Sunday, Jun 21, 2015 04:59 AM CST
GOP’s fear of a black America: The long,
racist history which explains Dylann Roof and stains the so-called
“party of Lincoln”
Dylann Roof's assault was the latest
salvo in the racial struggle we have fought since 1865: Who owns
America?
Heather Cox Richardson
Dylann Roof’s murder of nine people worshipping at Charleston’s Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church was
not about mental illness; it was
not about religious freedom; it was
not an “accident;” it does
not defy explanation. His
attack on nine African Americans in a church was a political attack
designed to keep the government in the hands of white men. His bullets
were a salvo in the fundamental struggle that we have fought bitterly
since 1865: Who owns America?
When
the 21-year-old white man killed six women and three men, including
pastor and South Carolina state senator Clementa Pinckney, he reportedly
said: “I have to do it. You rape our women and you’re taking over our
country. And you have to go.” Roof’s words seem bizarre—not just because
black Americans make up less than 15 percent of the population but also
because he murdered six women—but they made more sense when they first
entered the American vernacular. His statement hails straight from the
Reconstruction Era after the Civil War, when white Southern men had to
come to grips with the fact that they would no longer control the
country.
Men like Roof are staring at that same reality today.
Before
the Civil War, white Southern Democrats controlled American politics.
They used the government to prop up the system of racial slavery that
brought money, social status, and political power to wealthy white men.
But when Southern leaders tried to spread their system across the
nation, northern Republicans, who were largely men-on-the-make,
organized to stand against them. Republicans insisted that in America,
every man should be able to rise, and should have a say in the
government to make sure wealthy men could not manipulate the laws to
their own advantage. Once in power, Republicans used the government to
give all poor men land, education, and, in 1865, freedom.
In the
wake of the Civil War, white Southern Democrats initially refused to
face the reality that they would have to share any sort of economic,
political, or social power with their former slaves. President Andrew
Johnson, himself a Democrat, took over from the slain President Lincoln
during Congress’s long summer recess. He pardoned all but about 1,500
white Southerners, and demanded little from white legislatures in the
South seeking readmission to the Union except that they ratify the
Thirteenth Amendment abolishing slavery. State legislators ratified the
amendment, but then promptly set about recreating antebellum conditions
of racial servitude with what were known as “Black Codes.” In most
states, black people could not own guns, had to sign year-long work
contracts, and could be arrested on charges of “vagrancy,” fined, and
then bound to anyone who paid their fine. Nowhere could a black person
testify in court against a white person, which meant that no black
southerner could claim the protection of the law against theft, rape, or
murder.
With the return of their states to the Union and
with the Black Codes in place, Southern Democrats were poised to retake
control of the national government and return it to its prewar defense
of property.
But when Congress reconvened in December 1865,
Northern congressmen refused to return the same African Americans who
had fought for the Union to quasi-slavery under the very men who had
spent four years trying to destroy the nation. As a condition for
readmission to the Union, Congress put forward the Fourteenth Amendment
to give black men legal rights. Southern whites promptly retorted that
they would rather remain under military rule than submit to black
equality. So northern congressmen passed the Military Reconstruction Act
of 1867, which called for new Southern state constitutional conventions
to rewrite state constitutions providing for black civic rights.
Crucially, the Military Reconstruction Act permitted African American
men to vote.
As Republicans began to organize black voters, white
Southern Democrats recoiled at the idea of sharing political rights with
black men. Democrats railed that lazy black people would destroy the
country. They would vote for handouts so they could stop working.
White
Southern Democrats tried to keep African Americans from political power
by simply refusing to enroll voters. So Congress put the army in charge
of voter registration. When both white and black Republicans registered
to vote and elected moderate constitutional conventions, white
Democrats organized the Ku Klux Klan as a political force to stop the
change in government. Before the 1868 elections, members of the Ku Klux
Klan murdered at least a thousand African Americans and their white
allies. Things were particularly bad in South Carolina, where Klan
members killed African American clergyman and state legislator B. F.
Randolph at a train depot in broad daylight.
When the votes of
black southerners helped to put Republican Ulysses S. Grant in the White
House, white southern Democrats howled that black voters were taking
over the country. Even though black men were a small minority of the
nation’s voting population, they were in control of the government
because they could swing an election.
Klan terrorism against black
voters increased until Republicans in Congress recognized that it was
perverting democracy. In 1871, they passed a law making political
intimidation a federal offense, a distinction that enabled Grant to shut
down the Ku Klux Klan by imposing martial law in nine South Carolina
counties and by having federal courts, rather than local courts, try the
1000 men federal officers rounded up (only 36 were convicted). For the
next twenty years, white southerners controlled black political voices
by finding ways either to work with black voters or to intimidate them
into silence. It was imperative to purge black voters from the system,
they insisted, for black Americans only wanted social welfare
legislation that would enable them to live without working. Those
programs would bleed tax dollars from hardworking white men. Black
voters were thus “corrupting” the American government and destroying
America itself.
In 1889, a new Republican
administration threatened to revive the federal defense of black voting.
A new generation of white Democrats combined with increasing numbers of
middle-class women working outside the home to turn this political fear
into the specter of the rape of white women by black men. Opponents of
black political rights explained that in exchange for their votes,
political leaders would give government jobs to black men. This would
give them the power of patronage, for in the nineteenth century, local
positions depended on the goodwill of local politicians. While men
gained political favor by promising their votes, women had no votes to
trade for a job. So when black men became, for example, school
principals, they could force innocent white girls to have sex with them
in exchange for jobs as teachers. This social construction of a
political fear very quickly turned to the idea that black political
power meant widespread rape.
When American judges proved reluctant
to convict all black prisoners accused of rape, white mobs dismissed
the government as either corrupt or ineffectual and took over the job
themselves. By the early twentieth century, white citizens had made the
lynching of black men a civic duty. While the Ku Klux Klan had operated
in secret, the vigilantes of the early twentieth century took
photographs of themselves with victims. For these citizen-terrorists,
only by purging the government of black voices could the nation be made
safe.
When Roof said: “I have to do it. You rape our women and
you’re taking over our country. And you have to go,” and then made
himself judge and jury, he was echoing both a fear and a crazed solution
that grew out of the Civil War, when white Southern men had to face the
reality that they were going to have to share control the government.
That fact inspired terror—and terrorism—among white men in the late
nineteenth century. It did so in the 1960s, when, once again, white
Americans tried to silence black political voices with terrorism.
Today,
Fox News, talk radio hosts, and Movement Conservative politicians have
stoked in their followers that same fear of losing control of the
government with
constant references
to freeloading black voters and the “47 percent… who believe the
government has a responsibility to care for them, who believe that they
are entitled to health care, to food, to housing, to you-name-it.” As in
the past, the fear of sharing political power with African American
voters who, according to right-wing media, are lazy criminals, has led
to horrific violence. After a hundred and fifty years, this pattern
should come as no surprise.
1 comment:
Excellent explanation.
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