, the proud personification of the Lincoln Republican. When Republicans convened in 1964, however, he and other loyalists were cast aside. Throughout the South, blacks who had supported the Republican Party for decades were purged.
Taylor Branch's Pillar of Fire - the second of his two-volume history of the civil rights movement - describes the scene as Republicans met to nominate Barry Goldwater. The South's 375-person delegation was lily white. The regional caucus called its headquarters Fort Sumter. The South was not alone. California sent an all-white delegation, too. Only 14 of the convention's 1,300 delegates were black.
The developments represented a seismic shift. Although the economic deprivations of the Depression drove blacks into Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal coalition, African-Americans traditionally had voted Republican - particularly for President. As recently as 1952 and 1956, Dwight Eisenhower carried blacks by decisive margins. Blacks trended toward John Kennedy in 1960 (and probably provided him with his margin in the Electoral College), but a sizable percentage stayed with the GOP.
The country-club caricature may have zinged the GOP with all too much accuracy, but Republicans traditionally were more likely than Democrats to support civil and political rights. Henry Cabot Lodge introduced a voting-rights bill at the turn of the century. The overwhelming majority of Republicans in Congress voted for the civil rights laws of the 1960s. Democrats erected and enforced segregation's bleak barriers. Yet when Barry Goldwater voted against the 1964 act, when Strom Thurmond switched parties, when the GOP welcomed to its bosom diehards who had opposed racial progress and reconciliation, the party betrayed the confidence of African-Americans. The GOP's rise in the South reflected many positive influences (and, more than anything else, may have resulted from the migration of voters from the industrial states to the Sunbelt). Republicans also prospered because on racial issues they abandoned their roots. Meanwhile, national Democrats were asserting their commitment to civil rights. Their platforms no longer tried to appease malevolent segregationists.
Language counts. The U.S. has endured its share of Vardamans, Bilbos, Talmadges, and other demagogues who used the vilest terms. Others preferred more gentle prose. They referred to states' rights and local control and community standards and constitutionalism and all sorts of high-sounding virtues when the real point was to perpetuate separate-and-unequal. This newspaper knows. When Lott spoke at Thurmond's farewell, those with memories heard. Students of political history recognized the cadences, too.
Lott's performance reminded them of many things - of the GOP's devil's bargain with a Dixiecrat remnant (Lott had served as an aide to a Democratic Congressman who was an arch-segregationist), of a party whose dominant faction deliberately turned its back on citizens who had supported it for a century. Lott's ill-considered statement - and the pressure it put on Republicans - suggests the GOP is reaping what it sowed.
RTD
Hitlery said something similar - must be dim talking points.
If it were a "normal" person, I might chalk it up to alcohol, but that is simply not the case here. Any thoughts?
If it is "racism" to resist a race based attack upon your interests, than it must be "theft" to protect your property. But for those of us who reject Academic newspeak, this is, as we say, "drivel."
William Flax Return Of The Gods Web Site
The article you post, attacks the beautifully sentimental "Carry Me Back To Old Virginny." But the fact is, that song was written by a well educated New Jersey Negro, voluntarily in Virginia, to court his Virginia girl friend. The song is sentimental, touching, and an expression of the loving sentiments of its author. You have to be either a deliberate liar, or deranged, to suggest that it reflects an anti-Negro racism.
It is morally wrong to appease those who attempt this sort of tactic. It is also completely stupid politically!
William Flax
You may be more right than you know.
E. Culpepper Clark is Dean of the College of Communication at Tuscaloosa (of course) and not really a historian, at all.
After spending eight years in the Montgomery area (Lowndesboro), I concur that the only bigotry I observed was in relation to criminality and corruption, rather than skin color.
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