WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 2017 08:00 AM CDT
Donald Trump’s historical ignorance reveals a great truth: The party of Lincoln has become the party of Jefferson Davis
Beneath Trump's idiotic Andrew Jackson rant lies a real history of neo-Confederate sentiment and overt racism
SKIP TO COMMENTS
TOPICS: ABRAHAM LINCOLN, AMERICAN HISTORY, ANDREW JACKSON, CIVIL WAR, CONFEDERACY, DONALD TRUMP, DONALD TRUMP INTERVIEW, IGNORANCE, JEFFERSON DAVIS, REPUBLICAN PARTY, SLAVERY, POLITICS NEWS, MEDIA NEWS
Donald Trump is proudly ignorant. He does not read. Trump reminds the world of this almost every day. During an interview on Sunday with the Washington Examiner’s Salena Zito, Trump made a now-infamous observation:
I mean, had Andrew Jackson been a little later, you wouldn’t have had the Civil War. He was a very tough person, but he had a big heart. And he was really angry that — he saw what was happening with regard to the Civil War. He said, “There’s no reason for this.” People don’t realize, you know, the Civil War — if you think about it, why? People don’t ask that question, but why was there the Civil War? Why could that one not have been worked out?
As leading historians have pointed out, Donald Trump’s understanding of the causes that led to the American Civil War is pathetic. To wit, Trump’s errors are many.
Andrew Jackson died in 1845, 16 years before that national conflagration. He would not have been able to stop it.
As President Abraham Lincoln pointed out in 1858, slavery represented an existential crisis for American society and would demand a type of second Founding to correct it.
VIDEO
Andrew Jackson owned at least 150 black people as human property. He was quite literally the last American president to be a “slave driver.” Historians Ned and Constance Sublette detail this in their magisterial book “The American Slave Coast”:
Failing to sell the slaves himself, Jackson drove the unsold slaves back to Nashville, taking the unheard-of step of driving a coffle [chained train] of slaves from the destination back to the point of origin, through Choctaw and Chickasaw territory . . . Given the documentation of this episode that exists, it appears safe to say that Andrew Jackson is the only U.S. president that we know of who personally drove a slave coffle. But then, Jackson was also the first president to have been a merchant.
Given that slaves were the No. 1 capital good in the United States — collectively worth more than all the banks, factories, and railroads combined — Jackson would likely have done everything he could to protect his wealth.
If Jackson had magically been able to prevent the outbreak of civil war, it would likely have meant black people remaining in America’s slave labor camps where they were worked to death, raped, tortured and murdered by the white people who owned their flesh.
Jackson was also not a “swashbuckler,” as Trump described him. Jackson ordered horrific violence against black and First Nations people in Florida and also conducted a campaign of mass murder and “ethnic cleansing” in the American West against people of color in order to free up land for slavery.
Ultimately, Donald Trump is a reality TV show character and con artist turned president of the United States. As such, he is neither smart enough or possessed of the intellectual curiosity necessary to seriously evaluate counterfactuals in American history. It is extremely unlikely, bordering on the impossible, that there are copies of books by Eric Foner, David Blight, David McCullough, Steven Hahn, Edmund Morgan, Daniel Howe, John Hope Franklin, David Williams, Thomas Holt or even the speculative historical fiction writer Harry Turtledove on Trump’s bookshelf or near his bedside.
The more important concern is what do Trump’s statements about Andrew Jackson, the Civil War and American history more generally signal about his political worldview? Where do these beliefs come from? Who is influencing Donald Trump?
Donald Trump’s inner circle consists of white supremacists, neo-Nazi sympathizers, and white “ethno-nationalists” such as Steve Bannon, Sebastian Gorka, Stephen Miller, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Michael Anton. Collectively they embrace a racist ideology that considers “white civilization” to be under siege from nonwhites and Muslims. Trump’s cadre believes that white people in America (and Europe) are “oppressed” and “threatened.” To “free” white people means that they — especially white Christian heterosexual men — must be elevated above all others.
Andrew Jackson, who expanded voting to all white men in order to expand the ties of whiteness and reinforce the white Herrenvolk republic, is a perfect symbol for today’s right-wing white identity politics. Consequently, it is no coincidence that the conservative media (and unfortunately too many voices among the so-called liberal media as well) consistently refers to Donald Trump as a “populist” Andrew Jackson-like figure.
No comments:
Post a Comment