Thursday, November 10, 2016

Racism—Aided by Democrats’ Numerous Betrayals—Wins Again: The Duopoly at Work


THE DUOPOLY WATCH | Steven Jonas, MD, MPH

As I have previously noted in this space, racism, set into the Doctrine of White Supremacy, has been part of the basic fabric of life in that land which eventually became the United States of America since some of the first European settlers imported the first slaves from Africa to work their farms at the beginning of the 17th century. What I used to call the First Civil War, as is well known erupted in part over the issue of slavery in the middle of the 19th century.  The central element of the Southern ideology, which fueled that war and got many non-slave holding poor whites to fight and die to uphold the property rights of the slave-owners, is that same Doctrine of White Supremacy.

I have previously discussed how the South actually won the First Civil War because all of its principal aims were achieved, except for the maintenance, in name and property relationships, of the institution of slavery.  In essence, the institution was maintained in the South for 100 years or so through the political structure known as “Jim Crow.”  Interestingly enough, the first objective of the Ku Klux Klan and similar terror organizations established in the South during Reconstruction was to deny the recently freed slaves the vote.  (Sound familiar?)  More recently I have come to the conclusion that actually the Civil War never ended in this country.  It has simply continued through means other than the use of force.

Now, as it is well-known, since the end of the First Civil War there has always been a U.S. political party running in part on racism.  Everyone reading this column knows that until the mid-1960s and the passage of the Voting and Civil Rights Acts it was the Southern wing of the Democratic Party, and that since Nixon developed the “Southern Strategy” it has been the Republicans.  It happens that when the time came, racism and the Doctrine of White Supremacy easily found homes in the Republican Party.  One of its founding components in the 1850s was the “American Party” of the time, otherwise known as the “Know-Nothings.”  It was based on xenophobia, in that instance against Irish immigration.  In the DNA of the Republican Party was subsequently the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1885, the Immigration Act of 1924 which virtually excluded Southern and Eastern Europeans, and Jews in general, and the campaign to lock up Japanese-American citizens in the Western U.S. and Hawaii during World War II (implemented by Franklin Roosevelt but started by California Republicans led by the pre-Supreme Court Earl Warren).

“I have previously discussed how the South actually won the First Civil War because all of its principal aims were achieved, except for the maintenance, in name and property relationships, of the institution of slavery…”

Racism has been part of modern Republican Party doctrine since Barry Goldwater ran in part on his opposition to the Civil Rights Act.  That history is well-known.  But for the most part, they have used “dog-whistles,” employing racism in terms for which they could invoke plausible deniability: “oh that’s not what we meant.”  What many in the Repub. Party didn’t like about Trump was not that he is a racist, but that — being very open about it — he ripped the hood off the Party’s overall inherent racism.  (In the column just cited, I do have to immodestly say that last March I stated that I thought that Trump could win, precisely because he openly runs on racism.  Furthermore, in a  column just before that one, I discussed the “Republican Genius” of being able to enact policies that are unpopular with many voters — like encouraging the export of capital — and then blaming the very predictable outcomes on the Democrats.  Trump did that to a fare-thee-well during the campaign.)

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Source: The Greanville Post

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