.
The Salon.com author is so immersed in bigotry he forgets the United States Senator from South Carolina, Rick Scott, the only African American in the US Senate.
1/5/13, “Welcome to the new Civil War,” Salon.com, Andrew O’Hehir
“Lincoln’s unfinished war rages on, as the neo-Confederacy tries to turn back the clock on women, gays, God and guns.”
“On a repeat viewing of Steven Spielberg’s “Lincoln” over the New Year’s holiday, a scene I had barely noticed the first time jumped out at me. Confederate vice-president Alexander Stephens (played with reptilian gentility by Jackie Earle Haley), in a secret meeting
aboard a steamboat with Abraham Lincoln and Secretary of State William
Seward, faces up to the reality that the era of slavery has come to an
end. Ratification of the 13th Amendment, Stephens muses, will destroy the basis of the Southern economy and the South’s traditional way of life. “We won’t know ourselves anymore,” he says.
If only it had been so.
What an affluent slaveowner like Stephens feared most, no doubt, was
the utopian vision of “radical Reconstruction” imagined by legendary
abolitionist Thaddeus Stevens
(Tommy Lee Jones in the movie), in an earlier conversation with Lincoln
in the White House kitchen. Stevens envisioned a future in which all
the land and property of the Southern aristocracy would be dispossessed
and divided among the emancipated slaves, building a new society of free soil and free labor amid the ruins of tyranny. To put it in contemporary social-studies terms, Stevens hoped that by uprooting and destroying the South’s slave economy,
one could also replace its culture.
It didn’t quite work out that way.
You can’t boil one of the most tumultuous periods of American history
down to one paragraph, but here goes: Lincoln was assassinated by a
domestic terrorist and replaced by Andrew Johnson, who was an incompetent hothead and an unapologetic racist. Within a few years the ambitious project of Reconstruction fell victim to a sustained insurgency led by the Ku Klux Klan and similar white militia groups. By the late 1870s white supremacist “Redeemers” controlled most local and state governments in the South, and by the 1890s Southern blacks had been disenfranchised and thrust into subservience positions by Jim Crow laws that were only slightly preferable to slavery.
So even though it’s a truism of American public discourse that the Civil War never ended, it’s also literally true. We’re still reaping the whirlwind from that long-ago conflict, and now we face a new Civil War, one focused on divisive political issues of the 21st century – most notably the rights and liberties of women and LGBT people – but
rooted in toxic rhetoric and ideas inherited from the 19th century.
We’ve just emerged from a presidential campaign that exposed how hardened our political and cultural divide
has become, and how poorly the two sides understand each other. Part of
the Republican problem, in an election that party thought it would win
easily, was that those who felt a visceral disgust toward both the idea and the reality of President Barack
Obama simply could not believe that they didn’t represent a majority. As many Republicans are now aware, the party now faces an existential crisis. It’s all very well to go on TV and talk about attracting Latinos and downplaying cultural wedge issues.
But the activist core of the Republican Party is neo-Confederate, whether
it thinks of itself that way or not. It isn’t interested in common
cause with Mexicans or turning down the moral thermostat. Just ask Rick
Santorum: What it wants is war.
In the recent “fiscal cliff” negotiations, which ended (of course) in yet another short-term stopgap measure, most congressional Republicans, having sworn a blood oath never to raise
taxes on their millionaire patrons, were content to let the nation slide
into chaos and catastrophe rather than reach a compromise with the
president they have consistently depicted as a socialist renegade or
alien interloper.
It was like a third-rate farcical reprise of the great congressional struggle depicted by Spielberg and screenwriter Tony Kushner in “Lincoln,” when the defeated and embittered Democrats of 1864 fought a rear-guard action to defend slavery, in defiance of not just history, morality and
basic human decency but also tactical judgment and common sense.
Thanks to Lincoln’s great political victory in that Congress, slavery has faded into the history books — maybe too much so. As the controversy over Quentin Tarantino’s slave-revenge western “Django Unchained” demonstrates, it still isn’t a history we know how to talk about. It may seem
melodramatic to claim that the curse of slavery hangs over us still, but Lincoln himself clearly foresaw that possibility, as his slaveowning predecessor Thomas Jefferson had before him. In Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address,
he described slavery as an offense against God, and the bloodshed of
the Civil War “as the woe due to those [on both sides] by whom the
offense came.” Perhaps a cruel cosmic justice was now being extracted,
he concluded, and the war would go on “until all the wealth piled by the
bondsman’s 250 years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every
drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with
the sword.”
I’m not sure America ever paid that debt, in blood or money or any other currency. The lingering effects of our
racist history – from the resegregation of our public schools to the enduring and astonishing “wealth gap” between whites and blacks – are national problems, not just Southern problems. Our new Civil War is infused with the undead spirit of the old one and waged by a rebellious neo-Confederacy rooted in the states of the Old South,
but its influence can be felt, as with the pro-slavery forces of the
1860s, in every part of the country. (Fernando Wood, the fiery
pro-slavery Democrat played by Lee Pace in “Lincoln,” was a former mayor
of New York.)
The new Civil War is not entirely or even principally about race, although there’s no mistaking its pernicious racial component. Even making allowances for Bobby Jindal and Allen West, the neo-Confederate forces are perhaps 99 percent white,”…
[Ed. note: The author fails to mention South Carolina's Senator Tim Scott, the only African-American in the US Senate.]
(continuing): “in a nation whose fastest-growing demographic groups
are neither white nor black. While the issues of the new Civil War are
contemporary, its rhetoric is ancient and all too familiar, from states’ rights and resistance to Washington to claims of a special relationship with the Almighty and vague appeals to distinctive
“cultural traditions,”
employed as a justification for bigotry and oppression.
While the Civil War of the 1860s really was about slavery first and foremost – it was the foundation of the Southern economy, and had concentrated immense wealth in the hands of a small landowning caste – the true subject matter of the new Civil War is much less clear. Abortion and same-sex marriage play a crucial role,
to be sure (and we may soon see guns and marijuana enter the picture as
well). Those are symbolic issues that reflect larger social tensions
around gender roles, sexuality and the “war on women,” but they are not just symbolic issues.…
The battleground states of the moment, on these issues as on many others, are strikingly familiar: Florida, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin. All four are currently in the grip of neo-Confederate forces on a state level,
and all four have enacted gay-marriage bans and abortion restrictions,
even though Obama won them all in both of his election campaigns.
Do I even need to mention that none of the neo-Confederate states are in the Northeast or on the West Coast, regions where abortion remains widely available and same-sex marriage is rapidly becoming routine? Or that the neo-Confederate states of the South and the Plains States have sent nearly all of the intransigent, anti-taxation Tea Party members to Congress, while the neo-Union states of the East and West, with their polyglot, immigrant-rich populations, have elected few or none?…
Today’s fights over abortion and gays and God and guns have a profound moral dimension, but don’t quite have the world-historical weight of the slavery question. As with slavery, however, it’s tough to imagine any viable long-term middle ground….
No nation-state can function indefinitely on that kind of patchwork-quilt basis. Then again, this is the United States of America, land of semi-permanent political paralysis, so “functional” doesn’t really apply. It’s tempting to call upon history and proclaim that the only possible outcome
of this new Civil War, after many years of ugly politics and occasional
outbreaks of craziness and violence, will resemble the outcome of the
last one:
the continued expansion of constitutional rights and freedoms and the final defeat of the Confederate strain in American political and cultural life.
But other, darker outcomes are definitely possible, and I suspect that
as long as we’ve got a country, the Confederacy will still be with us.”
via Rush Limbaugh
================================
Remember when diversity and free speech were championed by the left only a few years ago?
Hillary Clinton in 2003:
In 2003, Hillary Clinton very loudly stated: “I am sick and tired of people who say that if you debate and you disagree with this administration somehow you’re not patriotic. We should stand up and say we are Americans and we have a right to debate and disagree with any administration.”
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