ANARCHY AND DEMOCRATS

Contents

A group of people in white clothes marching down the street.Anarchy has plagued our nation throughout its history. Anarchy has been primarily associated with the Democrat Party and the political left. The notable exceptions were the abolitionists marauding western territories prior to the Civil War, the non-violent mid-twentieth century civil rights movement led by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., MLK, and the 2021 Capital Riot. In the twenty-first century, the left supports one of the left’s most violent group of anarchists, ANTIFA, and the 2020 riots associated with Black Lives Matter, BLM, protests following the death of George Floyd. The left leaning groups involved in this association include much of the Democrat Party and self-proclaimed communists, socialists, progressives, liberals, moderates, and most activists in our unions, education systems, the mainstream news media, and entertainment industries. In my opinion, the verbal abuse, directed against the Republican Party, especially conservatives and those who support the Make America Great Again agenda as well as social conservatives and Biblical Christians, who support the Biblical church and family and oppose abortion as murder, illegal protests at the homes of conservative Supreme Court Justices, and targeting these Justices and their families during daily activities, are all forms of anarchism often employed by anarchists. When Democrats, mainstream media personalities, educators, and entertainment celebrities on the left fail to condemn verbal abuse, violence, and lawlessness, encourage confrontation perpetrated by those on the left, they become de facto progressive anarchists, organizers, and provocateurs who promote anarchy.

Discussing anarchy requires clear understanding of three terms. The Merriam-Webster on-line dictionary provides definitions of the terms relevant to this discussion of anarchy and Democrats. Anarchy is defined as a state of lawlessness or political disorder; ¦ the absence or denial of any authority or established order; or the absence of order. Anarchist is defined as a person who rebels against any authority, established order, or ruling power; believes in, advocates, or promotes anarchism or anarchy; or uses violent means to overthrow the established order.Anarchism is defined as the advocacy or practice of anarchistic principles. Various connotations of these terms will be relevant throughout this discussion.

Unfortunately, human beings are prone to violence to settle disagreements or dissatisfaction with their current situation beginning with the Biblical Cain and Abel. Our founding generation was not immune to this defect in humanity. John Jay, First Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, SCOTUS, only wrote four of the 85 Federalist Papers because he suffered a severe and debilitating broken leg during a New York City riot between supporters and opponents of ratification of our Constitution. Consequently, James Madison and Alexander Hamilton wrote most of the Federalist Papers supporting ratification.

Democrats, Slavery, Civil War, Lincoln’s Assassination, and Reconstruction

The issue of slavery and civil rights have been one of our greatest sources of controversy, anarchy, violence, and division throughout our history as a nation. In the years preceding the Civil War, congress sought to maintain a Senatorial balance between slave and free states as western territories sought statehood. The abolitionist John Brown promoted anarchy and led a group of mercenary anarchists that attacked pro slavery communities in the Kansas territories; and later, 1859, attacked and occupied the arsenal at Harper’s Ferry attempting to arm a slave insurrection. He failed, was hung for treason, but stirred emotion on both sides of the slavery issue. Within two years, the nation was at war over slavery.

In my opinion, the Democrat Party was on the wrong side of the slavery issue and civil rights movement from the founding of the party in the 1830’s. Democrats supported slavery in the South and started the Civil war with the attack on Fort Sumter in 1861. The cost of that act of violence to United States citizens was over 600,000 deaths and an untold number of disabled veterans on both sides of the war. Although it is impossible to know, the assignation of President Lincoln probably precluded the opportunity for both reconstruction and reconciliation with the former Southern slave states. In the North, radical Republicans gained power in the US Congress and bought retribution against the White southerners who brought war to the nation.

Historically, the assignation of President Lincoln had a profound impact on the arc of race relations and civil rights in our nation. Lincoln’s reconstruction plan sought reconciliation with the South which should have changed the way southern Whites viewed and treated former slaves who became freedmen. A conciliatory Reconstruction plan that did not deny thousands of former Confederate soldiers the right to vote while giving the vote to freedmen may have had future benefits. Balancing the ratio of freedmen and Whites for non-elected positions of authority in government may not have stirred such resentment among Whites toward Blacks. Without President Lincoln’s leadership, the punitive Radical Reconstruction Plan sent Yankee carpetbaggers into the south with northern financing for reconstruction of all segments of the economy and re-education regarding former slaves. Southerners were denied good financing rates for reconstruction projects. Southerners who had opposed the war, scallywags, considered traitors by most southern Whites, were given positions of authority in state and local governments and better financing for their reconstruction efforts. While only 30% of the White population of the South and 1% of the Confederate soldiers owned slaves prior to the Civil War, the punitive measure of placing freedmen in unelected positions of authority over Whites created anger and animosity. From the southern perspective, placing inferior humans in positions of authority was an unimaginable insult because freedmen were previously property that any White, and some Blacks, could buy and own just a few years prior. This punitive Reconstruction policy may have been the strongest factor contributing to the Jim Crow laws enacted after the Democrat Party regained control of the South. The advantages given the carpetbaggers and scallywags made them reviled groups; and they suffered retribution after the Yankees left the south at the end of Reconstruction hastened by a national economic depression. Fewer carpetbaggers, more equitable reconstruction financing, less reliance on and financing for scallywags may have reduced resentment of the Yankees, eased the pain associated with their war loss, and reduced the racism that rose in the South after Reconstruction.

With 20-20 hindsight, reconstruction of the infrastructure, economy, and culture of an enemy defeated in war should be based on reconciliation and understanding not revenge and retribution. Based on our experience following the Civil War, the revenge and retribution model gave us 100 years of Jim Crow, racial animosity, violence, anarchy, White supremacists, and the KKK. The same model following WWI brought a Middle East that remains tumultuous to this day and WWII in less than 30 years. After WWII, the victors, primarily the United States, followed a more understanding and reconciliatory model with the Marshall Plan to rebuilt West Germany and Western Europe and a similar plan for Japan. Both of those WWII enemies are now allies.

Democrats, Anarchy, White Supremacists, the KKK, and Jim Crow

According to Democrats are the party of the KKK, many prominent Democrat Party officials were members of the KKK and Jim Crow advocates at some time in their careers until the culmination of the 1960’s Civil Rights era. During the Jim Crow era, Southern Democrats passed poll taxes and literacy tests in their states to prevent African Americans from voting to elect Republicans to Congress. West Virginia Democrat, US Senate president pro temp, and KKK Exalted Cyclops Robert Byrd retired in 2010.  Mississippi Senator Theodore Bilbo became the voice of anarchy and racism in America.  In 1938, he tried to amend the federal work-relief bill in the Senate with a provision to deport 12 million Black Americans to Liberia. That same year, Bilbo voiced his opposition to a federal anti-lynching bill, stating:

If you succeed in the passage of this bill, you will open the floodgates of hell in the South.  Passage of the measure [will bring] the blood of the raped and outraged daughters of Dixie, as well as the blood of the perpetrators of these crimes that the red-blooded Anglo-Saxon White Southern men will not tolerate.

Another influential KKK member of this group was US Senator and later US Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black who served the court 1937-1971. As a Senator, Black led Filibuster efforts along with Senator Bilbo against federal anti-lynch legislation, thus promoting anarchy. The vast majority of those listed in Ku Klux Klan members in United States politics were members of the Democrat Party. During the 1948 Presidential campaign, Senator Strom Thurmond promoted anarchy when he said the following in a speech met with loud cheers by his assembled supporters:

“I wanna tell you, ladies and gentlemen, that there’s not enough troops in the army to force the Southern people to break down segregation and admit the Nigra race into our theaters, into our swimming pools, into our homes, and into our churches.”

White supremacist and the KKK controlled every level of government in the South and at least the U.S. Senate through the filibuster. White supremacists and the KKK were also active in other industrial regions and large cities in the nation. After passage of Civil Rights legislation, overt White supremacy in Southern government at all levels and other industrial areas and big cities took two to three decades to subside.

White Supremacist Race Riots and Massacres

The Pure History List of Race Riots in the United States is exhaustive with many Wikipedia links providing details of the linked riots. Some of the more impactful race massacres and riots are chronicled below. Prior to 1900, most rumored, suspected, or accused transgressions of a Black citizen against White citizens resulted in White supremacist mob attacks against Blacks. The anarchy included lynchings of accused Blacks, mob attacks on Black communities, homes, and businesses which were often burned, and killing Blacks in their communities which often escalated to massacres.

In 1863, a Detroit nonwhite man was falsely accused of sexually assaulting a two White girls. When a White lynch mob was kept away from the accused, they began setting Black neighborhoods ablaze leaving 200 Black Detroiters homeless.

What started as a minor confrontation between White police officers and Black Union Army soldiers led to a massacre in 1866 in Memphis, Tennessee. A mob of White men attacked and destroyed Black neighborhoods, leveling 90 homes, four churches and twelve schools. Several Black women were raped, and 48 people died, all but two of them Black.

The 1866 New Orleans race riot started when Black freedmen along with some former Union soldiers marched to protest newly-legislated Black Codes were attacked by a mob of Democrats. The Democratic mob included policemen from the New Orleans Police Department and former Confederate soldiers.  Shots were fired killing 44 mostly Black people. As a result of this riot, martial law was reinstated; and the First Reconstruction Act was passed in 1867.

In 1887, a few thousand local sugarcane workers in Thibodaux, Louisiana, mostly African Americans, started a three-week labor strike. Strikers demanded increased wages, more consistent pay periods, and payment in US currency instead of special tickets that could only be redeemed at company stores. A state judge who had once owned slaves, put Thibodaux under martial law and declared that African American residents could not leave the city without special passes. The Judge formed a vigilante group to keep the strikers in Thibodaux. When the strikers fired on the vigilante group and killed two of them, mass violence began. For three days, the vigilantes attacked the strikers and their families, executing them on the spot or in the nearby woods. According to official numbers, 35 people died. Historians later estimated that the White vigilantes killed 300 African Americans in this racial massacre.

Wilmington, NC Insurection,1898, After Black newsman was elected Mayor, White supremacist led 2,000 Whites in a riot that ended in re-election of the previous White Mayor. 6-100 Blacks died.

After 1900, African Americans began arming themselves to protect their individual citizens and communities from the anarchy and violence of White supremacists. The inevitable result was an increase in the number of race riots, death, and property destruction in both Black and White communities.

In what would later be known as the Atlanta Massacre, violence broke out on September 22, 1906, when four Black men were falsely accused of raping a white woman. Nearly 2,000 white men took to the streets and killed approximately 100 Black residents.

In 1917, an East St. Louis, Missouri white mob killed nearly 50 people, mostly Black, and drove approximately 6,000 African Americans from the city in retaliation for African American residents arming and protecting themselves after a white man drove through their neighborhoods shooting into Black homes.

When the US entered World War I in 1917, the Third Battalion of the 24th Infantry Regiment, maned exclusively by African American soldiers, began training in New Mexico. The Battalion was transferred to Houston, Texas where racist tensions over their presence began. When the Houston police violently arrested an African American woman, Battalion soldiers became involved in protecting the woman and violence ensued. Police shot one of the African American soldiers three times but did not kill him. Soldiers of the battalion raided their camp arms room, secured weapons, and marched into town. Once there, the battalion exchanged gunfire with police and fired at civilian buildings. The gun battle lasted throughout the night. 19 people died of gunshot wounds. Leaders of the battalion were court-martialed in the largest such trial in US history. Their attorneys claimed Houston racism, unsuccessfully, as their defense. Nineteen men received death sentences and were hanged. Sixty-three others received sentences of life in prison.

In the Red Summer of 1919, over three dozen cities in the United States suffered race riots including Elaine, Arkansas; Annapolis, Maryland; Syracuse; New York; Washington D.C.; Baltimore, Maryland; New Orleans, Louisiana; and Chicago, Illinois. Thousands of African Americans were driven out of their homes, and more than 250 African Americans were killed in at least 25 riots. The most serious was the Chicago Race Riot lasting13 days. A Black teenager was stoned by a group of White youths for being on an unofficially segregated beach and drowned in Lake Michigan. Police refusal to arrent the White perpetrator, identified by witnesses, started a week the rioting between gangs of Black and White Chicagoans. 15 White and 23 Black people were killed, 537 people injured, and 1,000 Black family’s homes were burned down.

In Rosewood, Florida on January 1, 1923, a White woman claimed she was assaulted by a Black man. Consequently, White supremacist mobs killed of up to 150 Black Americans. One of the first was a local blacksmith, Sam Carter, whose tortured and mutilated body was strung up in a tree for all to see.

The Tulsa Race Massacre and Black Wall Street

The 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre was the worst examples of White supremacy led by the KKK in our history. After WWI, the south saw a rise in violent White supremacist racism, a resurgence of the KKK, and anarchy as the Supreme Court began to reverse Jim Crow laws. By 1919, tensions between the races escalated as lynchings increased throughout the South and race riots occurred in some Northern cities. Armed Blacks from the Greenwood District of Tulsa, Oklahoma began to show up at courthouses to prevent White lynch mobs from killing Blacks. The main street of the Greenwood District was known as Black Wall Street. According to Michelle Place, executive director of the Tulsa Historical Society and Museum.

It wasn’t long before the affluent African Americans [of the Greenwood District] attracted the attention of local White residents, who resented the upscale lifestyle of people they deemed to be an inferior race.

I think the word jealousy is certainly appropriate during this time¦. If you have particularly poor Whites who are looking at this prosperous community who have large homes, fine furniture, crystals, china, linens, etc., the reaction is ˜they don’t deserve that.

When a young Black man was accused of sexually assaulting a young White girl, 75 armed Black men went to the court to help the sheriff guard the accused. They were confronted 1500 armed White men and retreated to Greenwood. This confrontation was followed by the Tulsa Race Massacre, anarchy, which lasted over 18 hours from May 31 to June 1, 1921. On June 1, thousands of White anarchists poured into the Greenwood District, looting and burning homes and businesses over an area of 35 city blocks. 1,256 houses were burned; 215 others were looted but not torched. Two newspapers, a school, a library, a hospital, churches, hotels, stores, and many other Black-owned businesses were among the buildings destroyed or damaged by fire. In 2001, the report of the Race Riot Commission concluded that property losses were about $2 million at the time with present value losses estimated as high as $200 million. Between 100 and 300 Greenwood District Blacks were killed and more than 8,000 were made homeless over those 18 hours.

Unfortunately, after the anarchy of the Tulsa Race Massacre, perpetrated by the KKK and other White supremacists, most of whom were Democrats, the sheriff concluded that no sexual assault had occurred and all charges against the young Black man were dropped. The Tulsa Race Massacre remains one of the worst incidents of racial violence in U.S. history.

A detailed Tulsa Race Massacre web search provides ample evidence that Tulsa newspapers catering to the White population fanned the flames of anger among White supremacists in the greater Tulsa area. The search also shows that Oklahoma government at every level failed to protect the Greenwood District from anarchy and   racially motivated looters and arsonists. After Martial Law was declared, the first Oklahoma National Guard units were sent to protect unaffected White neighborhoods. Concurrently, armed White mobs, anarchists, roamed the Greenwood District looting, burning, and killing Blacks throughout a 35-block area of the community. Fire crews refused to fight fires. law officers and guardsmen participated in the looting and carnage, disarmed or shot Blacks trying to protect Black property and citizens, and marched them to areas where they could no longer protect their people or property. Obviously, Oklahoma Democrats supported anarchy in the state and the Greenwood district of Tulsa.

Although T. D.  Evans was a Republican Tulsa Mayor from 1920-1922 when the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre occurred, five of the six proceeding mayors were Democrats including his predecessor. The Tulsa city bureaucracy was still dominated by Democrat appointees many of whom were Klansmen. At the time of the massacre, the Tulsa KKK had over 3,000 members including two future Democrat mayors, at least 40 law officers, 30 firefighters, three county judges, 10 county court clerks, and 10 insurance agents.

In state government, Democrat J.B.A. Robertson, Governor of Oklahoma in 1921 said, A lyncher is a worse menace to a democratic form of government than a Bolshevik who goes about waving a red flag and throwing bombs. Since armed Blacks from The Greenwood District had to protect jailed Blacks from Tulsa area lynch mobs, it is difficult to believe that the actions of the Robertson administration matched his words. No Republican was an Oklahoma Governor between 1907, when the state elected its first governor, and 1963. The state did not elect a Republican Lt Governor until 1990. In 1921, Republicans had a 67% House of Representatives majority for the first time in state history, while the Democrat Party had a 61% Senate majority. Prior to the 1921 legislative session, the Democrat Party controlled both Houses of the Oklahoma legislature with at least a 73% majority in the House and a 71% majority in the Senate. The Democrat Party regained control of both Houses of the state legislature for at least the next three legislative sessions following the Tulsa Race Massacre.

During the Jim Crow era, anarchy and smaller race riots occurred in many Southern cities and some Northern cities like Detroit and Chicago. Several conclusions are possible regarding the state of racism, White supremacy, and the prevalence of the KKK in the Jim Crow era South based on the evidence surrounding the Tulsa Race Massacre. First, Tulsa was not the exception but rather the rule related to the control of government at every level by the Democrat Party, White supremacists, and the KKK in the South. Second, led by Southern Democrat Party members, Jim Crow laws, anarchy, and mob violence including lynching was supported at every level of Southern government including Southern Democrat Senators who filibustered against Federal anti-lynch laws. Finally, White supremacy anarchists led by the KKK perpetrated violence, led lynch mobs, marched in their white robes and hoods through the streets of the South, and burned crosses to intimidate any who opposed them. Although the Tulsa Race Massacre was unique in its scope, White supremacists led lynch mobs and burned houses, churches, and other Black community buildings throughout the South. All the while, leaders of the Southern Democrat Party were silent and refused to stop or confront White supremacy, racism, anarchy, and violence.

Race Riots After the Tulsa Race Massacre until the 1970’s

The Tulsa Race Massacre apparently resulted in a dramatic change in the way African Americans responded to racism, White supremacists, and real or perceived law enforcement or legal system racism. After Tulsa the nation-wide African American community seems to respond to violence or real or perceived racism with violence and anarchy. Race riots are often the result.

The Detroit Race Riot of 1943 was the culmination of several years of increasing racial tensions in the city:   As the WWII Arsenal of Democracy in 1943, the Detroit defense industry was attracting African American workers in large numbers. Detroit, like most U.S. cities at the time was segregated. Consequently, the 200,000 Black residents were forced to live in small, subdivided apartments that often-housed multiple families in 60 square blocks on Detroit’s east side. When the city constructed a Black housing project in a White neighborhood adjacent to a Black neighborhood in 1942, over one thousand Whites supremacists, some armed, lit a cross on fire and angrily picketed the arrival of their African American neighbors. A mob of more than one thousand Whites, including KKK members, some armed, lit a cross on fire and angrily picketed the arrival of their African American neighbors. Racism was also prevalent in Detroit factories. In June of 1943, when some Black factory workers were promoted, white workers slowed or halted production and refused to work beside Black workers in protest. Racial animosity related to both housing and factory tensions soon spilled onto Detroit streets reaching the boiling point in June of 1943. 100,000 Black and White Detroit citizens assembled in Belle Isle City Park when Black and White youth gangs began fights which police controlled by midnight. Two rumors escalated the violence the next day. African Americans in Black Bottom were told that Whites had thrown a black woman and her baby off the Belle Isle Bridge. They formed a furious mob looting White businesses and attacking White individuals. Nearby, an angry mob of Whites were told that Black men had raped a White woman. The White mob attacked Blacks as they exited from city buses on their way to work. As word of both incidents spread, so did the violence. Gangs of each skin color roamed the streets looting, burning, and assaulting people of the other race. After several hours of violence, the Detroit Mayor finally asked President Roosevelt to send U.S. troops to stop the carnage. Nine Whites and 25 African Americans were killed in the Riots of 1943. No White individuals were killed by police, but 17 African Americans died at the hands of police. 675 people were reportedly injured, with damages amounting to two million dollars.

After the US took Guam during World War II in 1944, The African American Marine 25th Depot Company was stationed near the city of Agana. White Marines tried to prevent African American Marines from entering the city for months. Before Christmas, a white Marine fatally shot an African American Marine in a quarrel over a local woman. Although the white Marine was court-martialed, the African American Marines were still outraged. On Christmas Eve, nine African American Marines visited Agana when White Marines opened fire on them. Eight of the African American Marines made it back to their base, gathered reinforcements, and returned to rescue the one who remained in Agana. After learning their friend was safe, they returned peacefully to base. On Christmas day, White Marines attacked the African Americans Marines resulting in a day-long firefight and killing enlisted men in the African American camps. Eventually, the attacks stopped, and many of the people responsible for the violence received court-martials.

The 1965 Watts Riot started when an African American on parole for robbery was arrested for DUI. His family came to the scene of the arrest bringing a Black crowd with them. A Black woman, who the crowd incorrectly thought was pregnant, spat at the police and was roughly arrested. The incident triggered the six-day riot. 34 people died, 1032 were injured, and property damage exceeded $40 million.

The 1967 Newark riot started when two White police officers arrested and beat a Black taxi driver for a minor traffic violation. Rumors that the taxi driver had been killed started five days of rioting destroying much of the district. 26 died and 1,500 were injured.

The Detroit Riots of 1967 began with an early morning police raid of an illegal night club in the Black neighborhood of Virginia Park on July 23. 85 Black party goers were arrested. A crowd grew while police waited for vehicles to transport the accused patrons. The Black crowd began throwing bottles at the police cars still in the area. When a police car was damaged, the police left the area; and the Black crowds began looting area businesses owned or operated by Whites who commuted to the Detroit suburbs. Around 6:30 A.M., the looting turned to burning and soon spread to a 100-block area despite a force of 300 state polices officers. By the time the bloodshed, burning and looting ended after five days, 43 people were dead, 342 injured, most were Black rioters. 1,700 stores were looted, 1,400 buildings were burned, causing roughly $50 million in property damage, 5,000 people were left homeless, and 7,000 National Guard and U.S. Army troops had been called into service. At the time, the 1967 Detroit Riots were among the most violent and destructive riots in U.S. history. A commission later determined that the racism that plagued Detroit for nearly 100 years contributed to the anger in the African American community and the resulting riots.

The Civil Rights Movement

By the 1950’s, Republicans and African American Civil Rights leaders led by Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. began actively pursuing national civil rights legislation. Republican President Eisenhower signed the Civil Rights Act of 1957 which was the first major civil rights legislation since Reconstruction. Though the civil rights bill passed Congress, Democrat opponents of the act were able to remove or weaken several provisions significantly watering down its immediate impact. During the debate over the law, South Carolina Senator Strom Thurmond, a Jim Crow Democrat, conducted the longest one-person filibuster in Senate history.  The Act allowed federal prosecution of anyone who tried to prevent someone from voting, created a commission to investigate voter fraud, and created a civil rights division in the U.S. Justice Department.

The 1964 Civil Rights Act passed Congress with strong Republican support and 36% of the Democrats. 64% of Democrats opposed the legislation. This Civil Rights Act ended segregation in public places and banned employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin. This Act also banned segregation at all places of public accommodation, including courthouses, parks, restaurants, theaters, sports arenas, and hotels. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act barred discrimination by employers and labor unions and created an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission with the power to file lawsuits on behalf of aggrieved workers. Bill Clinton’s political mentor, Democratic Senator William Fulbright, filibustered the bill for 83 days. Senator Al Gore Sr. voted against the Civil Rights Act and lost his seat as a result.

Two additional Civil Rights acts were signed into law by President Johnson. Both were spear headed by Congressional Republicans to overcome Southern Democrat Senate Filibusters. The 1965 Voting Rights Act banned all voter literacy tests, provided federal examiners in certain voting jurisdictions, and allowed the attorney general to contest state and local poll taxes which were later declared unconstitutional. The 1968 Fair Housing Act became law just days after Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s assassination. It prevented housing discrimination based on race, sex, national origin, and religion. It was also the last legislation enacted during the civil rights era.

Unfortunately, the full benefits of these three landmark Civil Rights Laws would not be fully realized for two to three decades.

Democratic Support of Anarchy from 1970 to 2000

The assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. King in 1968 was followed by 7 days of riots in 125 cities resulting in 46 deaths and 2600 injuries nationwide.

  • In Washington, D.C. 1200 buildings were destroyed resulting in $27 million in damage.
  • In Chicago, 11 died, 500 were injured, and 200 buildings were damaged costing $10 million.
  • In Baltimore, 6 died, 700 were injured, and $12 million in property damage resulted.
  • In Kansas City, 6 died and 20 were injured.
  • In Cincinnati a Black jewelry store owner accidently killed his wife defending their store from Black robbers and rumors spread that the woman was killed by White policemen. Two were killed, 70 buildings were burned resulting in $3 million in damages.
  • In Trenton, 200 buildings were burned resulting in $2.5 million in damages. Police and firefighters were attacked while responding to false alarms. In Pittsburg, 100 businesses were damaged or burned causing $600,000 in damages.
  • Lesser riots occurred in Louisville, Wilmington, Detroit, and New York.

In virtually all the cities affected by the anarchy of the 1968 MLK riots, Black communities suffered long term adverse economic impacts. The cities suffered from emigration of White citizens to the suburbs and irreversible loss of tax revenue and their economic activity.

In 1971, a Camden, New Jersey, police officer beat Rafael Gonzales to death when he felt threatened by Gonzales during a routine traffic stop. Hispanic residents took to the streets to demand action against the officer after he was not charged with any wrongdoing. Although Camden officials gave in and charged the officer, they let him stay on the job and did not really punish him. Outraged, Camden Hispanics took to the streets again on August 20, 1971. For three days, rioters looted stores and destroyed buildings. A lack of cohesion in the police force led to multiple incidents of police violence. In the end, police arrested 90 people. Eventually, the officer responsible for the death of Rafael Gonzalez was suspended.

The 1980 Miami Race Riot lasted 4 days, caused 18 deaths, 10 Black and 8 White, 300 injured, and 100 million dollars in damages to property in the city through arson and looting.  It required the National Guard to restore order. The riot started after six White Metro-Dade police officers were acquitted by a White male jury of the cover up and murder of Arthur McDuffie, a Black insurance salesman, former Marine, and father of two. McDuffie waws stopped for a routine traffic violation and beaten to death with flashlights.

The 1991 Brooklyn, Crown Heights riots started when a Jewish man driving in a rabbinic motorcade crashed his car into two African American children. African American residents attacked the driver and his passengers, beating him severely. After one of the African American children died because of the crash, African Americans started riots against the Jewish residents. For three days, the riots raged with African Americans and Caribbean-Americans attacking Jewish houses and stores killing one Jewish man. People who did not even live in Crown Heights came to take part in the violence. Among the rioters was Reverend Al Sharpton, who spread anti-Semitic propaganda and organized marches during the riots. The riots remain one of the worst acts of anti-Semitism in US history.

The 1992 Los Angeles Race Riot started after the acquittal of four white police officers who were filmed beating up a black motorist Rodney King who was on probation for a robbery conviction, driving under the influence, and resisted arrest. The riot lasted 2 Days, caused 63 deaths, injured more than 2,300, included thousands of fires, and caused a minimum of $1 billion in property damage. During the riot, White truck driver, Reginald Denny, was pulled from the cab of his vehicle, beaten, and smashed in the head with a cinder block. He was rescued by people from the neighborhood who had been watching the event unfold on television. The trial acquittal set off riots in Atlanta, Las Vegas, New York, San Francisco and San Jose. To end the riot, the California Governor deployed 6,000 guardsmen. President George Bush also dispatched 3,000“4,000 army troops and marines, along with 1,000 riot-trained federal law officers, to help restore order.   In a television interview during the riot, Rodney King, famously asked, Can’t we all get along? Koreatown, situated just to the north of South-Central LA, was disproportionately damaged.

Democratic Support of Anarchy from 2000 to 2022

The 2001 Cincinnati Race Riots lasted 4 days. During the riots, 70 people were injured, White motorists were pulled from their cars and beaten, store and bank windows were smashed, businesses were robbed, over 900 were arrested, and total losses and property damage was estimated at $3.6 million. The riots were a culmination of long-standing racial tension in Cincinnati which peaked when a young African American, Timothy Thomas, was killed by a Cincinnati police officer.

Austin Hsu’s 2018 article discussed the 2014 Ferguson Race Riots, which lasted 10 days. The riots started after a White policeman shoot and killed Michael Brown, an unarmed young African American who resisted arrest. In Ferguson, 17 buildings were damaged so badly they were deemed “unsafe structures.” The value of buildings destroyed in the Ferguson area was nearly $4.6 million. Four months after the Michael Brown incident, extra St. Louis County Law Enforcement costs were $4 million. Ferguson suffered from periodic riots on month and year anniversaries of the shooting for nearly two years. One of the worst was after the Missouri grand jury decided not to indict the policer officer on any criminal charges.  Many of those waiting outside the Ferguson Police Department grew violent after they learned that the policeman would not be charged. Multiple buildings were torched, and protesters hurled rocks at parked police cars. National Guard and reinforced law enforcement presence in the area, effectively bringing the protests to a stop.

Circumstances surrounding the shooting of Michael Brown by a white male Ferguson police officer are still disputed by the African American community in Ferguson. According to the policeman, Brown attacked him in his police vehicle for control of his service pistol, until the officer fired his pistol. Dorian Johnson, a friend of Brown and accused fellow petty criminal, said that the policeman initiated the confrontation by grabbing Brown by the neck through the patrol car window, threatening him and then shooting at him. At this point, Johnson ran and hide behind a car, and the policeman pursued Brown. According to the officer, Brown stopped, turned around, and charged him. The policeman shot and killed the charging Brown in self-defense. Johnson contradicted this account, stating that Brown turned around with his hands raised after being shot in the back. The policeman fired twelve shots, including two during the car struggle. Brown was struck six times in the front of his body not in the back as Johnson claimed..

“Hands up, don’t shoot”, or simply “hands up”, is a slogan and gesture originating from the incident and was seen in demonstrations in Ferguson and throughout the United States. The gesture became a rallying cry against police violence. On March 4, 2015, the U.S. Department of Justice, under the direction of African American Attorney General, Eric Holder, issued a report on the shooting, which said, “There is no witness who has stated that Brown had his hands up in surrender whose statement is otherwise consistent with the physical evidence” and “our investigation did not reveal any eyewitness who stated that Brown said, ‘don’t shoot’.” Consequently, Hands Up, Don’t Shoot! Is Built on a Lie. The news media, national civil rights leaders, and Democrat politicians reported on the lie without critical investigation fomenting further violence, anarchy, and destruction by African Americans in Ferguson and around the nation. The narrative and speculation regarding widespread police violence against African Americans was more important than the truth and facts concerning the Michael Brown shooting.

The 2015 Baltimore Race Riots started after the arrest and police transport injury which eventually caused the death of Freddie Grey. Protests and rioting increased as Grey’s condition worsened and peaked after his death and funeral. During the 16 days of peaceful protests and rioting, 113 police officers were injured, and two civilians were shot, 486 people were arrested, and 350 businesses were damaged or looted.  There were also 150 vehicle fires, including police cars and vans.  Two people were shot and one injured by fire, but there were no fatalities. The cost of building destruction alone was estimated at $9 million. Thousands of police and Maryland National Guard troops deployed to end the anarchy costing millions more.

The 2016 Charlotte Race Riots lasted three days. The anarchy started when bystanders falsely claimed that Keith Lamont Scott was unarmed and shot by a White policeman. Actually, Scott was a violent felon armed with a handgun not registered in his name, The riots resulted in the death of one protester killed by another protester and sixteen police officers were injured. The riots cost Charlotte and North Carolina $4.6 million including police overtime, national guard deployment costs, and the destruction of public property. That number does not include any private property damage.

During the 2020 George Floyd BLM Race Riots at least 25 people were killed and the destruction cost our nation between $1 and $2 billion. Consequently, the cumulative national cost of the 2020 BLM riots was the most expensive year in United States history. The major BLM riots are detailed below.

  • The death of George Floyd sparked a summer of BLM protests and riots in cities around the country. On May 25, 2020, police were called to investigate suspected use of a counterfeit $20 bill by Floyd. Floyd was sitting in a car with two other passengers. Police officers forcibly removed Floyd from the car, handcuffed him, and attempted to place him in a police vehicle. When he resisted placement in the vehicle, he was thrown to the ground where a White Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee to Floyd’s neck for 9 minutes and 29 seconds[ causing Floyd’s death. Floyd’s death was ruled a homicide. In addition to fentanyl and methamphetamine, the toxicology report from the autopsy showed that Floyd also had cannabinoids in his system when he died. Floyd also had heart disease, hypertension, and an asymptomatic sickle cell trait,  The medical examiner listed Floyd’s death as a homicide and noted the amount of fentanyl in Floyd’s blood was pretty high and could be a fatal level of fentanyl under normal circumstances.  His death was caused by the police subdual and restraint in the setting of severe hypertensive atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, and methamphetamine and fentanyl intoxication, officials from the Office of the Armed Forces Medical Examiner wrote.  The 2020 Minneapolis George Floyd riots cost the Twin Cities an estimated $500 million in damages including $4.8 million to temporarily rent an office building and adapt it to replace the police station burned to the ground by rioters. The mostly peaceful rioters damaged more than 1,500 businesses. Fire department responses were limited due to fear that firefighters could not be protected from rioters.
  • In New York City, Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood mobs rampaged down sidewalks, smashing numerous luxury shop windows to steal merchandise. The looters cost stores tens of millions of dollars in stolen merchandise and damages. A BLM leader and trained Marxist said that the stores were all insured, and the stolen goods were a form of reparations. Police angered protester for use of a tactic called kittling, corralling protesters who had made their way onto the Manhattan Bridge and blocking off both ends of the bridge allowing police to control and arrest the looters and those who became or had been violent.
  • In ROCHESTER, NY, BLM protests were sparked after the death of a 41-year-old black man, Daniel Prude. Prude’s family called police because he was naked in the street and high on phencyclidine, Prude was vomiting and spitting at police who placed a spit hood on his head and forced him to the ground. In less than three minutes he stopped breathing but was revived. A week after is arrest, he died in the hospital. The autopsy report called the death a homicide and listed excited delirium and intoxication by PCP, as contributing factors. A grand jury did not charge the police officers involved. Protests and riots broke out around police headquarters and in spread to many residential areas.
  • The Portland OR BLM riots lasted 100 consecutive days and included vandalism, chaos and, at times, violence.  President Trump deployed federal law enforcement agents to stop attacks on a federal courthouse and other U.S. property. During the clashes, rioters broke windows, set small fires, punctured police car tires with spikes, shined lasers in officers’ eyes, and pelted them with rocks and frozen water bottles. One night, and man was dragged out of his car and beaten by nine or 10 people. When police arrived, the man was unconscious. Fortunately, he recovered. Trump supporter Aaron “Jay” Danielson, 39, was fatally shot as he walked on a sidewalk. Michael Forest Reinoehl, the suspected shooter, was killed by a law enforcement task force sent to arrest him outside Lacey, WA.
  • Chicago “Car caravans” of looters made their way into Chicago’s Magnificent Mile, Gold Coast, Irving North neighborhoods, and neighboring commercial districts for several hours. Police made more than 100 arrests and 13 officers were injured, including one who was struck in the head with a bottle. The “pure criminality” included occupants in a vehicle who opened fire on police who were arresting a man they spotted carrying a cash register. Videos of the vandalism showed huge crowds of people smashing their way into businesses and streaming out of the broken windows and doors with clothes and other merchandise.
  • In Kenosha WI, protests erupted in August following the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man shot multiple times. Blake scuffled with three officers who yelled, “Drop the knife! Drop the knife!” before the gunfire erupted. Crowds destroyed dozens of buildings and set more than 30 fires in downtown Kenosha. In one instance, a Kenosha car dealership reportedly sustained $1.5 million in damage during one night of riots. Damage blamed on rioting in Kenosha exceeded $50 million. Kyle Rittenhouse was charged with first-degree intentional homicide in the killing of two protesters and attempted intentional homicide in the wounding of a third. Rittenhouse claimed that he was defending himself against rioters and was acquitted of all charges.
  • Philadelphia following the October officer-involved shooting of Walter Wallace Jr., an armed Black man reportedly with a mental health history. Wallace’s family has said he was experiencing a mental health crisis when police were called. Officers who arrived at the scene fired 14 shots after Wallace advanced toward the officers despite their orders that he drop the knife he carried. More than a thousand people took to the streets following the shooting, ransacking a Walmart and Foot Locker stores, as well as smaller businesses. Hundreds were arrested, and dozens of police and law enforcement vehicles were damaged during the riots. Meanwhile, more than 50 police officers were injured, including a sergeant who was “intentionally run over” by a pick-up truck driver.

Thankfully, our nation has not experienced major riots of any kind since the George Floyd, BLM, race riots of 2020. Perhaps, the 25 or more lives lost and the billions of dollars the riots cost our nation taught us a valuable lesson. We can only hope.

Final Thoughts

In my opinion, the Democrat Party has been the party of anarchy from its inception. The party supported slavery, Jim Crow, and all forms of violence against African Americans until the reluctant acceptance of the 1960’s civil rights legislation by most White Southern Democrat leaders in the late twentieth century. Then, the Democrat Party miraculously became the party of the assassinated MLK and African Americans despite past abuse by Democrats. The Democrat Party’s metamorphosis from supporters of violence and anarchy perpetrated against African Americans to supporters of violence and anarchy perpetrated by African Americans is remarkable to me. Democrats justify this support because of past slavery, Jim Crow, violent White racism, perceived and real law enforcement racism, perceived and real systemic racism in the judicial system, education, economic opportunities, and claimed White privilege, the precepts of Critical Race Theory.

It saddens me when Democrats, national news correspondents and pundits, and African American Civil Rights leaders like Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, and Attorney Ben Crump rush to every city where a Black person is killed of badly injured by police, especially if the police involved are White, and claim racism and police brutality before the facts of the case are known.  These leaders usually incite the Black community to protests which often become violent despite calls for peace. These riots are usually started by BLM activists, members of ANTIFA, or bad apples simply caught up in the moment. In most police encounters with Black people, if the offender simply followed this simple advice, Comply, don’t die, they would not suffer at the hands of police.

Each new situation like those described above has the potential to make another racist old or young white man. Two polar opposite responses to jury verdicts should explain my reasoning. After four White police officers were acquitted in the Rodney King beating criminal trial, the African American community erupted in arson, racial violence, anarchy, and murder against innocent White people and Korean businesses in Koreatown. The end result was the second most costly riots in our history. Sadly, race riots also occurred in other cities around the nation. In contrast, after O. J. Simpson was acquitted in the murder of two White people, his former girlfriend and her new boyfriend, not severely beating them, the White community did not erupt in race riots, violence, or anarchy in the LA area or around the country. Every time African American leaders, Democrats, and the news media rush to microphones, cry systemic racism, and call police officers racists when a Black person is killed or severely injured in a police encounter before the facts are known, the Black community loses respect. This is especially true if the Black person resisted arrest, refused to surrender a weapon, or attacked the police. If the Black community starts protests and the protests devolve into rioting, most carnage destroys or severely damages Black businesses and sections of the city involved which rarely recover economically.

In contrast to the entire anarchy narrative above, the Republican Party and conservatism, including Ultra-MAGA folks who all understand that the United States was built on the foundation of our nation’s Judeo-Christian heritage, the traditional family, religious liberty, human rights and the end of slavery, free, fair, and honest elections, small government, states’ rights, capitalism, strong borders, national sovereignty, and a strong national defense. We support the rule of law, the Constitution, and equal opportunities for all because all Life Matters. Black Lives Matter; White Lives Matter; Asian Lives Matter; Native American Lives Matter; Unborn Lives Matter; and Old People’s Lives Matter. In my opinion, it is still time to put America First and Make America Great Again. One can be ideologically Ultra-MAGA without a 2016 or 2024 primary vote for Trump. We’ve never worn white hoods and robes or burned crosses to intimidate our political foes or led mobs to lynch Black people. Contrary to current Democrat, progressive, and news media prognostications, racism and anarchy is the ugly past of the Democratic Party not the current Republican Party and all its supporters.

A woman with blonde hair and pink highlights.For the What’a bouters who will spout January 6, the behavior of the Capital Rioters was abhorrent to me causing me to jump off the Trump Train when it happened. It is important to recall that four of the Capital Police who died committed suicide and the fifth officer died of multiple strokes. Ashli Babbitt was the only person killed during the Capital Riot. Based on at least one video, she did not appear to me to pose a real threat as claimed, but she was still shot to death by a capital policeman. Babbitt was an Air Force veteran who served 12 years on active duty with deployments in Afghanistan, Iraq, Kuwait, and Qatar. When she was killed, she was a member of the Air National Guard serving in the WDC Capital Guardian unit. Why is she dead?

It is time to say to America, Y’all come back now, hear! or Can’t we all just get along?

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BLACK ALLEGIANCE TO DEMOCRATS?

BLACK ALLEGIANCE TO DEMOCRATS CONTENTS

Black allegiance to Democrats is puzzling to me. Historically, the relationship between African Americans and the two major political parties in the United States Is characterized by a switch in allegiance from Republicans to Democrats that occurred during the first 40 years of the twentieth century. Several factors contributed to this change in party affiliation and subsequent Black allegiance to Democrats. My question is, Is this allegiance still Justified?

Black Allegiance to Republicans from the Civil War to the 1940’s
A group of men sitting in front of each other.

 

 

 

 

 

After the Civil War, Reconstruction brought freedom, opportunity, education, the right to vote, and hold elected public office to freedmen, former slaves. In 1866, the Republicans passed the Civil Rights Act and took control of all Southern state governorships and legislatures, leading to the election of numerous African Americans to local, state, and national offices. Consequently, all of the First Blacks in Congress Were Republicans. African Americans were also installed in other non-elected positions of power throughout the South. Reconstruction resulted in the South’s first state-funded public-school systems, more equitable taxation, and laws against racial discrimination in public transportation and accommodations. Freedmen also bought farms, started businesses, and established many of the traditional Black universities that remain to this day. By 1870, three civil rights Amendments to the Constitution, championed by Republicans, were ratified to prevent the benefits of the 1866 Civil Rights Act from being overturned by future legislatures. Amendment XIII freed former slaves. Amendment XIV gave the rights of citizenship to all former slaves and all those born in the United States. Amendment XV ensured the right of former slaves to vote. Sadly, the punitive implementation of Radical Republican Reconstruction turned most southerners into White supremacists with the first KKK groups forming by 1867. Democrat anarchists and White supremacists were controlled under martial law and suppression by Yankee solders. Until the end of Reconstruction in the mid-1870’s, Southern state governments were controlled by Republicans including blacks, carpetbaggers,” and “scalawags.” Consequently, protected Freedmen prospered during and after Reconstruction despite subsequent, restrictive Jim Crow laws.

The 1876 Presidential election between Democrat Samuel B. Tilden and Republican Rutherford B. Hayes was one of the most contentious in US history. By midnight election day, Tilden lacked one electoral vote needed to win; and he was leading the popular vote by 250,000. However, Republicans refused to accept defeat, and accused Democrats of intimidating and bribing African American voters to prevent them from voting in Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina, the only remaining Republican states in the South. According to the article, Compromise of 1877,  after it became clear that the outcome of the race hinged largely on disputed returns from those three southern states, a bipartisan congressional commission was set up to resolve the election issue. While the commission worked, a secret meeting between Republicans and moderate southern Democrats negotiated an agreement that gave Hayes the victory in exchange for withdrawal of all federal troops from the South. As a result of the so-called Compromise of 1877, Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina became Democratic once again ending the Reconstruction era.

Consequently, the Democrat Party regained control of the US House of Representatives and Southern State governments. Between the mid-1870’s and the early twentieth century, rulings by the United States Supreme Court restricted or overturned many of the civil rights granted to freedmen by the Civil Rights Act of 1866, the Reconstruction Act of 1867, and Constitutional Amendments XIII, XIV, and XV. The fallacy of the living constitution concept where the law evolves with social mores is clear in the Supreme Court decisions that reversed the original intent of Amendments XIII, XIV, and XV by upholding Jim Crow laws including the idea of segregated separate but equal facilities did not violate the Constitution. In many respects, African Americans, most of whom lived in the South, were abandoned by Republicans when they were once ” stripped of their voting rights. Despite this, many African Americans both North and South maintained commitments to the Republican Party.

Great Migration Changed the Black Population from Rural to Urban

The Great Migration, relocation of more than 6 million African Americans from the rural South to the cities of the North, Midwest and West, from about 1916 to 1970, was probably the most significant factor in the political party affiliation reversal by African Americans. In the decade between 1910 and 1920, the Black population of major Northern cities grew by large percentages, including 66% in New York City, 248% in Chicago, 500% Philadelphia, and 611% in Detroit. By 1970, when the Great Migration ended, its demographic impact was unmistakable. In 1900, 9 of 10 Black Americans lived in the South, and 3 of 4 Southern Black people lived on farms. In contrast. the South was home to only half of the country’s African Americans, with only 20% living in the region’s rural areas in1970. This migration created a Black urban culture that would exert enormous influence for decades including eventual Black allegiance to Democrats.

Two factors were the primary causes of the great Migration. First, the outlawed KKK and White supremacists continued underground activities using acts of intimidation and violence including lynching Blacks to enforce Jim Crow Laws throughout the South. Second, a shortage of laborers became acute in Northern industrial centers, as WWI put an end to European immigration to the United States. Although the Great Depression slowed the migration, labor shortages resumed during WWII. During the periods of active migration, recruiters pursued African Americans with promises of good jobs and a better life in the industrial cities of the North, Midwest, and West. This activity offended many southern while supremacists.

Black residents ended up creating their own cities within big cities, fostering the growth of a new urban, African American culture. One of the most prominent examples was Harlem in New York City, a formerly all-White neighborhood that by the 1920s housed about 200,000 African Americans. Harlem became an important part of the artistic movement known first as the New Negro Movement and later as the Harlem Renaissance, which would have an enormous impact on the culture of the era. The History of African Americans in Detroit article reports that between1910 and 1930, the Black population of Detroit increased during the  great migration from under 6,000 to over 120,000, a city within a  city, and Detroit became the fourth largest city in the country. As in other cities, Black people were recruited for work in Detroit industries during WWI and WWII. Culturally, the African American community fostered the development of the Motown Record Corporation in 1960, according to Motown. From 1961 to 1971, Motown had 110 top 10 hits. Top artists included the Supremes with Diana Ross, the Four Tops, the Jackson 5. Related record label hit artists included Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, the Marvelettes, the Miracles, the Temptations, the Contours, Edwin Starr, Martha and the Vandellas, the Velvelettes, the Spinners, the Monitors, and Chris Clark. Smokey Robinson said of Motown’s cultural impact:

In the 1960’s, We were not only making music, we were making history. I recognized the bridges that we crossed, the racial problems and the barriers that we broke down with music. I would come to the South in the early days of Motown and the audiences would be segregated; and the kids were dancing together and holding hands.

The Greenwood District of Tulsa Oklahoma, with a population of 10,000, was another Black city within a city. Greenwood Avenue, known Black Wall Street, was the epicenter of this vibrant, affluent community.

After being disenfranchised in the South, urban African American centers provided the opportunity to begin a new era of increasing African American political activism as they found a new place for themselves in public life in the cities of the North, Midwest, and West. The civil rights movement directly benefited from this activism.

Unfortunately, the influx of African Americans to Northern, Midwestern, and Western cities caused animosity among Whites because they were competing for jobs and housing. The result was a rise of racial tension with White supremacist including KKK activity beginning in 1915. The summer of 1919 began the greatest period of interracial strife in U.S history including a disturbing wave of race riots in Washington, D.C.; Chicago, Illinois; Knoxville, Tennessee; Longview, Texas; Phillips County, Arkansas; and Omaha, Nebraska. The most serious was the 1919 Chicago Race Riot lasting13 days. A Black teenager was stoned by a group of White youths for being on an unofficially segregated beach and drowned in Lake Michigan. Police refusal to arrent the White perpetrator, identified by witnesses, started a week the rioting between gangs of Black and White Chicagoans. 15 White and 23 Black people were killed, 537 people injured, and 1,000 Black family’s homes were burned down.

Two years later, tensions between the races escalated as lynching increased in the Tulsa Oklahoma area. Armed Greenwood Blacks began to show up at courthouses to prevent White lynch mobs from killing Black people. When a young Black man was accused of sexually assaulting a young White girl, 75 armed Black men went to the courthouse to help the sheriff guard the accused. They were confronted by 1500 armed White men and retreated to Greenwood. This confrontation was followed by the Tulsa Race Massacre, which lasted over 18 hours from May 31 to June 1, 1921. On June 1, thousands of White anarchists poured into the Greenwood District, looting, and burning homes and businesses over an area of 35 city blocks. 1,256 houses were burned; 215 others were looted but not torched. Two newspapers, a school, a library, a hospital, churches, hotels, stores, and many other Black-owned businesses were among the buildings destroyed or damaged by fire. In 2001, the report of the Race Riot Commission concluded that between 100 and 300 Greenwood District Blacks were killed and more than 8,000 were made homeless over those 18 hours.

Unfortunately, after the Tulsa Race Massacre, the sheriff concluded no sexual assault had occurred; and he dropped all charges against the young Black man. The Tulsa Race Massacre remains one of the worst incidents of racial violence in U.S. history

The Black Conversion from Republican to Democrat

The Wikipedia articles, Democratic Party (United States) and History of the Republican Party (United States) both indicate that African Americans favored Republicans from the Civil War until 1936. In the article on Republicans, A line graph showing the number of civil rights act and republican studies. Paul Kleppner provides data showing that Northern Blacks

voted 60% Republican throughout the late nineteenth century. According to the article, When did Black Americans start voting so heavily Democratic?, the African American conversion from Republican to Democrat occurred between the 1936 and 1944 elections; and Black allegiance to Democrats became a consistent, dependable, political reality.

According to Black-American Members by Congress, all African Americans serving in the United States Congress from 1869 through 1935 were Republicans. Conversely, all the African Americans serving in the US Congress between 1935 and 1967 were Democrats. From 1935 to the present, most African Americans serving in the US Congress are members of the Democrat Party demonstrating solid Black allegiance to Democrats. From 1869 when the first African Americans served in the US Congress through the end of Reconstruction in1877, the number of African Americans serving gradually increased from three to eight in 1875. As soon as Reconstruction ended the trend reversed. In 1877, four African Americans served; and in 1879, there was only one serving. From 1879 until 1945, only one African American served in Congress in all but four congresses. Many congressional sessions during this period were devoid of African Americans. Three serving in a session of congress was the most occurring throughout this period. From 1879 through 1929, a few African Americans serving in Congress were from the South despite voter suppression and Jim Crow laws. From 1901 to 1929, no African Americans served in Congress; and between 1929 and 1967, there were no Republican African Americans in Congress. From 1967 to 1979, Senator Edward Brooke, III of Massachusetts, was the only Republican African American in the US Congress. In 1979, Republican Representative Melvin Evans of Vermont served a single term. From 1979 to 2009, all the Congressional African Americans were Democrats with the exceptions of 1995 when Republican Gary Franks from Connecticut and Independent Victor Frazer of Vermont who each served one term in the House and 1997 when Republican, Julius Watts, Jr. of Oklahoma started three terms in the US House. Watts was the only African American Republican in Congress from 1997 to 2003. Between 2003 and 2011, all African Americans in Congress were Democrats when South Carolina elected Republican Tim Scott to the House. In 2013, Tim Scott was elected to the US Senate. In 2015, African American Republican Mia Love of Utah, who served two terms until 2019, joined Scott in Congress.  In 2017, Republican William Hurd of Texas, who served one term, joined Love in the House and Scott as the three African Americans Republicans in Congress. In the current congress, Senator Tim Scott is the only Republican African American serving. Clearly, this information demonstrates solid Black allegiance to Democrats.

Factors Affecting Black Conversion from Republican to Democrat

In their 2020 article, Why are Blacks Democrats?, Ismail K. White and Chryl N. Laird, discussed, what are to me, a perplexing set of circumstances resulting in Black allegiance to Democrats.  African Americans are strong supporters of traditional values which is unique among most Democratic supporters; but, hey are not Republican. They note that since the 1960’s, the Black middle and upper classes have grown significantly while experiencing substantial diversification of more moderate racial, social, economic, and political views. In my opinion, this conservatism along with the strong traditional, Biblical Christian, values of a large segment of the greater Black Christian community, should result in renewed allegiance with Republicans. Nevertheless, Black allegiance to Democrats remains strong.

Democrat Support for Organized Labor

The Democrat Party was committed to organized labor. Black people moved out of the deep South to work in the factories of industrialized cities. Consequently, Democrat support for organized labor attracted African Americans to Democrats. African American participation in the early organizational phase of the labor movement brought exposure to the Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA). According to Communists in the United States labor movement (1937“1950) , the CPUSA also supported Civil Rights and creation of Fair Employment Practices Committees (FEPC) which promoted equal treatment of Black workers in unions with Black membership. In many UAW locals, White members engaged in hate strikes to protest hiring or promotion Black workers in their plants including the massive Detroit race riots in 1943. At the 1943 UAW Convention, delegates could not agree that the FEPC head should always be Black. The UAW resolved the issue by deciding that they would not take any stand on civil rights since it was outside the union’s economic sphere.

The CPUSA was active in organizing labor unions in the first half of the twentieth century. The CPUSA actively supported several service and small industry unions having significant African American membership. They helped organize most of the major unions of the country including the American Federation of Labor (AFL), Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO), United Auto Workers (UAW), United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE), now the International Union of Electrical Workers (IUEW), International Woodworkers of America (IWA), and the International Longshore Workers Union (ILWU). From the mid-1930’s through WWII and the late 1940’s, the relationship between the CPUSA, union leadership, and our government was strained and at times, violent.

After the communist revolution in Russia, our nation distrusted communism. However, the CPUSA was a positive force for the labor movement which welcomed their contributions until power struggles within the various unions emerged. To assure the public that communists did not control the CIO, their 1940 conference resolved to condemn Communism, along with Nazism and fascism, as “inimical to the welfare of labor.” As the US military built up in 1940 and 1941 increased, US Secretary of War decided that labor strikes and slowdowns at key facilities were due to the CPUSA’s efforts to block Roosevelt’s military preparedness policy. Strikes at critical facilities were viewed as communist inspired for ideological reasons, rather than for better wages and working conditions. The most important of these strikes was at a bomber plant in June 1941 that built aircraft for the U. S. and Britain. The strike was so serious that the government seized the plant and army troops opened paths through the picket lines to allow workers to enter the plant. In 1946 the Republican Party took control of both the House and Senate. That Congress passed the Taft“Hartley Act, which contained a provision requiring all union officers to sign an affidavit that they were not Communists before the unions could bring a case before the National Labor Relations Board. The UAW expelled most CPUSA leaders who refused to sign the oath. By the early 1950’s, the CPUSA was insignificant in our labor movement.

The Great Depression

The Great Depression started in the United States with a stock market crash on Black Thursday, October 24, 1929. The result was a worldwide economic downturn that lasted until about 1939. It was the longest and most severe depression ever experienced by the industrialized Western world. No group of people, including African Americans, escaped the ravages of the Great Depression. Industrial production in the United States declined 47 %, real gross domestic product fell 30 %, the wholesale price index declined 33 %, and at its highest point unemployment exceeded 20 %. Although the U.S. economy grew between 1933 and 1937, growth remained substantially below long-term trends. In 1937“1938, the U.S. suffered another severe downturn but recovered and grew rapidly by mid-1938. The country’s output finally returned to its long-run trend path in 1942.

During the Great Depression, Union membership increased due to severe unemployment and the passage of the 1935 National Labor Relations (Wagner) Act  which encouraged collective bargaining and established unemployment compensation for laid-off workers. The role of the CPUSA during the start of organized labor exposed Americans, including African Americans to Marxism. Ultimately, the Great Depression taught people of all social classes the value of economic security and the need to endure and survive hard times. Americans rediscovered the virtues of democracy and the essential decency of the ordinary citizen. Thus, a decade marked by fundamental, even radical, social change ended for most with a reaffirmation of America’s cultural past and its traditional political ideals.

Roosevelt’s New Deal

The New Deal, President Franklin D. Roosevelt,1 FDR’s, response to the Great Depression, appealed to African Americans. The New Deal benefited African Americans especially those who left the South for urban areas in other parts of the nation.  The New Deal included government programs and agencies like the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), the Civil Works Administration (CWA), the Farm Security Administration (FSA), the National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933 (NIRA) and the Social Security Administration (SSA). They provided, jobs, unemployment, and welfare benefits for farmers, the unemployed, youth, the elderly, and African Americans. The New Deal produced a political realignment, between Democrats in the South and in big city machines, and newly empowered labor unions which included African American members, and other ethnic minorities. The realignment allowed Democrats to dominate presidential elections into the 1960s.

The Republicans were split. A minority supported the New Deal; but conservatives opposed the New Deal as hostile to business and economic growth. The majority of the Republicans in the U.S. Congress from 1937 to 1964 were conservatives. Some conservatives thought that the Roosevelt Administration supported communism, not traditional American values. Indeed, many conservatives believed then as now, that the left side of the political continuum is undergirded by Marxist philosophy which dominates their vision for the United States as patriots. Many conservatives believe that the policy initiatives of the New Deal and those of the Democrat Party from that period until today are based on Marxist philosophy. Hence, the fear of communism and its influences in the Roosevelt Administration.

The fact that New Deal policies supported the labor movement and its CPUSA participants contributed to conservative suspicions that the New Deal had its foundations in communism. By 1940, as the Roosevelt Administration prepared for the possibility of war, CPUSA union activities, promoting work slow-downs and strikes, became problematic. The Roosevelt Administration became critical of CPUSA union activities and slowly withdrew its support for CPUSA union activities. Although they had minor influence on policy, the fact that at least a dozen communists established a network of low-level government officials also contributed to conservative suspicions. The largest group worked in the Agriculture Adjustment Administration. They were all purged in 1935. Some moved to other government jobs. Other communists worked for the National Labor Relations Board, the National Youth Administration, the Works Progress Administration, the Federal Theater Project, and the Treasury and State Departments.

The fact that Roosevelt’s second Vice President, Henry A. Wallace, 1941-1945, was a progressive with a “naive faith in U.S.-Soviet cooperation,” who supported the work and ideas of Nicholas Rrich, a prominent Russian émigré, artist, and peace activist also contributed to conservative suspicions that the Roosevelt Administration was sympatric to communism. Additionally, in mid-1944, Wallace toured the Soviet Union labor camps in Magadan and Kolyma. Although the camps were forced labor camps for decadents, the Soviets claimed the workers were all volunteers. Wallace was totally deceived and indicated that he was impressed by the camps. Consequently, he received a warm reception in the Soviet Union.

In the 1944 election, Wallace was replaced by Harry S. Truman as the Vice-Presidential candidate. Some commentators think that had Wallace become president in 1945, “there might have been no atomic bombings, no nuclear arms race, and no Cold War;” and a President Wallace would have been an appeaser that would have allowed the spread of Communism into countries like Iran, Greece, and Italy. After leaving office, Wallace became the editor of The New Republic, a progressive magazine. He also helped establish the Progressive Citizens of America (PCA), a progressive political organization that accepted members regardless of race, creed, or political affiliation including Communists adding to the perception that Wallace was at least a communist sympathizer.

The New Deal brought mixed benefits for African Americans. On the plus side, Roosevelt appointed an unprecedented number of African Americans to second-level positions in his administration. Although Blacks accounted for about 10% of the total population, the WPA, NYA, and CCC allocated 10% of their budgets to Blacks. They operated separate all-Black units with the same pay and conditions as White units.  New Deal administrators worked to ensure Blacks received at least 10% of welfare assistance payments. The Fair Labor Standards Act helped boost wages for non-White workers in the South.1 Other New Deal policies played a major role in creating new employment opportunities to non-White workers.

With the start of WWII, the ravages of the Great Depression ended; and the benefits of the New Deal spread in the economy. The proportion of African American men employed in manufacturing positions rose significantly. Overtime provided larger paychecks in war industries and average living standards rose steadily. Real wages rose by 44% during the war. The percentage of families with an annual income of less than $2,000 fell from 75% to 25% of the population. In 1941, 40% of all American families lived on less than the $1,500. The median income was $2,000 a year. Eight million workers labored in poverty. From 1939 to 1944, wages and salaries more than doubled. Overtime pay and increased employment lead to a 70% rise in average weekly earnings during the war. Membership in organized labor increased by 50% between 1941 and 1945. The War Labor Board discouraged strikes; and new workers were encouraged to participate in the existing labor organizations resulting in improved working conditions, better fringe benefits, and higher wages. Consequently, workers enjoyed a level of well-being that they had never experienced before.” As a result, consumer expenditures rose by nearly 50% by 1944. Individual savings accounts climbed almost sevenfold during the war. The share of total income held by the top 5% of wage earners fell from 22% to 17% while the bottom 40% increased their share of the economic pie. In addition, during the war, the proportion of the American population earning less than $3,000 fell by half. In 1932, most Americans African voted Republican. However, since Blacks felt the sting of the depression’s wrath even more severely than Whites, they welcomed any help. Roosevelt, the New Deal, and Democrats provided that help. In 1936, almost all African Americans (and many Whites) shifted from the “Party of Lincoln” to the Democrat Party. By the end of WWII, especially in several Northern states, Black allegiance to Democrats was solidified and survives into the 21st century.

New Deal Impacts on African Americans

Unfortunately, many programs were not specifically targeted to alleviate the much higher unemployment rate of Blacks.  Some were even unfavorable to Blacks. The Agricultural Adjustment Act, for example, helped many White farmers but reduced the need of farmers to hire tenant farmers or sharecroppers which were predominantly Black. Thousands of Blacks were thrown out of work and replaced by Whites. On some jobs, Blacks were paid less than the   National Recovery Administration (NRA)wage minimums because some White employers considered the NRA’s minimum wage “too much money for Negrs”. By August 1933, Blacks called the NRA the “Negro Removal Act.” An NRA study found that the NIRA put 500,000 African Americans out of work. In addition, the New Deal was racially segregated as Blacks and Whites rarely worked alongside each other. The largest relief program was the WPA. It operated segregated units, as did its youth affiliate the NYA. Blacks were hired by the WPA as supervisors in the North, but of 10,000 WPA supervisors in the South only 11 were Black. Historian Anthony Badger argues that “New Deal programs in the South routinely discriminated against Blacks and perpetuated segregation.”  Although work camps in the North were initially integrated, by July 1935, practically all the camps in the United States were segregated, and Blacks were strictly limited in the supervisory roles they were assigned. Kinker and Smith argue that “even the most prominent racial liberals in the New Deal did not dare to criticize Jim Crow”.

There was no attempt whatsver to end segregation or to increase Black rights in the South, and several leaders that promoted the New Deal were racist and antisemitic. Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes, former Chicago NAACP president, was one of the Roosevelt Administration’s most prominent supporters of Blacks. In 1937, when a Southern Senator accused him of trying to break down segregation laws Ickes wrote him to deny that:

I think it is up to the states to work out their social problems if possible. I have never dissipated my strength against the particular stone wall of segregation. I believe that wall will crumble when the Negro has brought himself to a high educational and economic status. Moreover, while there are no segregation laws in the North, there is segregation in fact; and we might as well recognize this.

Although Roosevelt appointed a “Black Cabinet” of African American advisers on race relations and African American issues and publicly denounced lynching as “murder,” he did not push federal anti-lynching legislation since he believed that such legislation was unlikely to pass. Since Southern Democrats were critical to his legislative coalition, he did not oppose Southern Jim Crow laws or support of federal anti-lynch laws to avoid alienating Southern Democrats and endanger New Deal programs.

The fact, that African Americans completely switched allegiance from Republicans, the party of Lincoln, to Democrats by 1948, baffles me. From Civil War until the 1968 Fair Housing Act, the last major modern Cilil Rights legislation, Republicans, not Democrats, championed African American causes. Senate Democrats filibustered or attempted to filibuster every piece of Civil Rights legislation from the first bill passed during the Republican Eisenhower Administration in 1957 to the last passed during the Democrat Johnson Administration in 1968. Although Democrat Presidents signed most bills into law, the votes of Republican Congressmen ensured passage of all the Civil Rights legislation of the 1950’s and 1960’s.

Although African Americans benefited economically under FDR, his record on Civil Rights was, in my opinion, appalling. FDR made no effort to eliminate Jim Crow laws, including voter suppression, in the South. He did nothing to stop or reduce segregation anywhere in the nation. His efforts to promote equal employment opportunities for African Americans was marginal at best. He did nothing to promote fair and equitable educational opportunities for African Americans. Finally, and most egregiously, FDR never endorsed passage federal anti-lynch laws in Congress.

Despite the above issues, Black allegiance to Democrats and their poor Civil Rights record between 1877 and 1945 and beyond could be explained by one historical event which haunts me. In 1877, Republicans bought the Presidency of Rutherford B. Hayes in exchange for withdrawal of all federal troops from the South. As a result of the so-called Compromise of 1877, the last three Republican states in the south, Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina became Democratic ending the Reconstruction era. The Democrat Party gained control of the south ushering in the Jim Crow era, Black voter suppression, segregated equal but separate facilities and institutions, anarchy and violence to keep Blacks in their place, and a rise in White supremacy and the KKK. After about 250 years of slavery, Republicans promised freedom only to basically allow freedom to be snatched away after only 12 years of freedom. This betrayal could explain why African Americans abandoned Republicans for Democrats in the 1940’s.

Modern Black Allegiance to Democrats

Since the passage of Civil Rights legislation in the 1960’s, Black allegiance to Democrats has been unwavering with at least 80% support throughout the nation. Republican President Dewitt D. Eisenhower signed the Civil Rights Act of 1957, which was vigorously opposed by Southern Senate Democrats. Democrat President Lyndon B. Johnson, despite opposition by Southern Senate Democrats and most Southern Representatives in the House, signed all three of the 1960’s Civil Rights Acts into law. The 1964 Civil Rights Act was opposed by 78% of Senate Democrats and 74% of House Democrats. Rev. Dr. Maritn Lother King Jr. was present when Johnson signed the bill into law. The 1965 Voting Rights Act was approved by 75% of the Senate Democrats and 81% of the House Democrats. President Johnson signed the Act into law with King, Rosa Parks, John Lewis, and other civil rights leaders attending the ceremony. The 1968 Fair Housing Act passed Congress with 76% Senate Democrat approved. All Southern Democrats objected except three and one who abstained. 71% of the House Democrats approved. The Fair Housing Act was signed shortly after the assignation of Dr. King. The fact that two of the three 1960’s Civil Rights laws were approved by Congressional Democrats, who were in the majority; and all three bills were signed into law by President Johnson, a Democrat, assured Black allegiance to Democrats from then until now.

The Johnson Administration also established numerous policies and legislation that strengthened Black allegiance to Democrats. After the assignation of President John F. Kennedy in November of 1963, President Johnson was sworn into office and began his work to create a Great Society using his War of Poverty as his main tool. The Great Society Executive actions and legislation he proposed were the most aggressive since Roosevelt’s New Deal. The Great Society included the 1964 Economic Opportunity Act establishing the Office of Economic Opportunity and the Job Corps to help the underprivileged break the poverty cycle by helping them develop job skills, further their education and find work, the National Work Study Program to help students pay for college, loans and guarantees for employers to provide jobs to the unemployed, provide funds to establish agricultural co-ops, aid to help unemployed parents to enter the workforce, Medicare, Medicaid, Head Start preschool programs, the 1965, Elementary and Secondary Education Act guaranteed federal funding for education in low-income school districts, the 1965 Housing and Urban Development Act provided federal funds to cities for urban renewal and development, the 1965 National Foundation on the Arts and Humanities Act since the arts and humanities belong to all the people of the United States not just private citizens, the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Endowment for the Arts to study the humanities and fund and support cultural organizations such as museums, libraries, public television, public radio and public archives, and the 1965 Immigration and Naturalization Act which ended immigration nationality quotas, although it focused on reuniting families and still placed limits on immigrants per country and total immigration.

In 1968, President Richard M. Nixon set out to revamp the Great Society. Many Republicans still wanted to help the poor while reducing costs. Other Republicans and supporters of traditional values resented what they saw as government handouts and felt the government should butt out of Americans’ lives altogether. Consequently, political infighting for social reform has been raging ever since. Johnson’s Great society initiatives reinforced Black allegiance to Democrats while the Republican efforts to streamline its social programs and the idea that government should butt out of Americans lives altogether pushed African Americas away from Republicans.

From the African American perspective, it is not difficult to believe that the Republican desire to control the costs of the Great Society welfare programs was racist and an effort to reduce their ability to improve their lives, economically, educationally, and culturally. African Americans did not and still do not believe that government should butt out of their lives. The crux of the debate is whether government welfare programs create dependency on government at the expense of self-reliance and hard work and reduce the ability of people to better themselves. Those who believe in traditional values felt that dependance on government creates low self-esteem, hopelessness, and depression. Conservatives also understand the African American middle class and business class was expanding long before the New Deal and Great Society including Jim Crow era expansion when the African American community looked after and supported each other because the government would not help.

According to the 2020 article, Why are Blacks Democrats? by Ismail K. White and Chryl N. Laird, the purpose of Black allegiance to Democrats is to leverage their political strength as a minority group in a majority based political system, Black Americans have come to prioritize group solidarity in party politics. This partisan loyalty became a norm of group behavior, something you do as a Black person, an expectation of behavior meant to empower the group. As candidate Biden said in the 2020 Presidential campaign, If you don’t vote for me, you ain’t Black! Support for the Democrat Party is insured through social rewards and penalties which recognize compliance and punish defection of racial group members. Interestingly, it is the social and spatial segregation of Black Americans that makes all this work. This decision to ensure collective action for the larger group interest is an effective strategy for leveraging political power, especially in a two-party system. A divided group minimizes the likelihood of responsiveness by either party, but as a partisan voting bloc, Blacks are positioned to push their issues onto the party agenda. If the Democrats fail to be responsive Blacks can threaten to withhold their vote by not turning out. This is how racialized social constraint maintains both Black party loyalty and Black political power. This African American requirement to maintain their individual Black allegiance to Democrats and ensure collective action leverage political power, and :group solidarity is a tenant of Marxism.  The Marxist disdain for individualism will be discussed later in the section, The Assault on African American Culture. The idea that Blacks withhold votes if Democrats do not give them what they want is counterproductive. An abstention is a vote for the other party. The question, Is Black Allegiance to Democrats Still Justified? will be considered in detail in the next section.

A map of the united states with red and blue colors.As the map on the left indicates, Democrat majorities are closely linked to counties with the largest urban populations in their respective states. Many of these urban areas also have higher education institutions and large numbers of progressive academics. Both groups vote for Democrats. In many states, the urban populations constitute most of the state population. Rural areas contain most of the state’s land mass, agricultural land and production, and renewable and non-renewable natural resource production all of which often contribute significantly to the state’s gross economic productivity. Rural voters usually vote Republican. In states where urban populations compose most of their state’s population, the state is usually controlled by the Democrat Party. Comparing the map above with the two maps below showing the results of

A map of the united states with each state 's electoral votes.
A map of the united states with the names of each state.the 2020 state elections confirms these observations. Urban Black allegiance to Democrats usually leads to election of Democrat mayors, city leadership groups, school boards, and prosecutors. Additionally, in states where urban populations form a majority, Democrat governors and legislatures are also usually elected. Urban Black allegiance to Democrats gives Democrats control over virtually all aspects of life in urban African American population centers and communities. Therefore, Democrats have had a responsibility to ensure that the lives of African Americans were improved since they gained Black allegiance to Democrats in the 1940’s.

For Democrats in these areas, Black lives should actually matter; and the lives of their African American constituents should have improved every day during the last 80 years. African Americans should have benefited from their Black allegiance to Democrats.

Is Black Allegiance to Democrats Still Justified?

To quote President Donald J. Trump while seeking the African American vote as the Republican candidate in the 2016 election and sitting President and candidate in the 2020 election, What do you have to lose? In other words, Is Black allegiance to Democrats still justified? The question is not a Trump 2024 endorsement; but rather an endorsement of policies designed to make America great again (MAGA) and put We the People of the United States first in both domestic and foreign affairs. Under those Republican, MAGA, policies and initiatives, African Americans, and all minorities, achieved the lowest unemployment rates and highest prosperity in history prior to the onslaught of the Covid-19 pandemic. Based on the current status of education, poverty and fatherlessness, healthcare, crime, culture and the present economic situation for African Americans, indeed for all We the People, Is Black allegiance to Democrats still justified?

In my old White man‘s opinion, African Americans should be asking some additional questions. Have African Americans benefited significantly from almost 80 years of Black allegiance to Democrats? Again, in my opinion, the answer to that question Is an emphatic, no. Another reasonable question is this, Has the progress made by African Americans during the last 80 years occurred because of Black allegiance to Democrats or in spite of that allegiance? This also seems to be a reasonable question.

One Black man’s answer to these questions appeared in an article by Larry Elder. In his 2004 Baltimore Sun article, The secret story of blacks’ success he observed that Illinois Republican Senate candidate Alan L. Keyes proposed exempting Blacks from paying federal income taxes for a couple generations. Keyes stated that slavery “was an egregious failure on the part of the federal establishment.” In my opinion, Keyes like others, failed to mention that slavery existed for 170 years before Constitutional, federal, governance began or that British mercantilism forced the start of slavery and its continuation until 1789. British mercantilism made slavery an economic necessity for successful agriculture in the South during colonial times. This is not an excuse for slavery, it simply supplies a historical context for slavery. Larry Elder, an African American, asked Who argues with that? What he meant was, who agrees with reparations, not who disagrees that slavery was egregious, because slavery was egregious.

Elder noted that despite slavery, Jim Crow, and racism, the progress of American Blacks is simply astounding. Black America, if divided into a separate country, ranks No. 16 in gross domestic product. Elder quotes economist Thomas Sowell, another African American, as follows:

Black economic progress increased tremendously well before ‘level-the-playing-field’ government policies and programs. In fact, 40 [years after] Lyndon B. Johnson’s War on Poverty, the income gap between Blacks and Whites closed faster ‘prewar’ than ‘postwar.’

The economic rise of Blacks began decades earlier, before any of the legislation and policies that are credited with producing that rise. The continuation of the rise of Blacks out of poverty did not – repeat, did not – accelerate during the 1960s.

“The poverty rate among Black families fell from 87% in 1940 to 47% in 1960, during an era of virtually no major civil rights legislation or anti-poverty programs. It dropped another 17 percentage points during the decade of the 1960s and one percentage point during the 1970s, but this continuation of the previous trend was neither unprecedented nor something to be arbitrarily attributed to the programs like the War on Poverty.”

Elder observes that In America in Black and White: One Nation, Indivisible, authors Stephan and Abigail Thernstrom agree that the Black middle class expanded well before “affirmative action” In their book they state:

“The growth of the Black middle class long predates the adoption of race conscious social policies. In some ways, indeed, the Black middle class was expanding more rapidly before 1970 than after. … Many of the advances Black Americans have made since the Great Depression occurred before anything that can be termed ‘affirmative action’ existed.”

According to Elder, after President Ronald Reagan cut the top tax rate from 70% to 28%, Black income, business development, and business growth exploded. According to the National Review, by 1989, Black unemployment dropped from 20.4% to 11.4% while White unemployment dropped by only 4%…. A Black entrepreneurial class flourished.” According to the Census Bureau, the trend started under President Reagan continued through the Clinton years. Black-owned businesses increased almost three times faster than the total number of firms in the United States, receipts by Black-owned firms more than doubled, and from 1980 to 1990, the median income of Black households grew one and a half times faster than White households. Between 1992 and 1997, there was a 25.7% increase in Black-owned firms and a 32.5% increase in their gross sales.

In its 1963, Ebony magazine series called “If I Were Young Today,” Black high achievers offered advice to young Blacks. In his article, Paul Williams, said:

“Whatever one ds as a profession or livelihood, he should endeavor to read the current magazines pertaining to his work. One must keep pace with progress and what the other fellow is thinking and doing. In order to do this, he must read – read – read!!! He should strive to become a specialist and not just another architect, engineer or salesman.”

Elder noted that none of those offering advice even hinted at a need for race-based preferences. The road to success is simple, if not easily applied – hard work, sacrifice and, above all, the refusal to think like a victicrat. You know, the same formula used by Alan Keyes. To Democrats and progressives, “hard work,” “sacrifice,” and self-discipline (“read, read, read!!!”) are capitalistic values which they oppose. This begs the question, “Is Black allegiance to democrats still justified?”

Education

Black high school graduation rates are encouraging. In 1940, less than 8% of Blacks graduated from high school compared to 27% for Whites. By 2014, African American high school graduation rate was 86% and the White rate was 89%. At least two other internet articles came to the same conclusion. Unfortunately, a 2017, Pew Research Center article by Drew Desilver,  U.S. academic achievement lags that of many other countries, is discouraging. Fifteen-year-old U.S. students rank 24th in science and reading, and 38th in mathematics, compared to students in other countries of the world. Additionally, the 2020 Brookings Institute article, by Kenneth Shores, Ha Eun Kim, and Mela Still, Categorical inequalities between Black and white students are common in US schools”but they don’t have to be, is disheartening for African Americans. The chart and discussion below A bar graph showing the number of students in each class.portray critical inequalities in educational outcomes and opportunities for Black and White high school students. Teachers who use race as a classifier, which is unacceptable, instead of objective standards like test scores and grade point averages, often create racial disparities in opportunities for African American students. Racial differences in socio-economic status tend to account for most variation suspension rates, classification into specialized classes, and placement in advanced courses. Many educators suggest that sorting students into different educational experiences is attributable to students’ characteristics, race,

or Blacks don’t take advanced math because they confront steeper out-of-school challenges which is beyond the control of schools. In the authors view, schools create these socially relevant categories, and teachers and school leaders sort students into them creating categorical inequalities for Black students. Consequently, school districts where Black students are worse off academically or socio-economically, tend to increase the educational disadvantages that Black students face. Districts with greater inequality, segregation, and lower overall socio-economic status also has larger achievement and disciplinary gaps between White and Black students. With the insights they present, the authors claim that school districts can either perpetuate or undo categorical inequalities.

The National School Board Association article Black Students in the Condition of Education 2020, article reports that 45% of Black students attended high-poverty schools, compared with 8% of white students; and about 25% of Black students, higher than the proportion of Blacks in the U.S. population, were enrolled in predominantly Black public schools. In the 2017“2018 school year, only two thirds of the Black students enrolled in Individuals with Disability Education Act programs graduated with a regular high school diploma. This was the lowest rate among all racial/ethnical groups. The National Report Card achievement scores showed that almost seven times more White students scored above the proficient level in Geography; and almost three times more White students scored above the proficient level in Reading compared to Black students. The results were within this range for History, Civics, Science, Math, and Technology and Engineering Literacy. The article noted that the proficiency gap between White and Black students has not closed.

In addition, U.S. educators continuously replace core academics with transformational social and cultural engineering curricula. The fact that overall student outcomes in reading, science, and math lag behind at least one fourth of the world’s countries including competitors like China seems irrelevant to our educators. Unfortunately, Black students are about three to four times less proficient in core subjects compared to White students and far behind many students of the world. The Miseducation of America by David Goodwin, President of the Association of Classical and Christian Schools, is a review of the Fox Nation series, The Miseducation of America. Goodwin observes that progressives started their transformation of American education in 1907 with the Gary Plan. The progressive goal was complete removal Christianity and traditional values from America’s schools and elimination of America’s Christian identity. This identify perpetuated the Western Christian Paideia, Judeo-Christian values, the idea that men, all people, should be educated to be well-rounded, refined in intellect, morals, and physicality, so training of both the body and mind is important. Goodwin describes the conflict between the progressive vision and the Christian vision for America as follows:

The progressive narrative [paideia] tells us that our civilization today is the result of human progress over time, and now that science rules the day, they can improve civilization even further if given enough power and control. [The] Christian narrative teaches something else. Our present culture and civilization will remain great only insofar as it aligns with Truth. Because Truth is fixed and unchanging, we should guard our society from influences that conflict with it, and we should strive to pursue Truth.. The Progressives at the turn of the 20th century knew what they were up against. As long as the Western Christian Paideia defined our culture and civilization, the progressive agenda would be limited. Progressive philosophies, such as Critical Theory, Marxism, and the influence of the Frankfurt School, dominate education. Today, our schools are far from the engine of freedom that classical Christian education once was.

The progressive thinkers behind this plan were, and still are, primarily atheistic Marxists who used Frankfurt School concepts of critical theory to challenge all aspects of Western civilization, Biblical Christianity, and capitalism. In the late 1960’s, Herbert Marcuse, a Frankfurt School critical theorist and Father of the new left, observed that a propaganda based educational dictatorship would be required  before radical Marxist change could occur in Western Europe and the United states. Marcuse determined that working class labors were no longer a subversive force capable of bringing about revolutionary change in western society and culture. Consequently, he identified anti-capitalists, radical intellectuals, the socially marginalized, exploited, persecuted outcasts and outsiders of ethnic minorities, people of color, the unemployed, and the unemployable as trainable revolutionaries. Ethnic and gender study programs were established in most universities to train the envisioned revolutionaries. Critical Race Theory, CRT, Critical Gender Theory, CGT, and Queer Theory, QT, were, and still are, useful tools for these revolutionaries. The educators trained for this transformation of our nation now teach our children, including African Americans, from Preschool to Ph.D., Marxism PP.

According to the on-line Britannica article, Basic tenets of critical race theory updated in 2021 by Brian Duignan., there are six basic tenants of CRT. First, according to Duignan,

Race is an undefined social construction. [To] some theorists, race is a set of physical characteristics including skin color, certain facial features, and hair texture; and imagined set of psychological and behavioral tendencies. The [imagined psychological and behavioral tendencies] have been created and maintained by dominant groups (in the United States, whites of western European descent) to justify their oppression and exploitation of other groups on the basis of the latter’s supposed inferiority, immorality, or incapacity for self-rule.”

Second, Duignan notes that CRT considers racism to be the normal experience of most people of color. African Americans, and other minorities, face discrimination and unfair treatment in the public and private sectors. Third, the racial hierarchy of American society may be unaffected or even reinforced by improvements in the legal status of oppressed or exploited people. Our laws, from the Constitution and Amendments to the laws of today, represent institutional White racism, structural racism, designed to oppress all minorities. Fourth, minority groups are periodically assigned negative stereotypes that benefit the needs or interests of whites. Fifth, no individual can be adequately identified by membership in a single group. An African American person may also be a Christian. Sixth, people of color are uniquely qualified to speak on behalf of other members of their group (or groups) regarding the forms and effects of racism.

Progressives claim that CRT is not taught in our preschool through grade 12 schools, but Duignan contradicts this claim when he writes, generalized versions of some [CRT] claims appear in the curricula of some public schools. Indeed, CRT retraining or re-education classes are now required in major corporations and the military. In preschool through grade 12 schools, the curricula teach the basic ideas of CRT; but the curricula are not re-education; they are education. Our White children must be taught that they will all benefit from White Privilege, and they are all racist oppressors who will create negative stereotypes of minorities, benefit from laws, and institutions to maintain White dominance, oppression, and exploitation of minorities. Our Black and other minority children must be taught that they will be subjected to oppression, negative stereotyping, domination, exploitation, and legal and institutional obstacles designed by White people to maintain white superiority over them. To put it succinctly, CRT in our public schools teaches our children that White people are all cruel, mean, and evil, White Supremacists, whether they know it or not; and Black people are the oppressed victims of all White people. CRT curricula includes texts and literature written for each level of students, Preschool through grade 12. I my opinion, CRT is divisive and racist.

Critical Gender Theory, CGT, curricula, including texts and lessons developed for students from preschool to grade 12, is now taught in public schools nationwide. The Bartleby Research article on Critical Gender Theory states that gender, a device by which society controls its members, revolves around the theory that gender is a social construct designed to subjugate women as system of oppression. CGT refuses binary gender characterizations in connection with sexuality. This theory says get rid of the norm and we do not need to come up with categories that are outside the norm.

Queer Theory, QT, and CGT are interrelated aspects of Critical Theory’s critique of traditional Western Judeo-Christian culture and traditional family values. The on-line article Queer Theory is a review of Queer in The Encyclopedia of Diversity and Social Justice. CGT and QT are aggressive assaults on traditional values. QT is one of the key contemporary critical theories of sex, gender, and sexuality. Therefore, it is one of the handful of specific and activist-driven approaches to ‘applied postmodernism.’ QT disputes the power dynamics and social constructions concerning homosexuality. The QT review states,

QT exists to antagonize norms, that is, anything that can be considered normal by society (even [an] accurate, neutral description) that carries a morally normative exceptionwhich [QT] deems intrinsically oppressive. This attitude is probably most clearly understood in the dichotomy normal [which has a positive connotation] versus abnormal [which has a negative connotation]. QT wouldn’t merely seek to expand the boundaries of normal’ to include circumstances like homosexuality or intersex conditions; but to [establish] the idea that normal is constraining and oppressive.

QT seems to deliberately confuse anything that is. normal [or] commonplace [like] heterosexuality or the sexual binary. Any variation [from normal] must be understood pejoratively and seen as illegitimate. Society has strong expectations for people to [be] normal. [QT] sees these expectations as [an] application of dominance to create oppression. Conflation of normal [with] moral is the centerpiece of QT. [This conflation of normal and moral makes it] relatively easy for QT to keep muddying this water for its own activist purposes sometimes called queering, [queering something, or just being queer].

Being queer [is not] being LGBT because being queer cannot accept normalcy or stability even within those categories. In fact, there should be no categories at all other than queer [which is woke or critically conscious under QT doctrines] and ‘not-yet-queer [or] bad’.

In her 2021 Heritage Foundation article, Woke Gender, Emilie Kao observed that like CRT, gender theory,  CGT,  (and QT) emerged from universities and have been propelled into the mainstream by identity politics. CGT rejects any relationship between biology and gender as biological essentialism. Accordingly, the biology of sex and gender (the way one expresses being male or female) are performed social constructs. Therefore, gender (and the body itself) can be reconstructed according to CGT and QT.

According to Kao, progressives insist that others must accept this dogma. This latest iteration of the sexual revolution is destructive to children and threatens the rights of parents to determine the upbringing of their children. The political lobbying organizations and woke capital hidden from parents, are transforming medicine and education into fields for transgender activism. Children are treated with a one size fits-all narrative, affirmative care, that has no basis in science, common sense, or compassion. Affirmative care uses hormonal and surgical interventions on minors to affirm gender identity. It limits counselors and doctors to affirming that boys are trapped in girls’ bodies, and vice-versa, even in children as young as 4 years old. Twenty states also ban talk therapy for gender dysphoria, meaning that counselors are forbidden from questioning a child as to whether he or she is actually trapped in the wrong body.

Ultimately, CGT and QT drives wedges between children and their parents. They also drive wedges between parents and activist educators promoting CGT and QT ideas in the classroom confusing children about their gender when they are emotionally and physically unprepared for the ideas. As Prof. Melissa Moschella has explained, despite the Supreme Court ruling in Meyer v. Nebraska and Pierce v. Society of Sisters affirming that parents have a fundamental and pre-political right to direct the education and upbringing of their children, judges have removed children from the custody of parents who opposed hormonal interventions for gender dysphoria. CGT and QT have so permeated American culture and law that parents who question it now risk challenges from the government. For parents to succeed in protecting children from woke gender ideology, they will need to do political battle. Like critical race theory, gender theory has entered pediatricians’ offices and classrooms through the work of political activists.

With this information in mind concerning the schools attended by African Americans, five questions seem reasonable. Have African Americans benefited significantly from almost 80 years of Black allegiance to Democrats? Has the progress made by African Americans during the last 80 years occurred because of Black allegiance to Democrats or in spite of that allegiance? Do African Americans approve of teachers’ unions, school boards, and educators who seek to undermine the rights of parents to demand an end to curricula, like CRT, CGT, and QT, that undermine African American’s traditional values, Christianity, and families? Should African Americans work to challenge or remove school boards that continue to fail to close the education gap between White and Black students? Since Democrats support teachers’ unions and school boards that support progressive curricula that failed our students, especially African Americans, Is Black allegiance to Democrats still justified?

Poverty and Fatherlessness

Although the African American middle-class continues to grow, the Black family poverty rate was 23% with the Black female parent family poverty rate at a staggering 37% in 2014, the poverty rate declined 33% for all Black families and 55% for single female parent Black families. The trends related to poverty in the United States are similar for all families from 1967 to 2014. A chart showing the percentage of black families in poverty.

Chart: History of Poverty in Black American Families

Poverty among Black families is more severe for both two parent and single female parent families compared to all families in both categories. If White families in both categories was presented, the difference would be even more stark. The data clearly shows that single female parent Black families are three time more likely to suffer poverty than two parent Black families. Although the difference has declined since 2000, Black single female parent families are almost twice as likely to suffer poverty compared to Black two parent families. With this data in mind, the same two questions seem reasonable. Have African Americans benefited significantly from almost 80 years of Black allegiance to Democrats? Has the progress made by African Americans during the last 80 years occurred because of Black allegiance to Democrats or in spite of that allegiance?

In the Black Community News article, ’72 Percent’ Documentary on Fatherless Black Children, the Senior editor observed that Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s 1965 report, The Negro Family: The Case For National Action, warned of the female-headed household crisis among Blacks due to an illegitimacy rate of about 24 % which would have devastating social consequences.

According to the author,

The saddest thing about out-of-wedlock pregnancy in the United States is the children are, for all intents and purposes, fatherless. A man is more emotionally and financially invested in his children when he lives with them and is married to their mother. Children who don’t live with their biological fathers are at higher risk for out-of-wedlock pregnancies, school truancy and drop-outs, and criminality. The majority of juvenile delinquents and adult prisoners grew up in female-headed households. Fatherless children are much more likely to suffer physical abuse, including sexual, because of the men their mothers bring home.

The Center for Health Journalism article, How Absent Fathers Are Hurting African American Boys by Lottie Joiner, painted a similarly dire picture for African American boys raised in fatherless homes. She described three Black boys who lived next door to her in a low-income neighborhood in Washington, D.C. Before their father died, he encouraged them to help their neighbors; and He kept close watch over them, warning his boys of the dangers that lurked in the streets. According to Joiner, after the boys’ father died life changed drastically for them. Although their mother tried to get help for her boys, none graduated from high school, two have criminal records, and the youngest was in drug rehab several times. Joiner asked, So what happened? and What did these young men need in their lives that their mother could not provide? She sought to answer those two questions with another, What happens to a boy ” specifically young African American men who are often faced with the eye of scrutiny from the world ” who ds not have a father present in his life. Joiner continued, If [young Black boys] don’t have a father in the home who can act as a source of support and one of your pillars for your formation of resilience, then you’re less likely to be resilient in the face of a lot of sources of trauma. She concluded that father-absence adversely impacted the mental health of Black boys and young men leading to major depression disorders. She quoted one Washington D.C. family therapist Ayize Ma’at who said, They’re hurting. They’reacting out pain. They’re just trying to meet a need ” the need to be included, to be loved, to be welcomed, respected, and wanted. Sadly, in my opinion, gangs often fulfill that need.

Another potential factor contributing to fatherlessness in African American homes is fatherless fathers or fathers whose fathers abused them, or their mothers. These men may not know how to be the kind of fathers or husbands they want to be or fear failure or becoming abusive themselves. These fathers could choose to be absent from their families. As noted previously, boys and young men raised without fathers are likely school dropouts, substance abusers, or become involved in gangs or other criminal activities, often becoming absentee fathers themselves. The result is generational fatherlessness in the less affluent segments of the African America community. Unfortunately, Joiner’s article was short on real answers to the problem of the adverse impact of fatherless homes on African American boys and young men. Her answer seemed to be, It takes a village with mental health and mentoring resources.

Speculation, concerning the causes of absentee father homes among African Americans, abounds. Some answers seem obvious to an outsider like me, who many African Americans would call a racist old White man.  The answers are socially, racially, economically politically, and regionally complicated. The answers also require patience, understanding, and open, frank dialog. Since 37% of the Black families living in poverty are fatherless, double the percentage of Blacks in the U.S. population, every potential factor should be considered. From my perspective, one potentially important issue may be government programs that provide resources to single moms where benefits increase based on the number of children in a home. Many conservatives believe that these programs incentivize father-absent homes rather than traditional family values. Three articles may provide some insight into the issue. According to the 2022 article, How To Get Government Help & Assistance As A Single Mom, a single mom can find government help. There are thousands of state and federal programs to cover food, rent, utility bills, and credit card debt so single moms can have extra money to spend on their children. In the 2020 article, How Much in Benefits Can a Single Mother Receive?, the author states, Mothers who are unemployed or make less than $25,000 per year are eligible for more benefits. Single mothers with many children also usually receive more benefits. In her 2022 article, 18 government assistance programs for moms with no income, Emma Johnson observes that about 56% of the people who live in poverty in the United States are women, and most of those are unmarried women of color with children who live below the federal poverty line. Universal Basic Income, or UBI, is an efficient, effective way to alleviate poverty and improve society overall. These programs give people a guaranteed sum of cash each month to get the services or resources they need. Single moms stand to benefit the most from this kind of aide. Each of these articles, and many others, provide links help moms find programs that meet their specific needs.

Since fatherlessness contributes to both poverty and criminality at twice the rate in Black culture compared to White culture, the same questions are relevant. Have African Americans benefited significantly from almost 80 years of Black allegiance to Democrats? Has the progress made by African Americans during the last 80 years occurred because of Black allegiance to Democrats or in spite of that allegiance? Other questions about how single moms are supported seem relevant, Should the programs be tied to required self-improvement classes or education with associated childcare provisions? Should the number of children receiving supplements be limited? Should the programs require non-abortive birth control where failure to comply would end subsidies for more children? Does welfare for single mothers encourage or discourage unmarried women from having babies? These are difficult issues to solve. Two final questions are appropriate. Have the programs supported by Democrats provided meaningful solutions to date?  Is Black allegiance to Democrats still justified when it comes to fatherlessness and poverty in Black culture and many communities?

Healthcare

Several other factors contribute to fatherlessness in African American hones. Healthcare is a significant factor related to fatherless African American homes. In 1992, Black men were about 10% to 33% more likely than White men to die from most diseases, a trend that continues to this day. According to Jerry Kennard, in 2019, heart attacks and cancer accounted for about 44% of all deaths for Black men. For young Black men between about 13 -15 and 44 years of age, homicide was the leading cause of death accounting or about 30% of all deaths in this age group, exceeding heat attack and cancer deaths.

Crime

In his 2020 article, 100 Black Crime Statistics: Data, Trends & Predictions, Arthur Zuckerman provides important information concerning crimes committed by African Americans. He makes the following important statement regarding Black crime in the United States:

“Despite the massive disparity in population, Black felons outnumber Whites in crimes like manslaughter, robbery, and illegal gambling. They also take up large percentages of both serious and petty crimes. Tighter law enforcement measures might be needed to improve the safety [in Black] communities, provided that the suspects are judged based on their acts and not their skin color.”

African Americans comprise about 15%; Whites comprise about 62%; and bi-racial Whites and Whites comprise about 71% of the US population.  In 2017, 53.1% of the arrests for manslaughter, 54% of the arrests for robbery, 33.5% of the arrests for aggravated assault, 28.7% of rape arrests, 29.8% of burglary arrests, and 43.9% of the arrests for illegal firearms were Black. in 2015, 58.8% of the Blacks in prison had committed violent crimes; and, in 2013, Blacks accounted for 52.2% of all murder arrests while Whites made up 45.3%. In Black-on-Black violence, familiarity and proximity are critical factors.  According to the FBI, in 2018, most murder victims are acquaintances of the suspects when their relationship to each other was identified. Crimes committed by friends and family exceed those perpetrated by strangers. 70.3% of the violent incidents suffered by Black victims were committed by Black offenders. In 2015 2,380 Blacks were accosted by Black killers. The proportion of Black-on-Black homicides to the number of Black people killed was 89.3% in 2015. For all crime categories discussed, one striking statistic is greatly concerning. The rate of criminality is two to three times greater than the proportion of African Americans in the U.S. population. Gangs, their drug trade and the associated criminality, and resultant incarceration also contributes to fatherlessness in Black families. Where African American crime is concerned, the same two questions are appropriate. Have African Americans benefited significantly from almost 80 years of Black allegiance to Democrats? Has the progress made by African Americans during the last 80 years occurred because of Black allegiance to Democrats or in spite of that allegiance? Another relevant question is, Why is criminality so high among African Americans? The high proportion of father-absence among African American families may provide one part of the answer to these questions.

The Assault on African American Culture

As a racist old White man, and total outsider, the assault on African American culture and society seems to contribute to many of the issues adversely affecting African Americans. From my White privileged, white supremacist perspective, asking pointed questions designed to promote critical thinking and dialog, is the least provocative way to approach the issues. First, Ds the progressive assault, on traditional values, morality, and ethics in the overall American culture and society, contribute to African American issues related to education and the noted racial disparities, poverty and fatherlessness, healthcare, and crime? The answer to problems related to these issues is a resounding yes for both White and Black Americans; but Why?A quote from joseph stalin on the side of a black background.The answer lies in the Frankfurt School’s application of critical theory to move people and cultures to accept atheistic Marxist progressive ideology as the bases of governance and society. Critical theory uses every academic discipline and most aspects of our culture to promote the revolutionary, transformational change they envision for the United States. Three of the most important disciplines used by critical theorists to accomplish their goals are psychiatry, psychology, and sociology. Research projects are developed and statistically designed by researchers in these disciplines to support the tenants of critical race theory, critical gender theory, Queer Theory, and attack Biblical Christianity, traditional values, and our system of governance.

Elimination of Christianity, especially Biblical Christianity, and our traditional Judeo-Christian values as major influences on American culture and society, is the primary goal of Marxist progressives. In my opinion, progressives oppose Christianity for several reasons First, both Judaism and Christianity teach that each individual is important to God; and individualism is an anathema to Marxists since their success depends of the individual’s subjugation to the collective. Consequently, the individual is worthless compared to the value of the collective. In contrast, Biblical Christianity teaches that the individual has infinite value because

God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still Sinners, Christ (God’s only Son) died for us (each individual)” (Romans 5:8 NIV).

The value of the individual is magnified by the fact that

The Spirit Himself testifies with our spirit that we are God’s children. Now if we are children, then we are heirs “ heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ, if indeed we share in his sufferings in order that we may also share in his glory (Romans 8:16-17 NIV).

As joint heirs with God’s only Son, Jesus Christ, each Christian individual has infinite value in the sight of the God. Marxist philosophers have expressed their disdain for the role of Christianity in promoting the individual. Ludwig Feuerbach wrote,

Christianity alienated man’s communal character as a species into individual relationships with an external being resulting in the rise of individualism. The essence of Man is contained only in community, in the unity of Man with Man. [In the relationship between] ‘I and Thou,’ [Christ had become] ‘Thou.’ [Religion was misdirected].

Engels observed that the abstract subjectivity of individualism to be a problem of the Christian-Germanic view of the world and the Christian state. Accordingly, the free and spontaneous association of men would lead to an ever certain victory over the unreason of the individual.

The second reason progressives oppose Christianity is the relationship between the Biblical Christian Church and traditional Christian family to the nurture and training of each generation of Biblical Christian individuals. Evangelism, conversion of non-Christians, is a primary task of Biblical Christian churches and individuals. God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son that whver believes in Him shall not perish but have everlasting life (John 3:16). Each person on earth is individually valued and loved by God. While discussing the church and religion in The Communist Manifesto, Marx wrote, Communism abolishes eternal truths, it abolishes all religion, and all morality, instead of constituting them on a new basis; it therefore acts in contradiction to all past historical experience. In A Dictionary of Marxist Thought, Nikolai Bukharin wrote, religion [especially Christianity] must be opposed actively [since it would take too long for it to] die out of its own accord.

The traditional Biblical Christian family with a father, mother, and their children is another reason progressives oppose Christianity. The Christian family serves the same basic function as the Christian church with the primary emphasis on their children. This family model ds not fit the preferred progressive family model. It is both hierarchical and patriarchal, an anathema to LGBTQ+ activists and social Marxists. Marxist, progressive opposition to the traditional family is clear. In The Communist Manifesto, Marx wrote:

Abolition of the family! Even the most radical flare up at this infamous proposal of communists.

On what foundation is the present family, the bourgeois (ruling class, landowners, and capitalists) family based? On capital, on private gain. In its completely developed form this family exists only among the bourgeoisie.

In The Mothers: A Study of the Origins of Sentiments and Institutions, Robert Briffault observed that paternal families were a product of economic systems where property inheritance by individuals was important to society. Briffault’s vision for the future family is not traditional. He concluded:

The expectation that the decay of the patriarchal family as a result of the serious crisis of the individualistic, competitive economy would increase, and that a society no longer characterized by competitiveness would be able finally to release social emotions which went beyond the narrow and distorting circle of family.

Friedrich Engels viewed the Bourgeois, traditional Biblical family, as an institution of male dominance in which the wife simply provided heirs for legal transmission of property to succeeding generations in exchange for sustenance. Engels considered the relationship a form of prostitution. Michele Barrett defined family as simply kinship arrangements or the organization of a household. This view is consistent with the current demands of the LGBTQ+ agenda. The role of the Biblical Christian family in relation to raising strong Biblical Christian individuals is a significant reason that progressives oppose Christianity.

Thirdly, progressives oppose Christianity because of the relationship between individualism and capitalism. They understand that Biblical Christianity produces individuals who are confident, self-reliant, well-rounded, refined in intellect, morals, and physicality, potential capitalists and entrepreneurs. Progressives know that virtually every major corporation was founded by one or a few individuals who had confidence in our Constitutional, capitalistic, economic system to risk starting their business. Since Marxist progressives oppose capitalism, Christianity must be opposed and every level. A fact that most progressives refuse to admit.

It seems that African American culture and society have suffered greatly from the progressive assault on traditional values, including Biblical Christianity, the traditional family, individualism, and capitalism. Since Democrats support the progressive assault of traditional values, “Is Black allegiance to Democrats still justified?”

Marxist progressives and Critical Theorists use education and telecommunication industries as tools of teaching and indoctrination. Marxism has been largely assimilated into modern social sciences. Consequently, our students, now from Preschool to PhD., Marxism PP, are taught by curricula determined by the left’s educational dictatorship. CRT, CGT, and QT are now stealthily taught in virtually every discipline, especially liberal arts and social sciences. With these educational programs, each new generation of citizens, including leaders of the industries below, becomes more tolerant of and often in favor of a more progressive culture and socialist society in the United States. The cultural weapons used by progressive Critical Theorists to deliver their ideas to the people of the United States for this assault include the news media, movie industry, music, television, advertising, fashion, and literature. Movies, television, music, and literature routinely portray extra-marital sex, including bi-sexual and homosexual characters, and unmarried co-habitation as acceptable. The behavior occurs in most prime-time television programming and advertisements viewed by our children. On these venues, children are exposed to hundreds of violent acts each year. Although criminals usually suffer consequences for crime in hourly dramas, seasons long series like the Sopranos and Empire depict the lavish wealth potentially generated by crime and drug empires. The events portrayed tell children that non-traditional sex and families are acceptable, and carefully done, crime pays. The news media usually portrays interactions between law enforcement and Black criminals as prime examples of systematic racism” or White privilege. When these interactions result in a Black fatality, news and social media, and civil rights leaders often fan flames of protest before the facts are known. The chart below provides some interesting data regarding deaths caused by Police brutality. It shows that

A bar chart showing the number of people shot to death by police in the united states from 2 0 1 7 through 2 0 3 4.From The real number of unarmed black people killed by police Washington Post, 2022

the rate of Black deaths caused by police is about the same as the rate of Black criminality and less than total white deaths which are also like White criminality rates.

According to The U.S. Sun, 2020 article How many unarmed black people are killed by police each year? By Patrizia Rizzo, from 2013-2019, over 1,000 people were killed by police, and one third were black. The article also notes that 765 people killed by police in 2020, 28% were black. The article notes its discouragement since the Black population is only 13% of the U.S. population. As noted in the Crime section above, For all crime categories discussed, one striking statistic is greatly concerning. The rate of criminality is two to three times greater than the proportion of African Americans in the U.S. population. The article title implies that most of the blacks killed by police, 201 to 333 according to the percentages in the article, were unarmed. Yet, the article cites only three examples of unarmed victims killed by police brutality in America, noting that two of the three victims highlighted in the article resisted arrest; but, they should not have died. The article failed to supply actual data regarding the number of unarmed, compliant Blacks killed by police during the time periods discussed. Nor did the article mention that the rate of Black criminality and deaths at the hands of police is virtually identical. The article also failed to provide data about the number of Black deaths occurring during violent altercations with police involving weapons., guns, or hand to hand battles threatening the lives of police.

In her 2020 Wall Street Journal opinion article, The Myth of Systemic Police Racism, Heather Mac Donald wrote,

“The police fatally shot nine unarmed blacks and 19 unarmed whites in 2019, according to a Washington Post database, down from 38 and 32, respectively, in 2015. In 2018 there were 7,407 black homicide victims. Assuming a comparable number of victims last year, those nine unarmed black victims of police shootings represent 0.1% of all African Americans killed in 2019. By contrast, a police officer is 18½ times more likely to be killed by a black male than an unarmed black male is to be killed by a police officer.

The latest in a series of studies undercutting the claim of systemic police bias was published in August 2019 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The researchers found that the more frequently officers encounter violent suspects from any given racial group, the greater the chance that a member of that group will be fatally shot by a police officer. There is ‘no significant evidence of antiblack disparity in the likelihood of being fatally shot by police,’ they concluded.

When an African American dies in an encounter with police, especially a White officer, is the news coverage and national civil rights activist’s response designed to discover the facts about the encounter, stir Black resentment toward police, and promote the CRT doctrine that our policing and criminal justice system is systematically racist? In my opinion, the facts are usually secondary to the narrative and CRT agenda.

A Result of the Assault: Breonna Taylor

One tragic incident puts the assault on traditional values and African American culture into perspective, the Breonna Taylor death at the hands of Louisville, KY, police. The incident tragically combines extra-marital relationships, potential single female parenthood, crime and drugs, policing, and the CRT narrative that our criminal justice system is systematically racist into a single event.

In the predawn hours of March 13, 2020, Breonna Taylor was shot and killed by Louisville, KY. police executing a search warrant looking for illegal drugs and drug money. Taylor was a 26-year-old Black emergency medical technician. By the night of the raid, Taylor had broken ties with her previous boyfriend, Jamarcus Glover, a convicted drug dealer and accused weapons trafficker in Louisville. Taylor had been dating Glover on and off for several years. She resumed another apparently long term relationship with Kenneth Walker, which developed into a serious live-in relationship according to an American Thinker article. Walker had a license to carry a 9 mm Glock. Some reports note that Walker kept other weapons in Taylor’s apartment. The reason Walker had a license to carry was difficult to determine.

The American Thinker article provided details of the information evaluated by the court that issued the search warrant for Taylor’s apartment. Glover made frequent trips to Taylor’s apartment and once took a package from Taylor’s apartment to a known drug house. When Glover was arrested in January, he called Taylor who arranged for an associate of Glover to post bail. Taylor also was involved in procuring bail for another Glover associate. The article,  Fact-checking claims about Breonna Taylor’s death reports that a car registered in Taylor’s name stopped at drug properties under surveillance; and Glover listed her apartment as his home address leading police to  believe that Glover “used her apartment to receive mail, keep drugs, or stash money earned from the sale of drugs. This information was sufficient for the court to issue a warrant for the raid on Taylors apartment.

On the night of the raid, Talor and walker herd loud pounding on the apartment door, got out of bed, and went into the hallway yelling to learn who was pounding on the door of the apartment. Walker was in front, and Taylor was slightly behind and beside him. When plain clothed police broke through the door and Walker saw three men, he fired one shot that struck one office in the leg. Walker later claimed that he was afraid the intruders were Glover and associates, and he shot in self-defense. Walker also claimed that he did not hear police announce themselves.  Which is contradicted by a witness. It is reasonable to assume the Walker did not hear the police due to the other noise of the raid. The officers immediately returned fire to neutralize the shooter in accordance with active shooter protocol and training. Inexplicably, Talor, who was unarmed, was shot five times, once fatally, and died at the scene. Walker, the shooter, was unharmed. Much of this information is also reported in NBC on-line , USA TODAY, and other articles. Details of the case are also presented by Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron at a Sept. 23,  2020, press conference.

As soon as social media started sharing news of Breonna Taylor’s death protests began. These early reports contained both false and incorrect information. She was unarmed [true] and shoot in bed [false].  She died due to a no-knock warrant executed at the wrong address [both false]. The claim that the target, Jamarcus Glover [false], was not in the apartment was a misrepresentation of the target which was the apartment not Glover. The raid was botched because no drugs or drug money was in the apartment. In situations like this, there is no guarantee that targeted money and drugs are at the target location when raids are conducted. This false information and misrepresentation of the situation quickly fanned protests and demonstrations in Louisville and other cities around the nation. Benjamin Crump quickly became the Taylor family attorney for litigation against the City of Louisville. He was joined by Al Sharpton, and other civil rights activists almost immediately who agitated the African American community with claims of injustice and systematic racism on the part of Louisville police. They also demanded that the officers involved be charged with murder before the facts of the case were determined. By late May after the May 25 death of unarmed George Floyd at the hands of a White police officer, later convicted of murder, large Black Live Matter demonstrations turned into a summer of protests that turned into riots, death, and $2 billion in property damage throughout the United States and Louisville. Breonna Taylor’s family received a $12,000,000 suit settlement from the City of Louisville, KY, on September 15,2020.

In my opinion, Breonna Taylor’s death was caused as much by the Marxist, progressive assault on traditional values, Biblical Christianity, the traditional patricentric family, morality, and ethics as it was caused by the Louisville, KY, police. The assault on traditional values, supported by Democrats, told Breonna that extra-marital relationships and pre-marital co-habitation are ok, dating drug dealers is ok, helping drug dealers and their associates is ok, and, if she knew the situation, living in the apartment listed as the address of a drug dealer is safe and ok. These issues are problems in both the Black and White communities; but, with the rate of criminality in the Black community that is 2-3 times greater than the percentage of Blacks in the U.S., the issues impact African Americans more severely. Is it reasonable to ask, “Is Black allegiance to Democrats still justified?”

Run, Resist, Don’t Comply or Die, Means You Probably Will Die

As a father and grandfather, the needless deaths of African Americans who are killed by law enforcement officers because they run from, resist, or don’t comply with the orders of the officers is unnecessary and tragic. It is incomprehensible to me that Young Black Americans, especially law abiding young Black boys and men, are taught by their community and civil rights leaders, parents, peers, educators, mainstream news outlets, and the entertainment industry that encounters with law officers are usually dangerous to them today. Every race has a few bad apple racists. Black assaults on Asians are a growing racist problem. The vast majority of White Americans abhor White supremacists and racists and want to see them punished as a scourge on the overall American Culture. Any law officer who racially abuses their authority must be removed from law enforcement. In today’s environment, law officers understand that every encounter with the public could result in their injury or death, loss of their job, or possible indictment, prosecution, and conviction if they fail to do their job safely and lawfully. Consequently, most of the law officers encountered by Black Americans do not want to harm them. In my opinion, if the greater African American community taught Black Americans this simple phrase regarding encounters with the law, the death toll would drop immeasurably.

Comply, don’t die.

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TWITTER VERSUS CONSERVATIVES

 

Twitter versus conservatives and the GOP, Republicans, is a reality; and I have recently experienced it. On November 12. 2020 after logging into my Twitter account at about 1PM, I learned that all the accounts that I was Following had been deleted.

A twitter profile with the name of dr. Champlin

These accounts included President Trump, who has also been harassed by Twitter, Vice President Pence, Republican members of Congress, Tea Party leaders, and Tea Party accounts, conservative and Republican student group accounts, Conservative think tank accounts, and black conservatives like Candace Owens. These Following accounts were removed from my Profile sometime in the 10 days prior to November 12.

I immediately attempted to file a complaint about the problem. First, I went to the Help Center with the More link on my home page. At the bottom of that page, I clicked on Contact us, Experiencing an issue on Twitter? Let us know how we can help and clicked the File a Report link. On that page, I clicked the View all support topics link which took me to the Harassment link under the Report a violation column as shown below.

A screenshot of the select topic page.

This link took me to a page with the heading, Someone on Twitter is engaging in abusive or harassing behavior. On this page, I checked Harassment under What are you reporting and Directed at me under These actions are. The page asked for the URL of offending Tweets or

A screen shot of someone on twitter is engaging in abusive or harassing behavior.
A twitter account has been blocked by the group.

it stated, If what you are reporting appears outside of a Tweet please provide details in the text field below. In that text field below, I detailed the deletion of those accounts I was Following as shown above. Under the heading starting with Someone on Twitter, shown above, the following statement was written in red: You missed some Fields! We’ve highlighted them for you in Red It was the URL field which the form stated, If what you are reporting appears outside of a Tweet please provide details in the text field below. I entered two possible URL’s for Twitter and Not a Tweet, in that field (See Above); but Twitter would not accept the complaint. In each of my attempts, I clicked Submit as shown below and received the Red error message shown above.

A close up of the email field in a computer

At about 2:30 PM on November 12, I gave up and logged out of Twitter. Later that evening, I logged in to Twitter; and, to my surprise, my profile looked different. The accounts that I was following had magically reappeared. I guess I should say, ALL’s well that ends well; but it smacks as Harassment to me. This harassment is an example showing that Twitter versus conservatives is a reality.

A twitter feed with the following hashtags :

Unfortunately, the above incident is not the first time that Twitter has caused problems for me. The last time, Twitter presented a Halloween trick to me by refusing to post a Tweet I attempted to post in response to another Tweet. I tried to post the Tweet a few minutes later; but Twitter would still not accept the post. This is a second example showing that Twitter versus conservatives is a reality. In both situations, Twitter never explained or attempted to justify its actions. Twitter acted against me because it is Twitter; and Twitter can do anything it pleases; especially, when conservatives and Republicans are involved.

A person is posting on twitter with an image of a baseball player.

MAKING A RACIST OLD WHITE MAN, https://americascrossroad.com/racist-old-white-man is an article from my blog, AMERICA’S CROSSROAD. It is the story of a man who changed from a young man who hated racism to a man who has lost respect for the Black community at large. To many, if not most, on the left, the fact, that I no longer respect the black community at large, makes me a racist. The question that Twitter and the left refuses to ask is a simple question; Is my very personal story of making a racist old white man an anomaly, a symptom of white privilege, or systemic racism. The fact is that my article, MAKING A RACIST OLD WHITE MAN, is an affirmative answer to another simple question. Are the race riots, looting, fires, and violence carried out by members of the black community that have occurred for decades and those following or in association with the recent BLACK LIVES MATTER demonstrations and their leaders, subsequently justified by both black and white progressives making racists of white people like me in all walks of life throughout the United States? If my story is not unique among white people in the United States, then social media giants, progressives, progressive black leaders specifically, and the black community at large might want to reconsider their strategy for accomplishing an end to racism in the United States.

It is my fervent prayer that we can end racism in the United States!

JUST A THOUGHT.

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MAKING A RACIST OLD WHITE MAN

 

A baseball card of george crowe with the st. Louis cardinals
George Crowe from Indiana Central University to the major leagues.

When I say that I am now a racist old white man, I must also say in the strongest possible terms that is not where my heart is, nor has it ever been. My parents did not have a racist bone in their bodies; and I was raised to reject bigotry in all forms. My parents graduated from the Teachers College at Indiana Central University, now the University of Indianapolis after WWII. My father left the university to fight in WWII and returned after the war where he left his future wife at the university to study. According to their website, Indiana Central University” opened its doors in 1905. From its beginning, the University has been coeducational and open to all races. One of my mother’s best friends was a black woman, born and raised in Indianapolis. Years later, I listened to my mother and her friend reminisce and laugh during a phone call about their university days together. My father was a student trainer in the athletic program where George Crowe, a black athlete, played basketball and baseball for the university. He was the only black player in the conference and started his major league baseball career with the Boston Braves in April of 1952. He retired as a St. Louis Cardinal in 1961. He was named to the National League All-Star team in 1958. He hit the 11th pinch-hit home run of his career in 1960, which at the time set a major league record. I recall watching a Cardinal game on TV when my father said that he was proud to have known George Crowe in college.

I was raised in the north east part of Albuquerque, New Mexico. There were no black students in my elementary or middle schools, and my high school had only one black student. Since seniors attended classes in the morning and underclassmen attended in the afternoon, I never saw him. I did learn that he was courageous and funny from his B Team football coach, a family friend. The team used alternating half backs to send plays into the team. When it was time to send in the first play of the first game, coach called the name of the back he wanted to carry the play into the game, he said Kuhn, asking for Ray Kuhn (pronounced coon). When he turned to give the call to the player, he saw a black half back with a huge grin on his face waiting for the play call. Coach started laughing uncontrollably and had to call time out so he could stop laughing, regain his composure, and call the play. He said, The kid had a plan, and he was going to carry the first play into the game regardless of whose name I called. He had guts. I agreed. At the University of New Mexico, the University of Montana, and Oregon State University, I had little interaction with black students because of the curricula I was pursuing. As a married student with a part time job and active church life, my campus life was limited. Nothing to this point in my life indicated that I would become a “racist old white man.”

Nothing in my experience to that point moved me toward bigotry or racist attitudes; but unrest and racial rioting started to make me have concerns about the black community. During my three years of active duty as an Army Officer, all my interactions with black soldiers but one, with understandable circumstances, were positive; and the one did not change my attitude. Enumerable black trainees passed through our training programs, and several black Non-Commissioned Officers served in my company and battalion. I had a great working relationship with all of them. On the last day of a Drug Education and Race Relations Counselor training class, the instructor asked each of us to describe our honest feelings about race relations. I shared that I was reluctantly becoming a racist. The shocked instructor stated his surprise at my brutal honesty and asked what I meant.  I indicated that I could not understand why blacks considered that riots, arson, looting, assaults, murder, and lawlessness in general were justified under any circumstances. I referred to the 1967 Detroit Riots and the riots that followed the assignation of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. I observed that national leaders of the black community like Rev. Jesse Jackson claimed the lawlessness and mayhem was understandable considering centuries of racial injustice in the United States and Dr. King’s assassination. I noted that one sin does not justify a multitude of sins. The riots of 1967 and 1968 were the starting points of my evolution into a “racist old white man.”

A black and white picture of the detroit riots.

A history.com article on the 1967 Detroit Riots stated the following:

In the aftermath of the Newark and Detroit riots, President Johnson appointed a National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, often known as the  Kerner Commission. In February, 1968 seven months after the Detroit Riots had ended, [and less than two months before the assignation of Dr. King], the commission released its 426-page report.

The Kerner Commission identified more than 150 riots or major disorders between 1965 and 1968. In 1967 alone, 83 people were killed and 1,800 were injured”the majority of them African Americans”and property valued at more than $100 million was damaged, looted or destroyed.

Ominously, the report declared that Our nation is moving toward two societies, one black, one white”separate and unequal. Reaction to last summer’s disorders has quickened the movement and deepened the division. Discrimination and segregation have long permeated much of American life; they now threaten the future of every American.

However, the authors also found cause for hope: This deepening racial division is not inevitable. The movement apart can be reversed. Additionally, the report stated that What the rioters appeared to be seeking was fuller participation in the social order and the material benefits enjoyed by the majority of American citizens. Rather than rejecting the American system, they were anxious to obtain a place for themselves in it.

Sadly, nothing has changed.

Instantaneous rioting and carnage still follow real or perceived law enforcement abuses. All law enforcement officers, involved in lethal or injurious Use of force incidents involving black suspects, are guilty until proven innocent rather than innocent until proven guilty in the eyes of the greater black community, black leaders, and the majority of the Democrat Party. The broadcast verdicts are pronounced before investigations even begin. Although peaceful protests usually follow these guilty verdict pronouncements, the protest juries all too often become black rioters supported by their progressive allies and other anarchists. The punishment pronounced by these riot juries may result in arson, looting, assaults, or murders. Those punished by the riot juries are rarely the perpetrators of the original law enforcement sin. Riots are still justified by the greater black community, their leaders and Democrats because the rioters are simply seeking  [equal justice and] fuller participation in the social order and the material benefits enjoyed by the majority of American citizens as stated by the 1968 Kerner Commission. With each riot and its justification, the heart of this “racist old white man” becomes more hardened.

Again, I say, Sadly, nothing has changed. The riot list grows over the last 60 years including Detroit 1967 and 1968 with  at least 33 black and 10 white deaths, 1200 and more injured, 2,000 buildings burned, and well over $100 million in damages; Miami 1980 with 18 dead, 370 injured, and $100 million in damages and destruction; Los Angeles 1992 with 2 Asian, 28 black, 19 Latino, and 15 white deaths, 2300 injured, 1100 buildings destroyed, and $1 billion in property damage; Baltimore 2015 where information on deaths and injuries was too time consuming to retrieve, $9 million in damage and destruction to 350 businesses and two homes, and $20 million in government expenses related to riot control and personnel injury claims etc.; Portland, Seattle, Washington DC, Chicago, New York, Minneapolis, Kenosha, and Denver to name the worst in 2020 with a yet to be determined death toll, injury total, damage, looting, and governmental costs. The unfortunate deaths of more black people in these riots is one example of what I refer to as “black self-genocide.” When national black leaders justify each riot as understandable for the centuries of unequal justice at the hands of people afflicted by “white privilege,” the mind of this “racist old white man” remains unchanged.

The justification and excuses provided by the general black community as well as black and Democrat leaders remains the same. Additionally, the tactic devised by Mao Tso Tung for the Chinese Communist Revolution, the fish in a school of fish tactic in which activist fighters are embedded within large groups of peaceful protesters, was acknowledged by the Baltimore mayor during the 2015 riots. A Wikipedia article wrote the following:

Baltimore [Democrat] mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said, “most protesters were respectful but a small group of agitators intervened”. She also stated that “It’s a very delicate balancing act. Because while we try to make sure that they were protected from the cars and other things that were going on, we also gave those who wished to destroy space to do that as well. And we worked very hard to keep that balance and to put ourselves in the best position to de-escalate. “The phrase “we also gave those who wished to destroy space to do that as well” was interpreted by some conservative-leaning news sources as an indication that the mayor was giving permission to protesters to destroy property.

Two days later, the mayor’s Director of Strategic Planning and Policy, Howard Libit, released a statement clarifying the mayor’s remarks:

What she is saying within this statement was that there was an effort to give the peaceful demonstrators room to conduct their peaceful protests on Saturday. Unfortunately, as a result of providing the peaceful demonstrators with the space to share their message, that also meant that those seeking to incite violence also had the space to operate. The police sought to balance the rights of the peaceful demonstrators against the need to step in against those who were seeking to create violence. The mayor is not saying that she asked police to give space to people who sought to create violence. Any suggestion otherwise would be a misinterpretation of her statement.

It defies logic to say that we also gave those who wished to destroy space to do that or those seeking to incite violence also had the space to operate does not mean that providing space to destroy or incite violence does not require permission to participate in destruction and violence. If I tell a group of boys that they can use the space in my front yard to play football, I give them permission to play football in my yard.

With each riot, my “racist old white man” heart becomes more hardened! I hate what you are doing to me. I hate the anger that you are provoking in me. I lose respect for the black community when I hear chants directed at law enforcement officers like Pigs in a blanket, fry ’em like bacon, or who do we want to kill, Cops; when do we want to kill them, now, or No justice, no peace. No peace does not equate to peaceful protests. That statement means that if whites do not submit to black demands there will be no peace. Cities will burn down; and they are.

A red heart with a missing piece of it
Please, Can’t we all get together and get along?

I know one cure. My Lord and Savior Jesus Christ shed his red blood as a sacrifice for the sins of every human being. He offers salvation and peace. Every life matters to Jesus Christ. We all have red blood like the blood Jesus shed for us.

Finally, one critical question remains. How many “racist old white men,” like me, are being made by the race riots devastating the United States today? Similarly, How many racists in general are being made by these endless nights of rioting? The response of this “racist old white man” is this blog article. Others may choose a more active and violent response.

MY PRAYER IS FOR PEACE AND RECONCILIATION!

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BLACK SELF-GENOCIDE

 

Black self-genocide is a term that I use to describe deaths or injuries to black people caused directly or indirectly by some behavior or activity common, but not unique, in black communities and culture described in detail below. I am disgusted by every example of excessive force used by law enforcement officers involving black suspects or black innocents in the wrong place at the wrong time resulting in injuries or deaths. Unlawful excessive force by law enforcement officers involving guns or illegal and unauthorized physical restraints like choke holds disgust me. I am equally disgusted by assassinations, murders, or injuries of law enforcement officers. I am disgusted by the murder and assault of every human being, including black on black crimes, because all lives matter to me. To many reading this article, this all lives matter stand means I do not understand the injustices suffered by the black community for centuries because I suffer from the genetic disease white privilege.

Consequently, I admit that I am a racist old white man. I admit that I am a racist old white man not because I am a racist but that is what you know in your heart that I am, a racist. I am not a racist by birth or heritage, the environment where I was raised, or my personal experiences as an adult. I am a racist old white man because over the last six decades, I have gradually lost respect for the black community at large, most of the nationally acclaimed black leaders, and most members of the Democrat Party, especially progressives. The riots that have periodically destroyed our cities for six decades are one example of what I call black self-genocide. The riots are always justified by claims of systemic racism perpetrated by white racists which now includes every white person living in the United States because we all suffer from the genetic disorder of white privilege.

I have also lost respect for the greater black community because it has allowed itself to become the victim of black self-genocide. Indicators of black self-genocide include ramped black gang violence resulting in the death of thousands of black Americans, now including young children; debilitating drug abuse resulting in countless more deaths; abortions eliminating countless black babies in the womb; destruction of the nuclear family leaving countless single moms to raise unaborted children in poverty who often succumb to gang membership, death, or drug abuse; and a culture that no longer respects law enforcement officers teaching blacks to flee from the law, not cooperate with law enforcement conducting criminal investigations, disobey law officers, or resist arrest often resulting in serious injuries or deaths. Most of the twenty first century events that have involved use of excessive force by law enforcement officers started with the black suspects, subsequent victims, who fled from the law and/or resisted arrest. Had these blacks simply complied with or obeyed the legal orders and instructions of law enforcement officers, they would not have been injured or killed, more black self-genocide. Sadly, simple acts of disobedience or resistance result in injury or death of suspects or victims usually lead to massive and destructive riots, additional injuries, loss of lives, property destruction, theft, and millions to billions in costs to reclaim lost property and rebuild communities. Unfortunately, many of the injuries and deaths caused by the riots are to blacks and other minorities, additional back self-genocide. The black self-genocide described is a tragedy for black Americans specifically; but it is also a tragedy for every citizen of the United States.

A man in black gown holding up a bible.

In my opinion, one group of black leaders has the greatest opportunity change black community attitudes which result in black self-genocide, black Biblical Christian clergy and congregational leaders. These leaders understand that Biblical teachings leading to salvation and understanding through Jesus Christ offer real solutions to the problems of the greater black community. Such teachings would prevent the attitudes that lead to black self-genocide. Changed lives bring about changed outcomes. Changed outcomes for the greater black community should be the prayer of everyone in the United States.

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HATE, CONFEDERATES, AND STATUES

 CONTENTS

HATE IS EVIL
HISTORICAL EVOLUTION TOWARD OUR CURRENT CIVIL RIGHTS AND STATUARY DILEMMA
DIALOGUE

HATE IS EVIL

A person with their hands tattod with words.
The journey from hate to love and empathy requires open, honest, considerate dialogue. For a bright future, We the People must reach our destination, mutual love and respect.

In my opinion, the journey from hate to love and empathy requires open, honest, considerate dialogue. The errant idea that some hate is not as evil as other hate, is at the heart of most of the current social and cultural animosity related to slavery, our nation’s Founders, Confederate and other statuary, civil rights, and race relations in the United States.  When discussions are framed without any historical perspective, truth can be misrepresented or lost. My hate is not as evil as your hate is very personal paraphrase of the statement. With this idea as the starting point, the other side must apologize and admit that they are absolutely wrong before any meaningful discussion, understanding, or reconciliation can occur. With this as our starting point, we have no hope for an end to the civil strife plaguing our nation today. That is the unfortunate problem with hate.

Hate is hate. Bigotry is bigotry. Violence is violence. All hate is evil. The basic motivation for all hate is evil. Another word for evil is sin. In James 2:9-10 we read, If you show favoritism, you are convicted by the law as lawbreakers. For whver keeps the whole law and yet stumbles at just one point is guilty of breaking all of it (all of the Law, NIV). Leaders cannot show favoritism; or they are not real, consequential leaders. This is a basic principle of leadership, morality, and ethics. It is also a basic Christian principle.

The death of Heather Heyer in Charlottesville, Virginia, at the hands of a white supremacist has increased the intensity of the civil rights, race relations, and hate debate in our nation. The debate concerning white supremacists, Confederate and other monuments, and post-Civil War race relations in the context of slavery is historically complex with emotionally charged cultural issues and real animosity on all sides. This discussion is my attempt to provide some social, cultural, and historical context for the attitudes, some say hate, that motivates the advocates of the two sides of the debate regarding the symbology of the Founders of our nation, the Confederacy, civil rights, and race relations in the United States today.

There is no difference between the source or reasoning, if any reason exists, behind hate. While considering these critical issues, perhaps consideration of this scripture is relevant. 1 John 1:4 says, If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us (NIV). Consequently, the hate of Antifa, Black Lives Matter, or Occupy Wall Street demonstrators, is not less evil than the hate of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK), white supremacist, white nationalists, Nazis, or neo-Nazis. Hate is hate; hate is evil; and all hate must be unequivocally rejected. In my opinion, the idea that my hate is less evil than your hate constitutes the attitude of Thought Supremacists. Those promoting the Political Correctness movement on our college campuses and culture are also Thought Supremacists.

It is critical to note that the vast majority of those on the political right condemn all racists, white supremacists, and fascists. The fact that white supremacists and fascists believe that they are superior to any other race, ethnic group, or religion is evil. Some of these groups claim that their hate is justified because their beliefs are based on Christian principles. However, careful examination of Scripture contradicts their point of view. Four examples will suffice. In Romans 3:9-12 we read,

What shall we conclude then? Are we any better? Not at all! We have already made the charge that Jews and Gentiles alike are all under sin. As it is written: ‘There is no one righteous, not even one; there is no one who understands, no one who seeks God. All have turned away, they have together become worthless; there is no one who ds good, not even one (NIV).’

Romans 3:22-23 states,

This righteousness from God comes through faith in Jesus Christ to all who believe. There is no difference, for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God (NIV).

Romans 6:23 states, For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord (NIV). Finally, the words of Jesus Christ also contradict white supremacists and fascists. In John 3:16-18 Jesus said,

For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only son, that whver believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. Whver believes in him is not condemned, but whver ds not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in his name of God’s one and only Son (NIV).

Clearly, from the Scriptures cited, God ds not distinguish between groups of people; all includes all humanity; and no one is excluded from God’s love by the pronoun whver. When Scripture says that There is no one righteous, not even one, God includes white supremacists and fascists along with all humanity in His condemnation regarding sin. In the Great Commission, Mathew 28:18, Jesus told His followers to make Disciples of all nations. Acts 1:8 provides more detail for the command of Jesus, You will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth. According to the command of Jesus, most of the first Christians converted from Judaism. Mathew, Mark, John, and Paul also converted from Judaism. These men, under the leadership of the Holy Spirit, penned most of the New Testament. Therefore, if God ds not show favoritism among humans, the world, all nations, or Jerusalem all Judea and Samaria, how can we?

In Scripture, all humanity is broken into only two categories, Jews and Gentiles. Gentiles include all non-Jews; and among Gentiles, no distinction is made between races, ethnicities, or religions. Except for converts who are not limited by race, ethnicity, or other religion, Jews are the descendants of Abraham and members of the twelves Tribes of Israel named after the twelve sons of Jacob, who God renamed Israel, Abraham’s grandson. Jesus was born a Jew from the Tribe of Judah and a maternal descendent of King David, second King of Israel.

God established an everlasting covenant with Abraham and the nation that would arise through his descendants, Israel. Two Old Testament examples of this covenant follow. First, in Genesis 12:2-3 we read,

I will make you into a great nation and I will bless you. I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and whver curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you (NIV).

God reaffirmed this covenant with Abraham in Genesis 22:17-18 where God said,

I will surely bless you and make your descendants as numerous as the stars in the sky. Through your offspring all nations on earth will be blessed, because you have obeyed me (NIV).

God blessed all nations on earth because God sent His Son, a maternal descendant of Abraham, Jesus Christ to bless whver believes in him with eternal life. A logical conclusion, based on these Scriptures and promises of God, is that all anti-Semites, white supremacist, and fascists who hate Jews and non-whites will be cursed by God, and God only curses those who do evil, sin, by disobeying God. Again, all hate is evil.

HISTORICAL EVOLUTION TOWARD OUR CURRENT CIVIL RIGHTS AND STATUARY DILEMMA

The issues motivating those involved in our current statuary, civil rights, and race relations dilemma are complex, deeply held, and historically based. These issues include tensions over slavery and race relations between the northern and southern states which predate the Revolutionary War. Slavery had a lasting sociological and psychological impact on African-American individuals and culture today. It is my hope that the following discussion will provide some insight and historical perspective on the statuary, civil rights, and race relations attitudes that evolved over the past 400 years in the history of the United States of America.  It is also my hope that this discussion will reduce the level of hate on all sides in our national debate on these issues. Detailed discussion of the history related to social, cultural, and regional issues not strictly related to slavery is needed since these issues are rarely discussed and generally dismissed by the media, popular culture, and progressive academia. The cumulative impact of these issues was as significant as the institution of slavery resulting in the tumult of the Civil War.

Although slavery ended in the United States over 150 years ago, slavery still affects attitudes about civil rights and race relations including relationships between most African-Americans and other races, especially Caucasians or “white” people to this day. Unfortunately, slavery, which still exists in some cultures, has a multi-millennial history in most non-hunter-gatherer cultures, civilizations, and societies. Slavery was an acceptable source of inexpensive labor throughout the world including Judeo-Christian societies for millennia. In the United States, slavery started in colonial times when a Dutch trader brought the first slaves to Jamestown, Virginia in 1619. Taxes and tariffs imposed on virtually all colonial commerce under British Mercantile Law were especially difficult in the southern colonies with small profit margins for agricultural crops. Under mercantilism, slave labor allowed agriculture to remain a viable segment of the southern economy for the next 150 years. During most of the last half of the 1700s, slavery was declining in importance in the colonies including the South. Most thought that slavery would be an uneconomical source of labor by the early 1800’s which made constitutional compromise on slavery somewhat more acceptable in in the South.

A group of people standing around in the middle of a field.
The 1793 cotton gin invention made cotton king in the south and institutionalized slavery.

However, the 1793 invention of the cotton gin changed the economics of slave labor. The cotton gin provided a quick inexpensive, high capacity means of separating cotton seeds from the fibers increasing cotton production to meet the demands of rapidly expanding textile mills of Britain and France. Slavery became highly profitable in cotton fields. As a result, cotton, which accounted for 80% of US exports at its peak production, became the preeminent southern crop institutionalizing slavery in the southern states.

In 1860, only 30% of Southerners owned slaves and about 50% of those owned five or fewer slaves. Slavery was an integral part of the Southern economy and culture. On plantations, the value of slaves exceeded the value of the land and equipment. Southern per capita income was 50% greater compared to the North; and 60% of the wealthiest men in the United States lived in the South. Owning a relatively small number of slaves brought respect and stature to Southerners and represented both personal and corporate wealth. The economic power of cotton and slavery was so great that the southern states did not develop an adequate industrial base which proved to be a critical economic miscalculation that would impact the outcome of the Civil War. However, fewer than 10% of the Confederate soldiers owned slaves: and most Confederate military slave owners were high ranking officers.

Tensions between northern slave free states and southern slave states preceded the revolutionary war. One of the first significant disagreements regarding slavery occurred during the Constitutional Convention. Because the economic base of the South was largely agriculture, the South had comparatively fewer large metropolitan areas compared to the North. Southern states correctly feared political domination by the more populous northern states. The South wanted the census to include slaves because counting slaves would increase southern votes in the United States House of Representatives. Some northern abolitionist delegates wanted the Constitution to abolish slavery, and most Northerners did not want slaves to be counted in the census. The slavery controversy and debate over inclusion of a Bill of Rights in the Constitution nearly caused the convention to fail. Equal representation for each state in the Senate, the Electoral College, the three-fifth census rule compromise for slaves, and the Constitutional clause stating that slave importation could continue until 1808 assured approval of the Constitution. When the thirteen states ratified the Constitution, there were seven slave states and six free states.

Several factors contributed to steadily increasing north-south tensions and animosity from the time the United States was established under the Constitution until the Civil War. First, the more populous northern free states had a majority in the House of Representatives. Consequently, Senate parody between the North and South was essential for the southern states to maintain some control of their destiny. Prior to 1812, when there were nine slave and nine free states, maintaining balance was not critical to ensure preservation of the Union. As north-south tensions over slavery and economic policies mounted, the Senate balance was maintained by the Missouri Compromise until 1850 when each side counted 15 states. Over the next 11 years, four free states were added to the Union. Southerners considered this a betrayal for failure to honor prior agreements regarding the balance between slave and free states. North-South animosity toward the citizens of each opposing   side in disputes began to grow into hate for the opposition.

Secondly, the differential impact of import tariffs on the northern and southern states and infrastructure expenditures created early tensions between the North and South. Since cotton exports dominated the southern economy, ships from England and France brought needed inexpensive European goods to southern ports and returned to Europe filled with cotton. While the South was expanding cotton fields, northern manufacturers were expanding production of similar goods including textiles needed by the South. Northern politicians, knowing that tariffs would not severely impact the North, used this situation to impose high tariffs on imported goods adding as much is 50% to their cost. The high tariffs on European goods allowed the northern manufacturers to sell their products in the South at inflated prices that were still more affordable than the high tariff European goods. Southern anger over these tariffs resulted in a threat by South Carolina to secede from the Union in the early 1830’s. President Andrew Jackson ended secession talk with the threat of a naval blockade of South Carolina ports. Another result of the tariffs was the beginning of the Southern states’ rights movement related to Amendment X of the Constitution .

States’ rights played a significant role in the attitude of Southerners during the lead up to the Civil War. Southerners did not believe the national government had the right to end slavery in any state. Similarly, Southerners felt that national government expenditures on roads, harbors, canals, etc. were disproportionately weighted toward Northern interests. Some consider the tension over these two issues, especially the tariffs, to be the first seeds of animosity, hate, toward the North which was synonymous in their mind to the Union. The issues started the thought that the South could be better served as a separate nation.

Thirdly, the abolitionist movement in northern states began in the late 1700s. In the early 1800’s, abolitionist started the Underground Railroad which sheltered and moved escaped slaves to the north; and importation of slaves was banned by an Act of Congress in 1808, as soon as possible under the Constitution. Both actions infuriated Southerners; and breeding slaves for sale became more prevalent in the South. As the movement grew, pressure to abolish slavery grew. When abolitionist started to characterize slavery as immoral rather than simply a social evil, some Protestant denominations split between the North and the South further increasing animosity. In 1852, abolitionist zeal reached a peak with the publication of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel, Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Southerners felt that the novel portrayed the exception, not the rule, regarding slavery; and their hate and anger towards the North only increased.

Fourthly, the attitudes about the character of the people of the North and South toward each other grew increasingly derogatory and demeaning. In the North, all Southerners were considered to be immoral, corrupt, and cruel for their support of slavery. Northerners also resented the fact that eight of the first eleven United States presidents were Southerners, primarily Virginians. Southern dogma asserted that Yankees were inherently inferior to Southerners. Yankees were descendants of the cold Puritan traitor to the British crown, Oliver Cromwell. Cromwell and his trouble making followers were forced to flee to Holland before finally settling at Plymouth Rock, Massachusetts. Accordingly, Yankees had evolved into gloomy, saturnine, and fanatical people who seemed to repel all the more kindly and generous impulses common to the easygoing, chivalrous, honest Southerners.

Finally, several other significant events increased tensions and animosity ultimately leading to the level of hate between the North and the South over slavery. In 1850, California was admitted into the Union as a free state angering Southerners. To appease Southerners, congress passed the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, which required return of escaped slaves where ever they were found. The Act only increased Northern sentiment against slavery because it mandated Northern complicity in slavery. The 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act allowed residents of new states to decide whether the state would be slave or free. The famous Dred Scott Supreme Court Decision of 1857 overturned the Missouri Compromise of 1820, which had restricted slavery in the Louisiana Purchase territories north of the southern Missouri boundary extending the provisions of the Kansas-Nebraska Act to all United States territories. The Dred Scott decision also ruled that people with African blood were not eligible for  citizenship. Southern slave states hailed these pro-slavery decisions. Conversely, the Dred Scott decision galvanized abolitionist, gave new energy to the candidacy of Abraham Lincoln, and the new Republican Party. Removal of restrictions against slavery in the territories resulted in a race between abolitionists and Southerners to settle the territories and petition for statehood as either slave or free states.

A painting of a man holding a gun and standing on top of a horse.
Hate between the North and South, leading to the Civil War, was magnified by abolitionist John Brown.

In the Kansas territory, abolitionist John Brown formed a band of marauders that killed pro-slavery Kansas settlers. October 16, 1859, Brown and his followers seized the federal arsenal at Harper’s Ferry, VA (now West Virginia), in a plan to arm a slave insurrection. Brown’s plan failed; and he was captured, convicted of treason, and hanged. Northern abolitionists made a martyr of John Brown. Southerners came to believe this was proof the North intended to wage a war of extermination against white Southerners. The level of hate of those in the North and South for their opposition grew because of John Brown’s actions.

With the election of Abraham Lincoln as President, Southerners felt that their fears would soon turn to reality. This was despite the fact that Lincoln did not plan to end slavery where it existed. He believed that the United States would not survive abolition of slavery in states where it already existed. Before the inauguration, seven Southern states seceded from the United States. In February 1861, these states formed The Confederate States of America; and on April 12, 1861, forces of South Carolina, which had previously threatened secession, attacked Union forces at Fort Sumter starting the Civil War. After the start of hostilities, four more southern states joined the Confederacy for a total of 11 states.

Three technological innovations that changed the nature and lethality of war were introduced during the Civil War. Widespread use of rifled barrel muskets and the barrel cleaning minie bullet increased the rate of fire, accuracy, and range of riflemen. The rifle and the simple invention of a method to mass-produce shovel blades drastically altered Confederate tactics and the Union response to those tactics. Riflemen could effectively engage targets at 400 yards, or more, which made frontal assaults and cavalry far less effective. Artillery was forced further from the front lines of battle reducing its accuracy because the rifle made cannoneers targets. The mass-produced shovels allowed Confederate forces to maneuver to high ground and quickly dig defensive entrenchments. Rifles and trench warfare were a deadly combination for both sides. If Union forces did not have a three to one troop advantage, they were generally unsuccessful in defeating the entrenched Confederates. Tactics were not complicated. The numerically superior Union forces sought to maneuver the Confederates into open field battles. The Confederates sought to maneuver to defensive positions, structures or high ground, trench, and defend. The Civil War became a war of brutal attrition. Finally, the Union used the newly developed locomotive and railroad technology to provide logistical support to carry the battle deep into Confederate territory.

A painting of the battle of fair oaks, may 3 1 st 1 8 6 2.
The Civil War was a war of deadly attrition with the highest casualty toll in our nations history. Hate and anger on both sides lasted for generations.

No war in the history of the United States resulted in more deaths and injuries than the Civil War. The Civil War death toll was approximately 50% greater than the death toll of World War II when the population was far greater. In my opinion, four components of the Civil War impacted subsequent civil rights and race relations almost as much as the first boatload of slaves unloaded centuries earlier. First, the staggering loss that occurred in the male population of the country caused profound sadness, loneliness, hopelessness, anger, and  hate. Many of the survivor’s lives were permanently altered by debilitating injuries and disabilities. The long term demographic impact was profound. Union losses were 75% greater than Confederate losses; and the hate of angry Northerners demanded retribution against the South for slavery and starting the war.

Secondly, although the total number of casualties suffered by the Confederacy was far lower than Union suffering, the proportional impact to the South was equal or greater than the losses of the North. Confederate battle losses were also strategically more significant than the Union losses. The major Confederate attempts to invade the North were repelled by Union forces. Confederate forces never captured a major Union City or industrial center. As a result Northern civilians rarely suffered at the hands of the Confederacy. The exception was Confederate raiding forays into the northern states. Conversely, a majority of the Civil War battles were fought in southern states. Union forces had a superior navy, superior numbers, the raw materials and capacity to manufacture the necessary war materials, and an effective long range railroad logistical system. As a result, Union forces attacked cities, transportation, logistical centers, and factories throughout the Confederacy. Most of the civilian population of the South suffered the sting a war. The resulting resentment toward the invading Yankees would build to hate and last for decades.

Thirdly, on March 2, 1864. President Lincoln promoted Ulysses S. Grant to Lieutenant General and Commander of all Union Armies, answering only to the President. Lincoln and Grant devised a final strategic plan to defeat the Confederacy that included the principles supporting Sherman’s March to the Sea. The plan involved five simultaneous coordinated attacks designed to prevent Confederate shifts of reinforcements within their interior lines and destroy logistical support and supply lines including war material manufacturing centers. Grant and Meade attacked Lee’s army in northern Virginia while  Major General William T. Sherman attacked and defeated Confederate forces in Tennessee and moved on to Atlanta. The Confederates attempted to defend Atlanta which was almost totally destroyed by Union artillery. In response, Confederate President Jefferson Davis thought that having General P.G.T. Beauregard, a Confederate hero early in the war, lead the defense against Sherman’s March would awaken a certain enthusiasm among the citizenry. Davis ordered Beauregard to coordinate the region’s military response to Sherman’s advance. Encouragement of civilian resistance, when followed, played into the strategic plan of President Lincoln and General Grant amplified by General Sherman in his plan to march through Georgia and capture the port city of Savannah. General Grant approved Sherman’s planned march to the sea.

For the overall plan to succeed, Union forces had to break the Confederacy’s strategic, economic, and psychological will to fight. Sherman planned scorched earth or total war. Civilian cooperation was rewarded; but resistance resulted in total destruction. Sherman knew that liberal foraging by his forces would have a destructive effect on the morale of the civilian population it encountered in its wide sweep through Georgia. Sherman’s march is known for its boldness and sheer destruction of industrial and military targets, effectively destroying the Confederate’s capacity to wage war. The Yankees were not only fighting hostile armies, but a hostile people, Sherman explained; as a result, they needed to make old and young, rich and poor, feel the hard hand of war. Sherman believed his campaign against civilians would shorten the war by breaking the Confederate will to fight. After his success in Georgia, Sherman eventually received permission to carry this psychological warfare into South Carolina in early 1865. By marching through Georgia and South Carolina, Sherman became an arch villain in the South, a subject of universal Southern hate, to this day, and a hero in the North.

Finally, the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln by a group of Southern conspirators would have a devastating impact on African-American civil rights and race relations that still impact our society and culture. Apparently, these conspirators believed that President Lincoln would side with Radical Republicans who wanted retribution against the South for starting the war and slavery. The conspirators believed that Vice President Andrew Johnson from Tennessee would be more conciliatory towards the south than President Lincoln. They did not trust that President Lincoln would enact the provisions set forth in his December 8, 1863, Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction, a conciliatory plan for Reconstruction of the South and reunification of the United States after the defeat of the Confederacy. At that time, Lincoln knew he needed to make some preliminary plans for postwar Reconstruction. The Union controlled much of the South. Some southern states were ready to rebuild. The plan addressed three primary issues. First, it pardoned all rebels and restored their property with the exception of the highest Confederate officials and military leaders. Second, state government could be formed after 10 percent of the eligible voters took an oath of allegiance to the United States. Third, the Southern states must enact uncompromising plans for the freedom of slaves.

President Lincoln understood that harsh retribution and punitive treatment of the South during Reconstruction could result in long term divisions within the United States and slow integration of African-Americans throughout the nation. He also believed that the best strategy was to introduce black suffrage in the South by degrees in order to accustom southern whites to black voting. A lenient program of Reconstruction was integral to Lincoln’s strategy for reuniting the nation. Consequently, Lincoln’s plan gave southern states a great deal of latitude regarding Freedmen or former slaves. As Southerners feared, Radical Republicans were adamantly opposed to Lincoln’s plan.

It is a matter of hopeful speculation to think that civil rights and race relations in the United States would have turned out more positively for African-Americans had President Lincoln not been assassinated giving him the opportunity to execute his plan for reconciliation and Reconstruction of the South. History confirms the unfortunate results of Reconstruction under the Radical Republican Reconstruction plan.

The surrender of the Confederacy on the battlefield did not solve the problems that led to the Civil War. Hate still existed in both the North and South. In reality, the Civil War only solved two issues that plagued the United States at the time. The war ended slavery and assured that the United States would remain one united nation; but the other significant issues that led to the war remained unresolved.

To Northerners, especially abolitionists and Radical Republicans, Southerners were still immoral, corrupt, and cruel for their support of slavery. After the war, Southerners were also deemed to be traitorous rebels by most Northerners. To former Confederates, the Union states, Northern abolitionist, or Radical Republicans, controlled both the legislative and executive branches of government. Yankees would control where and how Reconstruction funds would be expended in both the North and the South. Experience taught Southerners that they would not fare well regarding Reconstruction expenditures, the war notwithstanding. Southerners did not want northern abolitionists to control the nature or pace of the integration of freemen, former slaves, into the fabric of Southern society. Southerners also felt that they had been overwhelmed rather than defeated on the battlefield, thus maintaining their feeling of superiority regarding Yankees. In their mind, the Confederacy had fought nobly in defense of the right of southern states to be free and sovereign. Even in defeat, Southerners felt that Confederate leaders and soldiers deserved to be remembered and honored for their attempt to rid the South of Union domination and become an independent nation. Sadly, African-American freedmen having little experience with individual freedom, the rights of citizens, and potential for self-improvement, were stuck between and at the mercy of two adversarial visions for the future of the United States. Philosophically, the United States remained deeply divided between the northern and southern states, hate prevailed. The period in our history known as Reconstruction would only deepen the divide within our unified nation.

The first two to four years after the end of the Civil War and Lincoln’s assassination would set the tone for Reconstruction, civil rights, and race relations in the United States to this day. The era of Reconstruction lasted from 1863 when President Lincoln attempted start Reconstruction in the first defeated Confederate states, until 1877 when depression became a greater issue for the nation. Johnson’s plan was nearly identical to Lincoln’s Reconstruction plan. Both plans were opposed by Radical Republicans because they were supportive of States’ rights and Federalism regarding the integration of freedmen into the society of the former Confederacy. Johnson’s plan also left establishment of voting rights for former slaves to the states.

Unfortunately for the South and African-Americans, Johnson lacked the personal and leadership skills of Lincoln. Under Johnson’s Presidential Reconstruction Plan, former Confederate states elected new governments which soon enacted measures designed to control and repress the freed slave population including denial of voting rights. These actions were inconsistent with the spirit of Lincoln’s proclamation regarding freedmen. When the Congress convened in December 1865, it refused to seat the newly elected Southern members and Amendment XIII, abolishing slavery, was ratified. In response to southern treatment of freedmen, Radical Republican abolitionists won control of the House of Representative and Senate in the 1866 elections and passed the 1866 Civil Rights Act which was the first major bill to become law over presidential veto.

While President Johnson and the Radical Republicans were arguing over Reconstruction plans, one of the first issues that would cause postwar controversy was treatment of the hastily buried bodies of dead soldiers from both sides on battlefields throughout the South. Most, 28 percent, of the Confederacy’s dead were buried on Virginia battlefields. With Union garrisons throughout the South to ensure peace, proper interment and honor for Confederate soldiers fell upon the white women of the South. Women, who had formed wartime aid societies and served as hospital volunteers and military camp workers, uniform and battle flag seamstresses, snubbed Yankees, and maintained the home front while the men were on the battlefront, united to move their dead to national Confederate cemeteries.

A year after the end of the Civil War, women throughout the South formed at least 70 Ladies Memorial Associations to bury and honor the memory of the Confederacy’s fallen soldiers. Most of the Ladies Memorial Associations’ leaders were not widows and orphans of the war who had lost their fathers, sons and brothers. They were the wives and daughters of lawyers, doctors, manufacturers, merchants, agriculturalists, and other leaders of the Confederacy who had supported the war effort on the home front. In reality, these groups mourned the loss of the Confederacy, the death of their cause. Virginia Ladies Memorial Associations successfully solicited funds for their activities from all the former Confederate states since a large proportion of the war battles were fought in Virginia. Memorial ceremonies for the fallen hers of the Confederacy soon became annual Southern events. They were allowed to hold annual memorial services since women were not considered to be political in the mid-1800’s. Although the annual memorial ceremonies of Ladies Memorial Associations were viewed with skepticism in the North, their activities were not considered a major threat to the fragile union. In reality, the annual memorials served to expound the virtues of the Confederacy, southern solidarity, sectional animosity, covert hate, and resistance to Reconstruction.

Almost immediately, rumors that the southern recovery and burial crews of the Ladies Memorial Associations were desecrating the bodies of Union soldiers began to spread in the North. In response, the union Army expeditiously dispatched large contingents of the United States Burial Corp to Virginia and other large battlefields and prisoner of war camps in the South. Soon, Southerners started complaining that “Yankee” Burial Corp crews were desecrating the bodies of Confederate dead. This controversy plagued the early stages of Reconstruction and resulted in lasting regional animosity and hate between the North and South.

During the period of Presidential Reconstruction, 1865 to 1866, the South remained defiant in adapting to social changes. Violent insurgencies against free blacks and Union supporters emerged in many regions of the South. As retribution, Congress passed the 1867 Reconstruction Act which grouped ten former Confederate states under military control and placed them into five military districts, Military Reconstruction. These state governments were re-constituted under a state of martial law and the direct control of the United States Army. The military closely supervised local government, elections, and protected office holders from violence. An estimated 10,000 or 15,000 white men, former Confederate leaders and officers, were not allowed to vote. Some whites also refused to register.

Radical Republican leaders were initially hesitant to enfranchise the largely illiterate ex-slave population; but they finally decided it was necessary to allow blacks to vote as protection for themselves, scalawags, carpetbaggers, and peace in the country. Although the South’s postwar white leaders renounced secession and slavery, by 1867 they were angered when their state governments were ousted by former Union military forces and replaced by Republican lawmakers elected by blacks, scalawags, and carpetbaggers.

In 1868, Supreme Court Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase, a leading Civil War Radical and abolitionist, expressed concerns about the military aspects of Radical Reconstruction:

Congress was wrong in the establishment of despotic military governments for the States and in authorizing military commissions for the trial of civilians in time of peace. There should have been as little military government as possible; no military commissions; no classes excluded from suffrage; and no oath except one of faithful obedience and support to the Constitution and laws, and of sincere attachment to the constitutional Government of the United States.

Based on his statement, it is quite reasonable to conclude that Chief Justice Chase had legitimate concerns about imposition of Martial Law and disenfranchisement of large numbers former Confederates. Unfortunately, white southern retaliation and hate related to northern retribution would have a long lasting impact on African-American civil rights and race relations.

A similar statement by Congressman John R. Lynch also sheds some light on the resentment of southern white men toward the Union, Radical Military Reconstruction, Republicans, civil rights, and race relations. Congressman Lynch, a Republican freedman from Mississippi born in slavery, was elected to the House of Representatives three times. He won his last term in 1880 after Reconstruction. Lynch remained active in the Republican Party as a delegate to national Republican conventions from 1872 to 1900 serving as temporary convention chairman in 1884. He was the first black to preside over a national convention of a major United States political party.

Congressman Lynch explained that,

While the colored men did not look with favor upon a political alliance with the poor whites, it must be admitted that, with very few exceptions, that class of whites did not seek, and did not seem to desire such an alliance.

Lynch explains that poor whites resented the job competition from Freedmen. Furthermore, the poor whites

with a few exceptions, were less efficient, less capable, and knew less about matters of state and governmental administration than many of the ex-slaves. As a rule, therefore, the whites that came into the leadership of the Republican party between 1872 and 1875 were representatives of the most substantial families of the land.

Thus, the poor whites became Democrats and bitterly opposed the black Republicans.

Congressman Lynch understood the repercussions of white southern resistance to the place of freedmen in their society and white southern anger and hate over the punitive nature of Radical Reconstruction; both impacted civil rights and race relations for generations.

As soon as a Radical Republican legislature convened in 1867, they started work on the legislative or Radical Reconstruction plan for the former Confederate states. In 1867, the Reconstruction Act divided the South into five military districts, required universal (male) suffrage and specific forms of governmental organization. Before they could rejoin the Union, the law also required southern states to ratify Amendment XIV, granting citizenship to former slaves and others persons born in the United States. This Amendment was ratified in 1868. In February 1868, Johnson was impeached by the House of Representatives. That May, the Senate acquitted Johnson by one vote; and he did not run for reelection in 1868. By 1870, all of the former Confederate states had approved new constitutions and rejoined the Union. Amendment XV, ratified in 1870, granted the right to vote regardless of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. Amendments XIII, XIV, and XV, the civil rights amendments, were ratified to insure that the provisions enacted in the 1866 Civil Rights Act could not be overturned by future legislatures. Following the election of 1866, Republicans took control of all Southern state governorships and state legislatures, leading to the election of numerous African-Americans to state and national offices, as well as to the installation of African-Americans into other positions of power. Reconstruction also resulted in the South’s first state-funded public school systems, more equitable taxation, and laws against racial discrimination in public transport and accommodations.

Under Radical Reconstruction, the Republican Party in the South gained control of southern governments as a coalition of blacks (who made up the overwhelming majority of Republican voters in the South) along with carpetbaggers,” and “scalawags.” Most Reconstruction-era carpetbaggers were well-educated northern middle class teachers, merchants, journalists or other types of businessmen who moved to the South after the war. Many were motivated by a genuine desire for reform and concern for the civil and political rights of freed blacks. They wanted to rebuild and reshape the postwar South in the image of the North, which they considered to be a more advanced society. Carpetbaggers purchased land, leased plantations, partnered with down-and-out cotton planters, and invested in business and industry. Initially, they were welcomed since northern capital and investment was needed to get the devastated region back on its feet. They later became an object of hate and scorn, as many southerners saw them as low-class and opportunistic newcomers seeking to get rich on their misfortune.

Scalawags, white southern Republicans, made up roughly 20 percent of the white electorate and wielded a considerable influence as the biggest group of white delegates to the Radical Reconstruction-era legislatures. Many had pre-war political experience as members of congress, local officials, or judges. The majority were non-slave holding small farmers as well as merchants, artisans and other professionals who had remained loyal to the Union during the Civil War. Most scalawags shared the belief that the South could achieve greater advancement in a Republican South than they could by opposing Reconstruction. They sought to develop the region’s economy and ensure the survival of its debt-ridden small farms. Many had strong anti-black attitudes. However, they thought that whites should recognize blacks’ civil and political rights while still retaining control of political and economic life. They also wanted to keep rebels from regaining power in the postwar South. For former Confederates and opponents of Reconstruction, scalawags were even lower on the scale of humanity than carpetbaggers. To most southerners, Scalawags were traitors to the South. By the end of Reconstruction, Republican African-Americans, carpetbaggers, and scalawags were viewed with hate and disdain by most southerners.

After 1867, many southern whites began to increase the level violence in response to the revolutionary societal changes of Radical Reconstruction and what they considered a military occupation and imposition of Radical Republican Party rule. The Ku Klux Klan (KKK) and other hate filled white supremacist organizations targeted local Republican leaders, white and black, and other African-Americans who challenged white authority. Federal legislation passed during the Grant administration in 1871 allowed military suppression of the KKK and others who attempted to interfere with black suffrage and other political rights.

Unfortunately, white supremacy and racism gradually reasserted its hold on the South after the mid-1870s as support for Reconstruction waned. Republicans also became more conservative and less concerned about the plight of former slaves as the decade continued. The Amnesty Act, signed by President Grant in 1872, pardoned all but the top 500 Confederate leaders. In 1874, after an economic depression plunged much of the nation especially the South into poverty, the Democrat Party won control of the United States House of Representatives for the first time since the Civil War. In 1876, Rutherford B. Hayes won a disputed election for President. In 1877, he reached a compromise in which the white South agreed to accept his victory if he withdrew the last Federal troops occupying the South effectively ending Reconstruction. The struggle to deal with the revolution ushered in by slavery’s eradication would continue in the South and elsewhere in the nation for generations.

A steady reduction of many civil and political rights for African-Americans started when Reconstruction ended. From the end of Reconstruction until the beginning of twentieth century, rulings by the United States Supreme Court restricted or overturned many of the civil rights granted to freedmen by the Civil Rights Act of 1866, the Reconstruction Act of 1867, and Constitutional Amendments XIII, XIV, and XV. The court of Chief Justice Waite, 1874-1888, started this trend. Although he had opposed slavery and secession of southern states, Waite court rulings tended to restrict extension Federal government powers ruling that, “Sovereignty rests alone with the States.” As a result of the unrest and strife in the South caused by Reconstruction, both the court and the people of the United States had grown weary of constant civil unrest. Most considered southern white moderates, many were scalawags, the best group to set rules for race relations in the South. The thought was that freedmen and carpetbaggers still sought retribution against southern whites while moderates would be fair to both southern whites and emancipated blacks. Unfortunately, the Waite Court rulings allowed southern state segregationist to regain power and enact racist Jim Crow Laws and institutions.

Continuing the culture centered tenor of the Waite Court and Jim Crow Laws, in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), a later court ruled that state-mandated segregation was legal when laws provided for “separate but equal” facilities. The fallacy of the living constitution concept where the law evolves with social mores is clear in the decision of the court. Justice Brown wrote,

“We consider the underlying fallacy of the plaintiff’s argument to consist in the assumption that the enforced separation of the two races stamps the colored race with a badge of inferiority. If this be so, it is not by reason of anything found in the act, but solely because the colored race chooses to put that construction upon it.”

This opinion totally ignores the original intent and clear meaning of the words of Amendment XIV, Section 1 which states. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States, nor shall any state deprive any person of life liberty or property. History, economics, and quality demonstrated that separate was totally unrelated to equal where segregated facilities and services were involved. The opinion totally disregarded the Merriam-Webster online dictionary definitions of abridge, to reduce in scope: diminish, and liberty, the positive enjoyment of various social, political, or economic rights and privileges. The dissent of Justice Harlan noted that the Court’s majority decision would be as infamous as the Dred Scott decision since there is no superior, dominant, or ruling class of citizens in the United States. He also observed that the Constitution is color-blind.

Jim Crow laws disenfranchised and marginalized African-Americans in the South. The process varied throughout the south. In Black precincts, boundaries were gerrymandered to minimize Republican seats; polling places were reduced; local officials were appointed by state legislatures; and felons and people who failed to pay their annual poll tax or pass literacy tests were not allowed the vote. One example of the impact of Jim Crow Laws on the African-American vote will suffice. In 1900 Alabama, only 3,000 of an estimated 181,000 eligible Black males, 1.7%, were registered to vote. Jim Crow Laws were culturally all inclusive. These laws which required separate but equal facilities and services where the white and back races could not intermingle included, no black nurse treatment of white males, separate waiting rooms in bus and train terminals, separate train cars or separation within train cars and buses, separate restaurant rooms and entrances or rooms with high wall dividers preventing cross room viewing, separate public restrooms and water fountains, no intermarriage between whites and fourth generation blacks, no interracial cohabitation, and school segregation including prohibition of sharing textbooks between races. Jim Crow Laws plagued African-Americans in the South and parts of the North though the middle of the twentieth century. African-American hopes and dreams of freedom started to be a reality with The Emancipation Proclamation, the defeat of the Confederacy, and Radical Reconstruction in the South. Unfortunately, those hopes and dreams were shattered by the Jim Crow era. Freedom for African-Americans became Democrat sponsored white supremacist illusion that lasted 90 years. The anger and suppressed hate of African-Americans is understandable.

Changes in Jim Crow Laws started early in the twentieth century. Since the United States Congress was not interested in undermining state rights, over the next 50 years, the Supreme Court ruled that many of these oppressive laws were unconstitutional. In 1915, laws that denied the vote to black citizens were over ruled. In 1917, residential segregation was over ruled. In 1946, white only primary elections were over ruled. In 1944 and 1946, segregation in interstate transportation was over ruled. In 1948, “restrictive covenants” that barred the sale of homes to blacks, Jews, or Asians in neighborhoods and other forms of privately created Jim Crow arrangements were over ruled. In 1954, Brown v. Board of Education ruled that separate public schools were inherently unequal. This case overturned Plessy v. Ferguson and other Jim Crow Laws. In 1967, restrictions on interracial marriage in the United States were over ruled.

From 1915 to 1964, African-Americans throughout the United States, particularly the South, sought to peacefully act on favorable Supreme Court decisions reversing Jim Crow Laws. In the South, under Democrat governance, these court decisions were purposely ignored; and African-Americans started to peacefully demonstrate to secure their civil rights granted by the courts. Their actions were met with resurgence of the KKK and violence at the hands of law enforcement ordered by Democrat mayors and governors in disobedience of court orders. Consequently, the United States Congress and Presidents Kennedy and Johnson started work on national civil rights legislation.

As with Radical Reconstruction legislation about 100 years earlier giving African-Americans their first civil rights experience, Republican legislator’s votes ensured passage civil rights legislation of the 1960’s over solid southern Democrat objections. On July 2, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which passed the Senate by a 73-27 vote and the House of Representatives by a 290-130 vote. The Act banned segregation on the grounds of race, religion or national origin at all public accommodations, including courthouses, parks, restaurants, theaters, sports arenas, and hotels. The Act also created the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and gave the US Attorney General the power to file lawsuits on behalf of aggrieved workers related to employer and union discrimination based on race, religious, national origin and gender. On August 6, President Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act of 1965 which passed the Senate by a 77-19 vote and the House of Representatives by a 333- 85 vote. The act banned literacy tests, provided for federal oversight of voter registration where non-white voter registration was less than 50 percent, and authorized investigation of poll taxes in state and local elections. In 1964, Amendment XXIV, made poll taxes illegal in federal elections. Poll taxes in state elections were banned in 1966 by the U.S. Supreme Court. On April 11, President Johnson signed the Fair Housing Act of 1968 which was actually titled the Civil Rights Act of 1968. The act received its popular name from Title VIII of the 1968 Civil Rights Act. The bill passed the Senate, by a slim margin, thanks to the support of the Senate Republican leader, Everett Dirksen, who defeated a southern Democrat filibuster. Shortly after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the House passed the Act; and President Johnson signed it into law the next day. The Fair Housing Act prohibited discrimination concerning the sale, rental and financing of housing based on race, religion, national origin, and sex.

Although the act stands as the final great legislative achievement of the 1960’s civil rights era, housing, unfortunately, remained segregated in many areas of the United States for years. From 1950 to 1980, the black population in American urban centers increased more than two fold to 15.3 million. Simultaneously, white Americans steadily moved to the suburbs, which were too expensive for most African-Americans, taking many employment opportunities for blacks with them. This trend led to urban American ghettos, inner city communities with high minority populations plagued by high unemployment, crime, and other social ills.

Since the 1960s, the United States has made great strides in civil rights. Our public schools, universities, and housing are integrated from the viewpoint of law. Minorities, including African-Americans, are now employed in every segment of our economy. Minority politicians attain elected office at every level from local communities to state governments, the United States Congress, and after the election of Barack Obama as President, the highest office in the land. Unfortunately, most minorities, especially African-Americans, still experience what amounts to economic segregation. Large minority populations still live in inner-city communities with high drug and gang related crime and unemployment. The high public school dropout rates and extraordinarily high rates of single parenthood with absentee fathers are significant contributors to the lack of economic opportunity, unemployment, and crime. As a result, it is not hard to understand the feeling of many African-Americans that the hopes and dreams that began with the Emancipation Proclamation, the revolutionary changes promised during the Radical Reconstruction following the Civil War, and the civil rights progress of the 1960’s still remain mostly unrealized.

DIALOGUE

With the insights provided by the preceding historical review in mind, the purpose of the following dialog is to raise questions about the validity of many of the assumptions and presumptions of progressives. Most of my questions revolve around the statement, some hate is not as evil as other hate. Stated another way, some opinions are more important than other opinions or the injustices you faced are insignificant and irrelevant in this discussion when compared to the injustices we faced. This dialog will not provide answers but it will pose questions that, in my opinion, must be answered to resolve significant issues related to race relations, civil rights, and the place of history, historical memorials, and statues for the future of our country. It is my hope that this dialog will be a start toward meaningful solution to our current dilemma.

Nearly 400 years after that Dutch slave trader unloaded the first cargo of black African slaves in Jamestown Virginia in 1619, the difficulties traced to that load of slaves still tare at the heart of our culture and society. Contrary to the insinuation of the left, slavery existed for millennia prior to the first sale of slaves in Virginia. Slavery existed throughout the world and did not originate in the Americas, southern colonies, southern states, or with the Republican Party. Before slave importation became illegal in the United States, in 1808, black African slaves were primarily the vanquished victims of African tribal wars sold to slave traders by their black African conquers. Black African tribal warfare victors killed almost all of their vanquished black African enemies after legal slavery ended in most of the world. The victors enslaved, for their own purposes, defeated enemies who they did not kill or sold them into slavery on the black market.

Democrats have been largely successful in separating themselves from their white supremacist, KKK, segregationist, Jim Crow past. This phenomenon is a total suspension of the reality of history. It was the Republican Party, the party of Abraham Lincoln, that ended the evil of slavery in the United States and enacted the original Civil Rights Act of 1866, the Reconstruction Act of 1867, and Constitutional Amendments XIII, XIV, and XV. These Constitutional Amendments made the end of slavery, citizenship, and the right to vote for former slaves a matter of Constitutional Law. If these laws and Amendments had not been subverted by later Democrat sponsored legislation and federal judicial activism, the Civil Rights legislation of the 1960’s would not have been necessary. In addition, the Republican Party ended Jim Crow segregation, and legalized the African-American vote since Republican Party votes were responsible for passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the 1965 Voting Rights Act, and the 1968 Fair Housing Act. Most southern Democrats opposed these three Acts.

In retrospect, it is not difficult to see the shortsighted nature of many decisions made in the United States related to African-Americans and slavery prior to the 1960’s as well as relationships between the United States and Native Americans. It is  not difficult to place blame with one group or another; but ascribing blame only inflames our hate and exacerbates our current problems. Until we attempt to understand how the impact of historical events has informed our culture and contributed to our attitudes toward each other, we will not be able to solve our social and cultural problems. If we do not seek understanding, “We the People” of the United States of America will continue to struggle with hate, race relations, and civil rights issues.

It seems reasonable to begin this discussion with a couple of Merriam-Webster On-Line definitions. Blame is defined as, to find fault, to hold responsible, a state of being blameworthy, culpable; and culpable is defined as meriting condemnation or blame especially as wrong or harmful. The impact of the current statuary, civil rights, and race relations dialogue on me personally seems an appropriate starting point. Hopefully, explanation of my prejudices will help open minds and hearts to a discussion of the other prejudices involved in the current statuary, civil rights, and race relations dilemma facing our country.

Three factors impact my attitude about these areas of current controversy in our culture. First, in my opinion, the concept of White Privilege, taken at face value, seems to indicate that, as a young white geezer (70 year old), my family and I am culpable and should be blamed for the current cultural, socio-economic plight of minorities, especially African-Americans. The manner in which the term White Privilege is used also indicates that my white family should be punished for the decades and generations of benefits we have derived from our White Privilege and apologize for our whiteness. We are viewed as evil based on the attitude shown on the vitriolic angry faces of our hate filled accusers. Ds this vitriol demonstrate the validity of the statement, Our hate is not as evil as your hate? Is the implication of the term White Privilege racist in its description of white people? When the nature of the dialogue, on either side, denigrates those on the other side, is there any hope of progress, understanding, reconciliation, or compromise? Ds the term White Privilege promote civil rights and race relations or alienate deplorable white citizens like me? Ds the term “White Privilege” improve race relations and understanding; or ds the term serve “white supremacists” as a recruiting tool for their hate groups? One final personal question regarding White Privilege seems relevant. As a white man with a PhD, who never worked in my field and retired as an 18 wheel truck driver; How have I benefited from my ‘White Privilege’?

Second, my parents raised me to understand that racism and prejudice in all its forms are not only wrong but evil. They were part of the Greatest Generation and late 1940’s graduates of what was then Indiana Central University or College, now Indianapolis University. At the time, it was an Evangelical United Brethren college. From its founding in 1903, the college was cducational and totally integrated when classes began in 1905. One of my mother’s best friends was an African-American woman from Indianapolis. My father was an athletic trainer. He shared fond memories of his personal experiences with an African-American athlete, George Crow who later became the first African-American first baseman to play for the St. Louis Cardinals. As a child, our next door neighbors were Hispanic. Their oldest boy was one of my best friends. Racism is foreign to my nature and upbringing. As an Army officer, I was trained and served as the Race Relations and Drug Education counselor in my company. My relationships with the entire training company cadre including the African-American Non-Commissioned Officers and trainees were a truly enjoyable experience in my military career. Recently, an attempt to form a business partnership with a fellow rental condominium owner, an African-American, was a rewarding experience. He moved to another state and needed a local property manager. After learning that a license was required to function as a legal property manager, my friend decided to sell his condominium because his level of trust in property management firms was low in comparison to working with me. On an individual basis, working and socializing with African-Americans and other minorities has never been a problem for me.

However, the actions and behavior of the greater African-American community, including most national civil rights leaders, in the United States, has turned me against the direction and goals of the majority of the civil rights groups and organizations in our country. On the other hand, if African-American Evangelicals were not marginalized by progressives and civil rights movement leaders, the community would be much better off. Admittedly, my attitude has become that of a prejudiced white man. A comparison of the reaction of African-Americans and whites to similar situations will explain the beginning of the evolution of my growing prejudice. Simply compare the reaction of the black community to the Rodney King jury verdict and the white community’s reaction to the O.J. Simpson jury verdict; and you will start to understand my prejudice against the greater African-American community and its civil rights leaders. African-Americans rioted, viciously targeted and beat unfortunate white people who came into the area, and burned neighborhoods and business districts. There was no such reaction by “whites.” Nationally acclaimed civil rights leaders blamed what is now considered white privilege for the very violent reaction of the African-American community following the Rodney King verdict. Watts, Detroit, Ferguson, Baltimore etc., and the vitriolic chants, led by national civil rights leaders, during Black Lives Matter rallies followed by the same justifications and excuses adds to my prejudice. When you add to this toxic mix, Bloods and Crips, MS-13, other minority gangs, black on black violence of all types, and the high rate of illegal drug use and unwed motherhood in the African-American community, it is not difficult to understand my reluctance to accept my white privilege as the cause of the problems in the African-American and other minority communities. Of course, to my accusers, my failure to understand is evidence of my hate, white privilege, and racism.

Third, in my opinion, both the concept of white privilege and especially the growth of the historically guilty like Christopher Columbus, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson in the statuary controversy are critical components of Marxist, progressive, efforts to undermine the concepts of patriotism, American exceptionalism, the general virtue of American citizens, and belief in the general virtue of the United States as a force for good in the world. Joseph Stalin purportedly said,

America is like a healthy body and its resistance is threefold: its patriotism, its morality and its spiritual life. If we can undermine these three areas, America will collapse from within.

Consequently, to understand how the left seeks to achieve this goal and undermine our society, a discussion of truth and lies seems appropriate.

In The Ten Commandments we read this, You shall not give false testimony against your neighbor (EX 20:16, NIV), or do not lie. The Merriam Webster On-Line Dictionary definition of lie is to make an untrue statement with the intent to deceive. Adding misrepresent to the concept of lies seems appropriate. Conversely, the same dictionary defines truth as, the body of real things, events, and facts, actuality, the state of being the case, fact. For We the People in the Deplorable Class, these concepts appear to be quite clear. In contrast, the 1983 Harvard University Press publication, A Dictionary of Marxist Thought essay on truth sheds a very different light on truth. A concise summary of this essay definition of truth describes truth as the practical expression of a subject totality achieved in the realized identity of subject and object in history and this-worldly manifestations of class-related needs and interests. Consequently, for Marxist progressives, truth must be refined to support their class related needs and interests. In this publication’s essay defining historiography, the study of history as a discipline, the definition of truth in the context of history is further refined. This refinement of the concept of truth is summarized as an ideal chosen from an infinite number of similar, potential ideals determined by history and finally realized under communism once a consensus regarding the new truth of history is achieved. This essay describes the process by which obscure and often discredited depictions of history are presented as historical facts to incrementally alter the existing historical paradigm and promote the progressive, Marxist agenda, historic misrepresentations or academic lies. With these thoughts regarding truth and history in mind and the current atmosphere on our college campuses, all levels of academia, and the media, it may be well for readers to consider the roll of the left’s educational dictatorship in today’s society to accomplish the Marxist, progressive plan for America described by Stalin.

It seems reasonable to frame most of the dialog regarding the current statuary, civil rights, and race relations debates in relation to the background, perceptions, and prejudices of white Americans and African-Americans. The impact of these issues on Native-Americans, Hispanics, and other minorities also has relevance. From the perspective of white Americans, the post-Civil War evolution of racism was different for the northern or Union states involved in the Civil War and the states of the Confederacy. For states joining the United States in the early generations after the Civil War, the degree of racism exhibited was somewhat related to the north-south composition of the population of each new state. From the end of Reconstruction until the civil rights legislation of the 1960’s was generally accepted by citizens of the United States, segregation prevailed.

Since slavery was the exception in most northern and all other post-Civil War states, white racism evolved along a different path than in the former Confederate states. In the northern states involved in the Civil War, most cheap labor was provided by white European immigrants. Many of these immigrants were originally indentured servants who contracted to work for their employers for at least seven years in exchange for their passage to America and living expenses. Debt to employers often extended the period of indenture. Consequently, northern whites had relatively little interaction with African-Americans either slave or free. Black freemen fought in the Revolutionary War, and slaves earned their freedom for service in the war. Free blacks, men and women, were paid household employees, other service workers, small business owners and artisans, other professionals, and politicians who made meaningful contributions to their communities. Many were well educated. The abolitionist movement and Underground Railroad brought more African-Americans to the north, but many went to Canada where they could not be returned to their southern owners if captured. The northern experience with African-Americans was generally positive.

After the Emancipation Proclamation freed all African-American slaves and the Reconstruction Era ended, southern racism, Jim Crow Laws, and segregation resulted in steadily increasing migration of African-Americans out of the former Confederate states. As African-Americans moved out of the South, the natural desire of people to live in communities that share common values, culture, and experiences prevailed. It did not take long for this self-segregation to become institutionalized and legalized. Most new immigrant populations to the United States settle in this manner throughout our history as well. Unfortunately, such segregation, whether forced or voluntary, reduces human interactions and leads to uncertainty, distrust, and eventually discrimination and racism. As African-American numbers increased outside the old Confederacy, competition for employment increased. Increases in the size of the labor force also resulted in lower wages. As a result, African-Americans also experienced increased discrimination, segregation, and racism, especially in Northern industrialized urban areas. Economic concerns grew into racism and, in some instances, issues related to white supremacy.

The evolution of white racism in the old Confederate South had a long, complicated history. Old Confederacy racism is rooted in economics, the long standing institution of slavery,  animosity toward the North which started in early colonial times, the impact of the Civil War which caused a total cultural disruption, radical and military reconstruction which suddenly inserted African-Americans into elected offices and other positions of authority, and the depression that ended reconstruction.

In retrospect, human nature indicates that it is hard to expect that white Southerners would not react to such sudden radical cultural, societal, and political change in a culture that had evolved over a period of 250 years prior to formation of the Confederacy. The reactions took two very different, but related, forms. First, shortly after the end of the Civil War, Ladies Memorial Associations organized throughout the South. These ladies’ groups evolved into the current state and national groups known as The Daughters of the Confederacy. The post-Civil War veneration of Confederate leaders and war hers was as much an idyllic effort to honor and memorialize the southern lifestyle and culture that had been lost by the outcome of the Civil War. Over time the venerated virtues of the old South have evolved into patriotism for the United States, personal honor, courage and valor, and respect for military service.

Second and not surprisingly, the southern response also included violence and formation of the first white supremacy groups.  Unfortunately, after the Democrat Party regained control of former Confederate states, African-Americans became scapegoats for the Confederate loss of their way of life. African-Americans endured approximately 100 years of Jim Crow racial discrimination, often quite violent, that was worst in the former Confederate southern states; but, unfortunately, racial discrimination occurred throughout the rest of the United States. Failure to acknowledge the legitimate reality of the personal, emotional, and cultural impact of these issues, makes progress on the critical civil rights and race relations issues of today far more difficult.

From the African-American perspective, no one can deny that slavery was and will always be evil, demeaning, and an affront to their humanity. Similarly, no one can deny that African-Americans suffered oppressive, often violent, repression, segregation, racial discrimination, and endemic civil rights violations during the century between the Emancipation Proclamation and passage the civil rights laws of the 1960’s. No one can deny the adverse emotional impact that denial of true freedom had on African-Americans during this period in our history. No one can deny that the peaceful African-American desegregation demonstrations of the 1950’s through the 1970’s were met by violent law enforcement opposition sanctioned by Democrat civil authorities including mayors and governors and incarceration of demonstrators and civil rights leaders. Oppression has an adverse and debilitating effect on both the individual and collective psyche of every oppressed group of people, including African-Americans.

Additionally, no one can deny that the United States have made great strides in race relations and civil rights during the last three to four decades, especially where African-Americans are concerned. After all, an African-American was elected President of the United States in 2008 and re-elected in 2012. Individual African“Americans, both male and female, have served in the Cabinets of Republican and Democrat administrations, the US Congress, and every level of state and local governments for decades. Individual African-Americans have also excelled in business, non-elected government service at all levels, military service, law enforcement, education, medicine, science and engineering, tele-communications, all forms of entertainment and sports, the print and news media, and all other fields of endeavor. Individuals, African-Americans and other minorities, succeed and prosper throughout our society, in spite of the white privilege that should, according conventional progressive wisdom, prevent them from succeeding.

On the other hand, no one can deny that the greater African-American community and other minority communities, especially in large urban areas, are plagued by a multitude of problems. These issues revolve around high poverty rates associated with the breakdown of the traditional family and absentee fathers, high school dropout rates, high unemployment, gang violence usually associated with illegal drug distribution and use, and a general disrespect for any form of authority as seen on most videos related to classroom teacher interactions with minorities, police interactions, and perceived white privilege in these communities. Admittedly, disrespect for law enforcement and authority in general, including violent rioting, is also endemic to progressive activists, ANTIFA, Occupy Wall Street, and Black Lives Matter and not restricted to minority groups.

From my prejudicial point of view, answers to some specific questions should be at least considered in relation to the impact of white privilege on minority communities including African-Americans. What is the precise definition and specific characteristics of white privilege? How and to what extent ds each specific aspect of white privilege adversely impact minorities including African-Americans? What are the common characteristics and personal traits allowing so many minority individuals to overcome white privilege and succeed in the United States of America? Do successful whites and successful minorities share common characteristics and personal traits? Are the characteristics and personal traits of virtually all successful people advanced by civil rights leaders and educators as methods for all individuals in minority communities to overcome white privilege and succeed? Do civil rights leaders and educators believe and teach members of their communities that each person is responsible to work and train for their personal success?

The current statuary, civil rights, race relations debate centers on issues of real and perceived wrongs. Slavery was wrong. In the case of white privilege, the wrongs are both real and perceived. In my opinion, progressives start these debates with a series of non-negotiable assertions which are rarely openly stated but become obvious from the tenor of their arguments and tone of their voices. These assertions could include the statement, some hate is not as evil as other hate, on a more personal note our/my hate is not as evil as your hate, or my vision of patriotism is better than your vision of patriotism. Several other progressive non-negotiable assertions, paraphrases, or variations of this theme appear to be part of the starting point in these discussions. Our or some group’s pain is more relevant to these discussions than your pain. Our progressive Marxist portrayal of historical truth is more relevant to the current discussions than your traditional portrayal of historical truth. Our evaluation of the impact of historical figures using modern cultural, sociological, ethical, and legal standards and the impact of decades or centuries of unintended consequences on current affairs is more relevant to current discussions than your citation of the words, goals, and intentions of the same historical figures in the context of the cultural, societal, ethical, legal standards, and mores of their time.

For progressives and those who seek to divide We the People into factions, slavery is the only relevant issue in discussions of the history of the formation of the Confederate States of America and current discussion of Confederate statues and memorials, civil rights, and race relations. The other economic, political, and cultural factors that led to the Civil War, the devastation of war in the South, and the retribution exacted on the South by Reconstruction were all the direct result of the institution of slavery; and the impact of these issues on white Southerners must be viewed as inconsequential and therefore, disregarded when compared to the impact of slavery on African-Americans in discussions of Confederate statues, memorials and all historically significant slave owners including George Washington, the Father of our Country.

As a final appeal for reason and fairness regarding the current discussions of race relations, civil rights, memorials to the Confederacy, and the place of our Founders who owned slaves when slavery was common place throughout the world, the request of one group despised by progressives, both white and African-Americans, might provoke thought, compromise, and reconciliation. August of 2017, Patricia Bryson, President General of the United Daughters of the Confederacy wrote the following:

We are saddened that some people find anything connected with the Confederacy to be offensive. Our Confederate ancestors were and are Americans. We as an Organization do not sit in judgment of them nor do we impose the standards of the 21st century on these Americans of the 19th century.

It is our sincere wish that our great nation and its citizens will continue to let its fellow Americans, the descendants of Confederate soldiers, honor the memory of their ancestors. Indeed, we urge all Americans to honor their ancestors’ contributions to our country as well. This diversity is what makes our nation stronger.

From the end of the Civil War and Reconstruction, southern women have honored and memorialized the Confederate soldiers who fought in the Civil War. Most of the statues erected as memorials portray the generals of the Confederacy who represent to soldiers they led and its highest civil leaders like Jefferson Davis. In the lead up to the Civil War, southerners did not believe that they were any different than the Founders of the United States. They considered themselves to be patriots seeking freedom from a government that no longer represented their best interests including the institution of slavery. Confederate soldiers considered themselves analogous to Continental Army soldiers of the Revolutionary War.

To most southerners, the statues and memorials have come to represent the selfless service, valor, honor, virtue, and devotion to a cause, patriotism, not blind devotion to the institution of slavery, racism, or white supremacy. These patriotic traits have translated into southern patriotism and military service at a rate that exceeds the rest of our nation. Compared to the other 34 states, between 40 and 44 percent of those entering military service, enlisted personnel and officers, for several decades are from the South, 16 states and the District of Columbia. The South accounts for about 35 percent of the nation’s relevant population. Southern patriotism, bravery, and valor in combat has been observed since the Civil War. In 1863, Union General William T. Sherman observed:

War suits them, and the rascals are brave, fine riders, bold to rashness and they are the most dangerous set of men that this war has turned loose upon the world. They must all be killed or employed by us before we can hope for peace.

The southern contribution to our nation’s defense since 9/11 has been significant. Many have made the ultimate sacrifice. To many, the statues and memorials to the Confederacy represent the heritage that translates into one specific form of patriotism, military service.

Should we as a nation disregard symbols of our history that contribute to this level of patriotism, selflessness, sacrifice, and military service? Are we a nation of over-comers; or are we a nation of victims? In my opinion, slavery and its legacy is over. Our nation has twice elected an African-American President. Is it time for African-Americans and all minority communities to view themselves as over-comers and conquers; or will they view themselves as victims? Are we a nation of over-comers and conquers or a nation of victims? In my opinion, the manner in which the statuary issue is resolved will provide the answer to these two questions.

One final question to consider, “Will we continue to allow progressives to divide We the People of the United States by  race, ethnicity, gender, gender identity, age, religion, and political persuasion and foment hate among us, or will We the People commit to respectful dialogue and solve our problems and unite for the good of the United States of America. For the good of our nation, We the People must change hate into love.

Join the fray. All of the America’s Crossroad Posts are listed by categories in the  BLOG CONTENTS tab.  If you decide to read a few, please leave comments about your “Patriot Visions,” start or join the conversation, and share the Posts with friends and political frienimies.