THE TRUTH ABOUT DEMOCRAT RACISM
By Frances Rice
Contemptible aptly describes the race
mongering by Democrats for partisan political gain. No issue, from
Obama-Care to Voter ID, escapes being demagogue by Democrats with false
accusations of racism leveled at Republicans who disagree with Democrats
on policy.
With not an ounce of shame, Democratic National Committee
Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz went on the African-American network
TV One’s program “Washington Watch” and accused Republicans of wanting
to return America to Jim Crow segregation laws, merely because they are
seeking to require photo identification to register to vote.
It
takes Weiner-level hubris for Democrats to conjure up the specter of
Jim Crow against Republicans since Democrats enacted those
discriminatory laws. The roots of modern-day racism rest squarely in
the Democratic Party. As author Michael Scheuer wrote, the Democratic
Party is the party of the four S’s: slavery, secession, segregation and
now socialism.
Details about the true history of civil rights can be
found in the book “Whites, Blacks and Racist Democrats” by Wayne
Perryman. An excellent summary of the issue of civil rights is
contained in Chapter 10 of Ann Coulter’s new book “Demonic”, an excerpt
of which is posted on the Human Events website and shown below.
Frances
Rice is a lawyer, a retired Army lieutenant colonel and chairman of the
National Black Republican Association. She may be contacted on the
Internet at: www.NBRA.info
_________________________________________________________
Civil Rights and the Mob: George Wallace, Bull Connor, Orval Faubus And Other Democrats
by Ann Coulter
June 7, 2011
An excerpt from Ann Coulter's new book, Demonic: How The Liberal Mob Is Endangering America.
CHAPTER 10: CIVIL RIGHTS AND THE MOB: GEORGE WALLACE, BULL CONNOR, ORVAL FAUBUS AND OTHER DEMOCRATS
It
was the Democratic Party that ginned up the racist mob against blacks
and it is the Democratic Party ginning every new mob today— ironically,
all portraying themselves as the equivalent of the Freedom Riders.
With
real civil rights secure—try to find a restaurant that won’t serve a
black person—modern civil rights laws benefit only the mob, not the
victims of the mob, as American blacks had been. Just as fire seeks
oxygen, Democrats seek power, which is why they will always be found
championing the mob whether the mob consists of Democrats lynching
blacks or Democrats slandering the critics of ObamaCare as racists.
Democrats
have gone from demagoguing white (trash) voters with claims that
Republicans are the party of blacks, to demagoguing black voters telling
them Republicans are the party of racists. Any mob in a storm.
The
liberal fairy tale that Southern bigots simply switched parties, from
Democrat to Republican, is exactly wrong. What happened is: The
Democrats switched mobs. Democrats will champion any group of hooligans
in order to attain power.
As Michael Barone said of the vicious
segregationist (and Democrat) George Wallace, he was “a man who really
didn’t believe in anything—a political opportunist who used opposition
to integration to try and get himself ahead.”
This is why
the Democrats are able to transition so seamlessly from defending Bull
Connor racists to defending Black Panthers, hippies, yippies,
Weathermen, feminists, Bush derangement syndrome liberals, Moveon.org,
and every other indignant, angry mob.
Every segregationist
who ever served in the Senate was a Democrat and remained a Democrat
except one. Even Strom Thurmond—the only one who later became a
Republican—remained a Democrat for eighteen years after running for
president as a Dixiecrat. There’s a reason they were not called the
“Dixiecans.”
A curious sleight of hand is required to hide
from the children the fact that all the segregationists in the Senate
were Democrats. In history books, such as Robert A. Caro’s biography of
Lyndon Johnson, the segregationists are not called “Democrats.” They’re
called “Southerners.”3
Except it wasn’t just “Southerners”
voting against civil rights. Not every senator who opposed black civil
rights was a Southerner, but every one was a Democrat.
In addition to
the Southern Democrats who voted against putting the 1957 civil rights
bill on the Senate calendar, for example, there were five Democrats from
nowhere near the South: Democratic senator Wayne Morse of Oregon—a
favorite target of Senator Joe McCarthy—Democratic senator Warren
Magnuson of Washington, Democratic senator James Murray of Montana,
Democratic senator Mike Mansfield of Montana, and Democratic senator
Joseph O’Mahoney of Wyoming.4
According to Caro, the
Western Democrats traded their votes on civil rights for a dam
authorization on the Idaho-Oregon border. That’s how dear black civil
rights were to liberals—they traded them away for a dam.
While
Democrats are the party of the mob, Republicans are the party of calm
order, willing to breach the peace only when it comes to great
transgressions against humanity—slavery, abortion, and terrorism.
After
the Civil War, it was Republicans who passed the Thirteenth Amendment,
granting slaves their freedom; the Fourteenth Amendment, granting them
citizenship; and Fifteenth Amendment, giving them the right to vote. It
was Republicans who sent federal troops to the Democratic South to
enforce the hard-won rights of the freed slaves.
Then, as
now, the Democrats favored the hooligans. The Ku Klux Klan was
originally formed as a terrorist group to attack Republicans who had
come to the Democratic South after the Civil War to help enforce legal
equality for freed slaves.
It was—again—Republicans who
passed the Civil Rights Act of 1866 and the Reconstruction Act of 1867,
both signed into law by Re- publican president Ulysses S. Grant. Under
the “living Constitution,” the Supreme Court upheld fraudulent “separate
but equal” accommodations for blacks in the 1896 case Plessy v.
Ferguson.
Republicans kept introducing federal civil
rights bills and Democrats kept blocking them—a bill to protect black
voters in the South in 1890; anti lynching bills in 1922, 1935, and
1938; and anti–poll tax bills in 1942, 1944, and 1946.
With
a lock on the racist mob vote, Democratic politicians won elections and
promptly re-segregated the entire South with Jim Crow laws. In 1913,
Progressive Democrat president Woodrow Wilson even instituted
segregation in Washington, D.C., bringing Jim Crow to the federal
workforce. Wilson summarily dismissed black officials from their federal
jobs in the South and in D.C.
A friend of Wilson said
that with him running the country, “Negroes should expect to be treated
as a servile race.”7 There’s your post- racial Democratic Party.
A
crucial part of the Democrats’ victim folklore is that they have been
losing the South to Republicans over the past half century because the
Democrats stood on principle to oppose race discrimination, while the
Republican Party pandered to racists in the South—a region of the
country liberals believe is composed primarily of Klan members.
(That
might be your first clue as to why Southerners don’t like liberals.)
The
Republican Party’s allegedly racist appeal to Southerners is darkly
referred to seventeen times a day in the mainstream media as the
“Southern Strategy.”
In fact, it was Eisenhower who broke
the Democrats’ hold on the South in 1952, and if anyone was appealing to
bigots that year, it wasn’t Eisenhower. Democrat Adlai Stevenson, known
to experience “personal discomfort in the presence of Negroes,”12 chose
as his running mate John Sparkman of Alabama, a Democrat
segregationist.
And yet the Old South—which according to
mainstream media accounts voted Republican solely out of racial
resentment—suddenly started voting Republican in 1952. Ike carried
Tennessee, Virginia, and Florida outright, and nearly stole Kentucky,
North Carolina, and West Virginia from Stevenson.
(Eisenhower lost
Kentucky by a microscopic .07 percent and lost West Virginia and South
Carolina by fewer than 4 percentage points.)
This was just
four years after Democrat-turned-Dixiecrat Strom Thurmond won four
Southern states. But running with a segregationist didn’t help Stevenson
in the South a few years later.
Then, in 1956, the
Republican Party platform endorsed the Supreme Court’s 1954 decision in
Brown v. Board of Education that desegregated public schools; the
Democratic platform did not, and would not, as long as Democrats were
winning elections by appealing to the racist mob. This led the black
congressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr. to break with his party and endorse
Eisenhower for president.
Governor Orval Faubus,
progressive New Deal Democrat, blocked the schoolhouse door to the
Little Rock Central High School with the state’s National Guard rather
than allow nine black students to attend.
In response, President
Eisenhower federalized the Arkansas National Guard to take it out of
Faubus’s hands. Then he sent the 101st Air- borne Division to walk the
black children to school and stay with them throughout the day.
Eisenhower
implemented the 1948 executive order President Truman had issued—but
then ignored—desegregating the military. Also unlike Truman, Eisenhower
hired blacks for prominent positions in his administration.
It
was Republicans who overwhelmingly introduced, promoted, and passed
every civil rights act from the end of the Civil War right up to and
including the 1964 Civil Rights Act. President Eisenhower pushed the
Civil Rights Act of 1957, written by Attorney General Herbert Brownell,
guaranteeing black voting rights, to be enforced by the U.S. Department
of Justice.
During the endless deliberation on
Eisenhower’s civil rights bill, Senator Lyndon Johnson warned his fellow
segregationist Democrats, “Be ready to take up the goddamned nigra bill
again.”
Senator Sam Ervin, another liberal luminary—instrumental in the
destruction of anti-communist Republicans Joe McCarthy and Richard
Nixon—told his fellow segregationists, “I’m on your side, not theirs,”
and advised them to face up to the fact that “we’ve got to give the
goddamned niggers something.”14
Until 1964, every civil
rights act had presented no possible constitutional problems—those
federal laws were fully within Congress’s enumerated powers to enact
because they were directed at government officials (Democrats) who were
violating the Constitution by denying black citizens the right to vote.
Federal
laws aimed at discrimination by government actors are expressly within
Congress’s authority under the Fourteenth Amendment.
The Democrats
opposed these civil rights laws not because of any questions about
Congress’s authority to enact them—they couldn’t care less about the
Constitution—but because they wanted to keep discriminating.
The
1964 Civil Rights Act was again supported overwhelmingly by Republicans
and less so by Democrats. As with the 1957 and 1960 civil rights acts,
it was Republicans who passed the 1964 Civil Rights Act by huge
majorities, with a distinctly smaller majority of Democrats sup- porting
it.
In the Senate, for example, 82 percent of Republicans voted for the
1964 Civil Rights Act, compared with only 66 percent of Democrats. In
the House, 80 percent of Republicans supported the ’64 bill, compared
with only 63 percent of Democrats.
The only reason
Democratic majorities were beginning to support civil rights for blacks
was that by 1964—thanks to Republican voting rights acts—more blacks
were voting. Democrats couldn’t keep winning elections in some parts of
the country by appealing to the racist mob.
As Democratic
senator Carter Glass of Virginia had explained years earlier,
“Discrimination! Why that is exactly what we propose,” saying the
Democrats sought to “remove every negro voter who can be gotten rid of,
legally, without materially impairing the numerical strength of the
white electorate.” The Democrats’ position on civil rights depended on
where the votes were.
Once the Democrats got involved,
civil rights became just another racket with another mob. Unlike
previous civil rights laws, the 1964 Civil Rights Act included
provisions aimed at purely private actors, raising the hackles of some
constitutional purists, notably Barry Goldwater, the Republicans’ 1964
presidential nominee.
Goldwater, like the rest of his party, had
supported every single civil rights bill until the 1964 act. But he
broke with the vast majority of his fellow Republicans to oppose the
1964 Civil Rights Act.
Like many other conservatives
opposed to a living, growing, breathing Constitution, Goldwater actually
opposed only two of the seven major provisions of the bill—those
regulating privately owned housing and public accommodations.
But there
were other provisions he would have made tougher. For example, Goldwater
wanted to make it mandatory that federal funds be withheld from
programs practicing discrimination, rather than discretionary, as
President Kennedy had requested.
Goldwater was a vehement
foe of segregation. He was a founder of the NAACP in Arizona, donating
the equivalent of several thousand dollars to the organization’s efforts
to integrate the public schools.
When he was head of the Arizona
National Guard, he had integrated the state Guard before Harry Truman
announced he was integrating the U.S. military. As the Washington Post
said, Goldwater “ended racial segregation in his family department
stores, and he was instrumental in ending it in Phoenix schools and
restaurants and in the Arizona National Guard.”
But he was
also a believer in limited government. It was, after all, racist
Democratic politicians in the South using the force of the government to
violate private property rights by enforcing the Jim Crow laws in the
first place. As Sowell points out, it wasn’t the private bus companies
demanding that blacks sit in the back of the bus, it was the government.
Goldwater
not only had personally promoted desegregation, he be-longed to a party
that had been fighting for civil rights for the previous century
against Democratic obstructionism. Lyndon Johnson voted against every
civil rights bill during his tenure in the Senate. But by the time he
became president, he had flipped 180 degrees. Appealing to regional mobs
wouldn’t work with a national electorate.
Unlike
mob-appeasing Democrats, Goldwater based his objections to certain parts
of the 1964 Civil Rights Act on purely constitutional principles. Along
with other constitutional purists in the Republican Party, Goldwater
opposed federal initiatives in a lot of areas, not just those involving
race.
By contrast, segregationist Democrats routinely criticized the
exercise of federal power and expenditure of federal funds when it
involved ending discrimination against blacks—but gladly accepted
federal pork projects for their states.
It would be as if,
after fighting the Democrats for a hundred years over the issue of
abortion, Republicans finally got Roe v. Wade over- turned, and then,
out of pure political calculation, Democrats jumped on the bandwagon and
demanded a federal law outlawing abortion.
Some pro-life Republicans
would probably object that federal law outlawing abortion is not one of
Congress’s enumerated powers.
On the basis of Republicans’
constitutional objections, Democrats would then reverse the entire
history of the pro-life movement and start claiming the Democratic Party
alone fought to end abortion in America. That is exactly what they have
done with the history of civil rights.
Ann Coulter is
Legal Affairs Correspondent for HUMAN EVENTS and author of High Crimes
and Misdemeanors, Slander, Treason, How to Talk to a Liberal (If You
Must), Godless, If Democrats Had Any Brains, They'd Be Republicans,
Guilty: Liberal "Victims" and their Assault on America, and the
forthcoming Demonic: How The Liberal Mob Is Endangering America.
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