D
distracted
Guest
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From the book Liberal Fascism by Jonah Goldberg:
For decades the Klan has stood as the most obvious candidate for an American brand of fascism. That makes quite a bit of sense. The right-wing label, on the other hand, isn’t nearly as clean a fit. The Klan of the progressive Era was not the same Klan that arose after the civil War. Rather, it was a collection of loosely independent organizations spread across the united States. What united them, besides their name and absurd getups, was that they were all inspired by the film The birth of a Nation. They were, in fact, a “creepy fan subculture” of the film. Founded the week of the film’s release in 1915, the second Klan was certainly racist, but not much more than the society in general…
For years the conventional view among scholars and laymen alike was that the Klan was rural and fundamentalist. The truth is it was often quite cosmopolitan and modern, thriving in cities like New York and Chicago. In many communities the Klan focused on the reform of local government and on maintaining social values. It was often the principal extralegal enforcer of prohibition, the consummate progressive “reform.” These Klansmen,” writes Jesse walker in an illuminating survey of the latest scholarship, “were more likely to flog you for bootlegging or breaking your marriage vows than for being Black or Jewish.”
When modern liberals try to explain away the Klan membership of prominent Democrats – most frequently West Virginiaenator Robert Byrd – they cough up a few clichés about how good liberals “evolved” form their southern racial “conservatism.” But the Klan of the 1920s was often seen as reformist and modern, and it had a close relationship with some progressive elements in the democratic Party. The young Harry Truman as well as the future supreme court justice Hugo black were members. In 1924, at the famous “Klanbake” Democratic convention, the KKK rallied around the future senator William McAdoo, Woodrow Wilson’s secretary of the treasury… a key architect of Wilson’s… socialism.
[The author mentions E.A.] Ross [who] served as a tutor on immigration issues to Teddy Roosevelt… and shared with… Wilson and others a conviction that social progress had to take into account the innate differences between the races. Ross… shared Wilson’s view, expressed in The State, that various races were at different stages of evolution. Africans and south Americans were still close to savages. Other races – mostly Asians – might be more “advanced” but had slid into evolutionary degeneration. … In 1914 he wrote: “Observe immigrants… in their gatherings… in their Sunday best … [They] are hirsute, low-browed, big-faced persons of obviously low mentality… [C]clearly they belong in skins, in wattled huts at the close of the Great ice Age. These ox-like men are descendants of those who always stayed behind.”
Such views didn’t stop Ross from getting a prominent appointment at Stanford [but] Stanford’s conservative… benefactor, Jane Stanford… disliked not only his politics and his activism but also his increasingly loud and crude denunciations of Chinese “coolies.” She forced the president of the school, David Starr Jordan – himself an avid eugenicist – to fire Ross.
The faculty erupted in outrage… [but after much protesting, he was not allowed to return].
It is telling that while we constantly hear about America’s racist past and our need to redeem ourselves via racial quotas, slavery reparations, and other overtures toward “historically oppressed groups,” it is rare indeed that anyone mentions the founders of American liberalism… [W]hen liberals are the historical villains, the crime is laid at the feet of America itself… ***When conservatives sin, the sin is conservatism’s [fault] alone… never is liberalism itself to blame ***[but (c]onsider the infamous Tuskegee experiments, where poor Black men were allegedly infected with syphilis without their knowledge and then monitored for years. … [a study that, as a University of Chicago writer put it] “emerged out of a liberal progressive public health movement concerned about the health and wellbeing of the African-American population.
Americans should read this book… I’m not finished but it is very interesting, especially if you want to find out how much we’ve all been lied to… and how much necessary information has been denied us via the public school system, which, of course, does not teach us the truth about many things…
From the book Liberal Fascism by Jonah Goldberg:
For decades the Klan has stood as the most obvious candidate for an American brand of fascism. That makes quite a bit of sense. The right-wing label, on the other hand, isn’t nearly as clean a fit. The Klan of the progressive Era was not the same Klan that arose after the civil War. Rather, it was a collection of loosely independent organizations spread across the united States. What united them, besides their name and absurd getups, was that they were all inspired by the film The birth of a Nation. They were, in fact, a “creepy fan subculture” of the film. Founded the week of the film’s release in 1915, the second Klan was certainly racist, but not much more than the society in general…
For years the conventional view among scholars and laymen alike was that the Klan was rural and fundamentalist. The truth is it was often quite cosmopolitan and modern, thriving in cities like New York and Chicago. In many communities the Klan focused on the reform of local government and on maintaining social values. It was often the principal extralegal enforcer of prohibition, the consummate progressive “reform.” These Klansmen,” writes Jesse walker in an illuminating survey of the latest scholarship, “were more likely to flog you for bootlegging or breaking your marriage vows than for being Black or Jewish.”
When modern liberals try to explain away the Klan membership of prominent Democrats – most frequently West Virginia
[The author mentions E.A.] Ross [who] served as a tutor on immigration issues to Teddy Roosevelt… and shared with… Wilson and others a conviction that social progress had to take into account the innate differences between the races. Ross… shared Wilson’s view, expressed in The State, that various races were at different stages of evolution. Africans and south Americans were still close to savages. Other races – mostly Asians – might be more “advanced” but had slid into evolutionary degeneration. … In 1914 he wrote: “Observe immigrants… in their gatherings… in their Sunday best … [They] are hirsute, low-browed, big-faced persons of obviously low mentality… [C]clearly they belong in skins, in wattled huts at the close of the Great ice Age. These ox-like men are descendants of those who always stayed behind.”
Such views didn’t stop Ross from getting a prominent appointment at Stanford [but] Stanford’s conservative… benefactor, Jane Stanford… disliked not only his politics and his activism but also his increasingly loud and crude denunciations of Chinese “coolies.” She forced the president of the school, David Starr Jordan – himself an avid eugenicist – to fire Ross.
The faculty erupted in outrage… [but after much protesting, he was not allowed to return].
It is telling that while we constantly hear about America’s racist past and our need to redeem ourselves via racial quotas, slavery reparations, and other overtures toward “historically oppressed groups,” it is rare indeed that anyone mentions the founders of American liberalism… [W]hen liberals are the historical villains, the crime is laid at the feet of America itself… ***When conservatives sin, the sin is conservatism’s [fault] alone… never is liberalism itself to blame ***[but (c]onsider the infamous Tuskegee experiments, where poor Black men were allegedly infected with syphilis without their knowledge and then monitored for years. … [a study that, as a University of Chicago writer put it] “emerged out of a liberal progressive public health movement concerned about the health and wellbeing of the African-American population.
Americans should read this book… I’m not finished but it is very interesting, especially if you want to find out how much we’ve all been lied to… and how much necessary information has been denied us via the public school system, which, of course, does not teach us the truth about many things…