Four days ago, on Saturday, August 26, in the early afternoon, a heavily armed, 21-year-old white supremacist in a tactical vest and mask, who had written a number of racist manifestos and had swastikas painted on his rifle, murdered three Black Americans at a Dollar General store in Jacksonville, Florida. He had apparently intended to attack Edward Waters University, a historically Black institution, but students who saw him put on tactical gear warned a security guard, who chased him off and alerted a sheriff’s deputy.
As David Kurtz of Talking Points Memo put it two days later, “America is living through a reign of white supremacist terror,” and in a speech to the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under the Law on Monday, President Joe Biden reminded listeners that “the U.S. intelligence community has determined that domestic terrorism, rooted in white supremacy, is the greatest terrorist threat we face in the homeland—the greatest threat.”
Biden said he has made it a point to make “clear that America is the most multiracial, most dynamic nation in the history of the world.” He noted that he had nominated the first Black woman, Ketanji Brown Jackson, for the Supreme Court and has put more Black women on the federal circuit courts than every other U.S. president combined. Under him, Congress has protected interracial and same-sex marriages, and his administration has more women than men. He warned that “hate never dies. It just hides.”
But in his Editorial Board newsletter, John Stoehr pointed out that the increasing violence of white supremacists isn’t just about an “ideology of hate” rising, but it is “about a minority faction of the country going to war, literal war, with a majority faction.” He pointed to former governor of Alaska Sarah Palin’s recent prediction of civil war because “We’re not going to keep putting up with this…. We do need to rise up and take our country back.” Stoehr calls these white supremacists “Realamericans” who believe they should rule and, if they can’t do so lawfully, believe they are justified in taking the law into their own hands.
Indeed, today’s white supremacist violence has everything to do with the 1965 Voting Rights Act that protected the right to vote guaranteed by the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution, ratified in 1870 after white supremacists refused to recognize the right of Black Americans to vote and hold office. Minority voting means a government—and a country—that white men don’t dominate.
In the 1870s, once the federal government began to prosecute those white men attacking their Black neighbors for exercising their right to vote, white supremacists immediately began to say that they had no issues with Black voting on grounds of race. Their issue, they said, was that Black men were poor, and they were voting for lawmakers—some Black but primarily white—who supported the construction of roads, schools, hospitals, and so on. While these investments were crucial in the devastated South and would help white Americans as well as Black ones, white supremacists insisted that such government action redistributed wealth from white people to Black people and thus was a form of socialism.
It was a short step from this argument to insisting that Black men shouldn’t vote because they were “corrupting” the American system. By 1876, former Confederates had regained control of southern state legislatures, where they rewrote voting laws to exclude Black men and people of color on grounds other than that of race, which the Fifteenth Amendment had made unconstitutional.
By the end of the nineteenth century, white southerners greeted any attempt to protect Black voting as an attempt to destroy true America. Finally, in North Carolina in 1898, Democrats recognized they were losing ground to a biracial fusion ticket of Republicans and Populists who promised economic and political reforms. Before that year’s election, white Democratic leaders ran a viciously racist campaign to fire up their white base. “It is time for the oft quoted shotgun to play a part, and an active one,” one woman wrote, ”in the elections.”
Blocking Fusion voters from the polls and threatening them with guns gave the Democrats a victory, but in Wilmington the biracial city government had not been up for reelection and so remained in power. Vigilantes said they would never again be ruled by Black men and their unscrupulous white allies who intended to “dominate the intelligent and thrifty element in the community.” They destroyed Black businesses and property and killed as many as 300 Black Americans, then portrayed themselves as reluctant victims who had been obliged to remove inefficient and stupid officials before they reduced the city to further chaos.
In 2005, white supremacists in North Carolina echoed this version of the Wilmington coup, claiming it was a natural reaction to “oppressive radical social policies” and a “carnival of corruption and criminality” by their opponents, who used the votes of ignorant Black men to stay in power.
That echo is no accident. The 1965 Voting Rights Act ended the power of white supremacists in the Democratic Party once and for all, and they switched to the Republicans. Then-Democratic South Carolina senator Strom Thurmond had launched the longest filibuster in U.S. history to try to stop the 1957 Civil Rights Act; Republican candidate Richard Nixon deliberately courted him and those who thought like him in 1968.
Republicans adopted the same pattern Democrats had used in the late nineteenth century, claiming their concerns were about taxes and government corruption, pushing voter suppression legislation by insisting they cared about “voter fraud,” insisting their opponents were un-American socialists attempting to overthrow a fairly-elected government.
This political side of white supremacy is all around us. As Democracy Docket put it last month, “Republicans have a math problem, and they know it. Regardless of their candidate, it is nearly certain that more people will vote to reelect Joe Biden than his [Republican] opponent.” After all, Democrats have won the popular vote since 2008. Under these circumstances and unwilling to moderate their platform, “Republicans need to make it harder to vote and easier to cheat.”
Republican-dominated state legislatures are working to make it as hard as possible for minorities and younger Americans to vote, while also pushing the election denier movement to undermine the counting and certification of election results. At the same time, eight Republican-dominated states have left the nonpartisan Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC), a compact between the states that makes it easier to share voter information to avoid duplicate registration and voting, and three more are considering leaving.
In a special session of the Tennessee legislature this week, Republican lawmakers blocked the public from holding signs (a judge blocked the rule), kicked the public out of a hearing, and passed new rules that could prohibit Democrats from speaking. House speaker Cameron Sexton silenced young Black Democratic representative Justin Jones for a day and today suggested the Republicans might make the rule silencing minority members permanent.
In Wisconsin, where one of the nation’s most extreme gerrymanders gives Republicans dominance in the legislature, Republicans in 2018 stripped Democratic governor-elect Tony Evers of power before they left office, and now right-wing Chief Justice Annette Ziegler has told the liberal majority on the state supreme court that it is staging a “coup” by exercising their new power after voters elected Justice Janet Protasiewicz to the court by a large majority in April. Now the legislature is talking about keeping the majority from getting rid of the gerrymandered maps by impeaching Protasiewicz.
The courts are trying to hold the line against this movement. In Washington, D.C., today, U.S. District Court Judge Beryl Howell decided in favor of Black election workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, who claimed that Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani defamed them when he claimed they had committed voter fraud. Not only did Howell award the two women court costs and damages, she called out Giuliani and his associates for trying to keep their records hidden.
But as the courts are trying to hold the line, its supporters are targeting the courts themselves, with MAGA Republicans threatening to defund state and federal prosecutors they claim are targeting Republicans, and announcing their intention to gather the power of the Department of Justice into their own hands should they win office in 2024.
After pushing a social studies curriculum that erases Black agency and resistance to white supremacy, Florida governor Ron DeSantis on Monday suggested the Jacksonville shooting was an isolated incident.
The Black audience booed.
Heather Cox Richardson
Notes:
https://apnews.com/article/jacksonville-shooting-victims-racist-5e66c7e4baf504de08d73a3857b78490
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/morning-memo/america-is-in-the-grip-of-reign-of-white-supremacist-terror
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/shooting-multiple-fatalities-dollar-general-store-jacksonville/
https://apnews.com/article/jacksonville-shooting-florida-students-edward-waters-university-4a4050c4f607c204be6fe0973954f0a2
https://apnews.com/article/biden-marriage-united-states-government-and-politics-1cb2d3f4ae76528c0f7d43daceeba974
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/speeches-remarks/2023/08/29/remarks-by-president-biden-at-the-lawyers-committee-for-civil-rights-under-the-law-reception/
https://www.editorialboard.com/the-jacksonville-shooter-was-one-of-the-chosen-people/
https://guides.lib.unc.edu/wilmington-1898/central-figures-resources
https://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/00ddd/id/173131
https://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/connor/connor.html
League of the South, “1898 Wilmington: Debunking th...
@phranny saidin a nutshell… During discovery plaintiff sought records from Giuliani…he couldnt produce the records because the doj/fbi had possession of them. Now, the judge fines Giuliani for not producing the records he did not have possession of.
Four days ago, on Saturday, August 26, in the early afternoon, a heavily armed, 21-year-old white supremacist in a tactical vest and mask, who had written a number of racist manifestos and had swastikas painted on his rifle, murdered three Black Americans at a Dollar General store in Jacksonville, Florida. He had apparently intended to attack Edward Waters University, a histo ...[text shortened]... s://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/connor/connor.html
League of the South, “1898 Wilmington: Debunking th...
You are repeating propaganda.
@mott-the-hoople saidOnce again, you are reading and reporting fake news. See the Reuters' article below. No mention of a Catch22.
in a nutshell… During discovery plaintiff sought records from Giuliani…he couldnt produce the records because the doj/fbi had possession of them. Now, the judge fines Giuliani for not producing the records he did not have possession of.
You are repeating propaganda.
https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/giuliani-sanctioned-failing-produce-records-defamation-case-2023-06-23/
@phranny saidTldnr
Four days ago, on Saturday, August 26, in the early afternoon, a heavily armed, 21-year-old white supremacist in a tactical vest and mask, who had written a number of racist manifestos and had swastikas painted on his rifle, murdered three Black Americans at a Dollar General store in Jacksonville, Florida. He had apparently intended to attack Edward Waters University, a histo ...[text shortened]... s://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/connor/connor.html
League of the South, “1898 Wilmington: Debunking th...
@phranny saidI hate Jacksonville Nazis.
Four days ago, on Saturday, August 26, in the early afternoon, a heavily armed, 21-year-old white supremacist in a tactical vest and mask, who had written a number of racist manifestos and had swastikas painted on his rifle, murdered three Black Americans at a Dollar General store in Jacksonville, Florida. He had apparently intended to attack Edward Waters University, a histo ...[text shortened]... s://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/connor/connor.html
League of the South, “1898 Wilmington: Debunking th...
@earl-of-trumps saidIf you read the piece I posted at the start of this thread, you will realize that in the late 1950's the GOP began to embrace white supremacists and the Democratic Party carried the civil rights torch. Politics can quickly change the political landscape. Unfortunately, most who participate in this forum do not bother to read history. They just like sound bites and ignore facts.
@Phranny
"...white Democratic leaders ran a viciously racist campaign to fire up their white base.“
Thanks for that, Phranny
@phranny said"Unfortunately, most who participate in this forum do not bother to read history. They just like sound bites and ignore facts."
If you read the piece I posted at the start of this thread, you will realize that in the late 1950's the GOP began to embrace white supremacists and the Democratic Party carried the civil rights torch. Politics can quickly change the political landscape. Unfortunately, most who participate in this forum do not bother to read history. They just like sound bites and ignore facts.
This is painfully true. What you explained to Earl has been said to him many times by different posters. Yet he continually keeps acting dumb.
Actually that's a bit harsh. Maybe he's not acting.
@phranny saidOriginal source:
Four days ago, on Saturday, August 26, in the early afternoon, a heavily armed, 21-year-old white supremacist in a tactical vest and mask, who had written a number of racist manifestos and had swastikas painted on his rifle, murdered three Black Americans at a Dollar General store in Jacksonville, Florida. He had apparently intended to attack Edward Waters University, a histo ...[text shortened]... s://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/connor/connor.html
League of the South, “1898 Wilmington: Debunking th...
https://dewaynenet.wordpress.com/2023/08/31/letters-from-an-american-august-30-2023/
@phranny said“In the court filing, a lawyer for Giuliani argued that his client did not fail to preserve or destroy any electronic evidence “because all pertinent documents were seized by the government and were in their possession, custody, or control.”
Once again, you are reading and reporting fake news. See the Reuters' article below. No mention of a Catch22.
https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/giuliani-sanctioned-failing-produce-records-defamation-case-2023-06-23/
The federal government had executed search warrants at Giuliani’s home and office in a separate case in New York and had seized his electronic devices.
The records that Moss and Freeman said were not produced “have not been in the possession of Giuliani since their seizure in April 2021,” according to the court filing, and therefore it is “physically impossible” for him to have destroyed the evidence.”
https://apnews.com/article/afc64a565ee778c6914a1a69dc756064
@phranny saidPhranny, I apologize for being brief, as you put some effort into that post. Well done.
If you read the piece I posted at the start of this thread, you will realize that in the late 1950's the GOP began to embrace white supremacists and the Democratic Party carried the civil rights torch. Politics can quickly change the political landscape. Unfortunately, most who participate in this forum do not bother to read history. They just like sound bites and ignore facts.
Now, you say that the GOP "embraced" the white supremacists on the late 50's and the Dems were turning into the good guys, eh,,,?
Ok, let's do a flashback into the late 1950's and see.
Onto the scene in 1959 was newly elected Senator, D Robert Byrd, W.Virginia, and who remained as such until he died in 2010.
Racist...? He was not only a member of the Ku Klux Klan, Byrd was the Klan's Exalted Cyclops,.
D Governor of Alabama, George Wallace, served 4 terms, and three times ran for president as a democrat, and once
as an independent against D Hubert Humphrey and R Richard Nixon. Wallace split the ticket giving Nixon an easy win.
George Wallace, the Democrat, was famous for standing in front of the bus brining in the first group of
African American students to Selma High School. Wallace is also noted for his famous - Segregation now, segregation forever
Is this what you call the Democratic Party carrying the civil rights torch?
Next up: A restauranter in Georgia, Lester Maddox, was told that with new civil rights legislation, Maddox would
have to allow African Americans into his eatery, to which he protested. In fact, Maddox and his sons stood in front of
the restaurant, armed with baseball bats to ward off any potential African American customers, to which,
an iconic photo was taken of the trio and made Maddox and overnight sensation in Georgia. His friends urged Maddox
to run for public office, so, in 1967, Maddox became Democratic Governor of Georgia. Carrying the civil rights torch, you say?
One last one, for now: Ross Robert Barnett (January 22, 1898 – November 6, 1987) was the 53rd governor of Mississippi
from 1960 to 1964. He was a Southern Democrat who supported racial segregation and was governor during
the highly charged murders of three civil rights workers, and event called "Mississippi Burning".
The murders of Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner, also known as the Freedom Summer murders, the Mississippi civil rights workers' murders, or the Mississippi Burning murders, refers to events in which three activists were abducted and murdered in the city of Philadelphia, Mississippi, in June 1964.
---------------------------------------
Phranny, I have shown you specific people that backs my claim about the Democrats in that era (50's, 60's).
I know you referred to the "GOP" but can you be more specific? I think you have been reading from a bad source.
Can you name these individual Republicans instead of just obliquely holding up the GOP?
EDIT to add: During the 1960's there were many African Americans hung in southern states, however, I cannot prove
that the culprits were democrats. But of course, I think they were. The KKK was a democrat creation.
@earl-of-trumps saidYou didn't really read what she said, did you?
Phranny, I apologize for being brief, as you put some effort into that post. Well done.
Now, you say that the GOP "embraced" the white supremacists on the late 50's and the Dems were turning into the good guys, eh,,,?
Ok, let's do a flashback into the late 1950's and see.
Onto the scene in 1959 was newly elected Senator, D Robert Byrd, W.Virginia, and who remain ...[text shortened]... that the culprits were democrats. But of course, I think they were. The KKK was a democrat creation.
The issue is that more people die from drunk driving in a single week than are killed by domestic terrorism in a year.
It's not a major issue... Obviously, y es, we bemoan the loss of these people and think that these attacks are horrible, but these are isolated incidents, and there's really nothing we can do about them.
We live in a country where 10,000+ people are killed annually by drunk drivers, with many of them even being juveniles that die, but nobody is willing to do anything to curb the legality around the consumption of alcohol to make it harder to access.
It doesn't make sense to crackdown on free speech or self-defense if we are unwillign to even give up somethign so trifling as booze.
@philokalia saidActually quite a good point.
The issue is that more people die from drunk driving in a single week than are killed by domestic terrorism in a year.
It's not a major issue... Obviously, y es, we bemoan the loss of these people and think that these attacks are horrible, but these are isolated incidents, and there's really nothing we can do about them.
We live in a country where 10,000+ peo ...[text shortened]... n on free speech or self-defense if we are unwillign to even give up somethign so trifling as booze.
How many drugs overdosis’ a year?
70.000+ a year in the US.
Domestic abuse victims?
10.000.000+ a year in the US.
There are greater problems to tackle than domestic terrorism.
That being said, just listen to the rhetoric on this forum alone. The incels, the racists, the polarization. That’s all part of a major problem of which the terrorist element is only a very visible extreme.
@earl-of-trumps saidSo you don’t know about the Dixie democrats who are so steeped in the inglorious racist history of the south that they could not bring themselves to join the Republican Party even though their attitudes and voting patterns put them on the right wing of that very party when race relations and emancipation issues were being legislated.
Phranny, I apologize for being brief, as you put some effort into that post. Well done.
Now, you say that the GOP "embraced" the white supremacists on the late 50's and the Dems were turning into the good guys, eh,,,?
Ok, let's do a flashback into the late 1950's and see.
Onto the scene in 1959 was newly elected Senator, D Robert Byrd, W.Virginia, and who remain ...[text shortened]... that the culprits were democrats. But of course, I think they were. The KKK was a democrat creation.
Now you decide if your ignorant or disingenuous