The South will rise again, and again and again. There is no end in
sight to the effort to redeem the Confederacy and promote white racism
and supremacy. Our late and now endlessly lamented 40th president,
Ronald Reagan, began his campaign for president in Philadelphia, Mississippi
by calling for “states rights.” He then gave a sheepish “Did I offend
anyone?” when he was called on the carpet for using this blatantly
racist language at the scene of the murders of civil rights workers
Schwerner, Chaney and Goodman.
Despite this very obvious appeal to the worst instincts in Americans,
the GOP faces a quandary when admiring white supremacists take
them at their word and run for office as Republicans. The latest
to cause embarrassment is Ron Wilson, national commander of the Sons
of Confederate Veterans, who is running for a seat in the South
Carolina State
Senate. The Southern Poverty Law Center has given
Wilson the dubious distinction of being named one of the top
40 white supremacists in need of constant monitoring.
If history is any indication, Wilson’s candidacy will have an all
too predictable response. Republican pundits will demand that the bum
be thrown out of their ranks. Black Republicans will whine that their
brethren’s hearts and minds will never be won over if the commander
of Sons of the Confederacy is a Republican elected official.
The GOP's southern ascendance coincided with both overt and covert
appeals to white racism. Unfortunately the unspoken bargain that says
racists
must stay in the closet is sometimes broken. Louisiana’s David Duke
was the first such troublemaker for Republicans. The former Klansman
must have been just a little confused by all the fuss. The Republicans
make racist appeals and then grow anxious when the less subtle want
to come along for the ride.
The poor Republicans cry and scream that they do not have a racist
bone in their collective body and that it is slander to think otherwise.
Poor Senator Trent Lott got the boot as Majority Leader when he went
over the top in praising the nearly moribund Strom Thurmond (who had
been literally propped up for yet another Republican love fest). We
can feel Lott’s pain. He hadn’t said anything he hadn’t said before
and neither Democrats, nor the press, nor other Republicans had ever
said a word against his racist diatribes. Lott may have gotten the
last laugh, however. He is now free to say that prison abuse is a fine
idea and remain in synch with his party.
Not only is Ron Wilson destined to become the GOP pariah, but he has
managed to alienate the southern cultural heritage crowd to such an
extent that some were forced to form a counter organization, Save the
Sons of Confederate Veterans. Let’s call them Confederate
light.
They want to remember southern heritage, but take great pains to disassociate
themselves from the white power group. Recalling that great-great-grandpa’s
regiment took a hill at Gettysburg is acceptable, but membership in
the KKK is not. The distinction is probably without a difference. We
are talking about people who exalt the effort to preserve slavery.
If some are racists with smiling faces the rest of us should not be
impressed but the amusement factor is too good to resist.
Are white supremacists getting an undeserved bad rap? The facts
are as follows. America wouldn’t exist if it weren’t for white racism.
Black people wouldn’t be here instead of in Africa if white racism
had not been sanctioned and institutionalized from the very beginnings
of this country’s history. America would not have the world’s highest
rate of incarceration if there were no white racism. But alas, if an
overly exuberant Confederate re-enactor has the nerve to give a salute
a la Hitler and yell “white power” then he is cast out, forced to live
with the Aryan Nation in Idaho alongside others who thought that the
nation was serious about putting one group on top and all others at
the bottom. It is little wonder they are so angry.
The ascendancy of David Duke, Ron Wilson and their ilk is inevitable,
particularly when the appeal to domination and supremacy get the proverbial
thumbs up from the powerful. Republicans may moan that these people
have nothing in common with them, but how is it that white supremacists
continue to emerge from Republican ranks? Do they get the wrong idea
about the GOP over and over again?
The answer is that they do not. Republicans are very extreme. What
else would one call a group that allies itself with a chemical weapons
terrorist? Yes, Saddam Hussein was once a friend of current Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and other administration officials. When
Rumsfeld was Reagan’s special envoy to the Middle East he met Hussein
in Baghdad in 1983. At that time a search for Weapons of Mass Destruction
would have been successful. Saddam Hussein not only had WMDs but he
was using them against Iranians and Kurds. These atrocities didn’t
stop Rumsfeld and the Republican party from shaking
hands with
the devil.
The Republicans even put in
writing that torture is not so bad
after all and maintain that if a pesky Congress asks for the information
they are just out of luck. Perhaps they will begin advocating torture
for Senators who ask too many questions.
The Republicans should welcome Ron Wilson with open arms. He is one
of their own and it would all be so much easier if they would just
admit the mutual affection. Extremism is as American as apple pie and
everyone knows that Republicans are the best Americans of all.