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FOCUS | Benghazi: The Shiny Object Distracting Us from Elizabeth Warren Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=7118"><span class="small">Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Thursday, 09 May 2013 11:41

Gibson writes: "If you're on Twitter, chances are your trending topics box has #Benghazi at or near the top. That means Fox News and the right-wing corporate media are succeeding in getting both the left and the right to squabble over an issue that was dragged through the mud months ago in a cheap attempt to politicize a tragedy."

Senator Elizabeth Warren is making noise, but Benghazi is stealing the headlines. (photo: Andrew Harrer/Getty Images)
Senator Elizabeth Warren is making noise, but Benghazi is stealing the headlines. (photo: Andrew Harrer/Getty Images)



Benghazi: The Shiny Object Distracting Us from Elizabeth Warren

By Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News

09 May 13

 

f you haven’t yet seen "Wag the Dog," go watch it right now. I’ll wait. And don’t worry, this article isn’t actually about Benghazi, but something that really matters.

The movie is about how the art of manipulation is used by the media to distract people from events of actual importance. It was cited regularly when the GOP had their Clinton witch hunt. The GOP’s latest witch hunt over Benghazi is simply more wagging of the dog. Fox News is trying really, really hard to make it into Obama’s Watergate to keep us all distracted from some incredibly populist moves in the Senate.

Elizabeth Warren’s first official bill of the 113th Congress, the Bank on Student Loan Fairness Act, is her first big salvo against the Wall Street and Federal Reserve banking cartel that controls our government. She’s made headlines during banking committee hearings, where she’s exposed the fact that the government's Wall Street regulators are simply tools used by Wall Street to pilfer more money from the people. She turned heads when calling for a $22 an hour minimum wage in another hearing. She even got Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to agree that "Too-Big-to-Fail" banks should be broken up. Now she’s introducing a bill that says if the banks that wrecked our economy and multinational corporations can borrow billions at a 0.75% interest rate, then students should be able to get those same rates when pursuing a higher education.

Apple exploited this obviously rigged system earlier this month when it borrowed $17 billion from the Federal Reserve at the preferential interest rate, then used it to enrich their own executives and dodge $9 billion in taxes. Banks borrow regularly at that same rate from the Fed to make risky bets on Wall Street. But this Summer, students with federal Stafford loans will see their interest rates double from 3.4% to 6.8%. The banks aren’t creating anything real, just imaginary financial instruments. But ensuring that more people have access to a college education will only improve society in the long run. So why are we bleeding poor students dry while giving big banks preferential treatment?

If you’re on Twitter, chances are your trending topics box has #Benghazi at or near the top. That means Fox News and the right-wing corporate media are succeeding in getting both the left and the right to squabble over an issue that was dragged through the mud months ago in a cheap attempt to politicize a tragedy. There were 60 deaths at U.S. embassies and consulates during the Bush administration, and there were zero outraged Republicans having hearings about it. The House GOP is obviously playing along with the corporate-owned spin machine’s game of smoke and mirrors. It’s largely a frantic attempt by the corporations running our government to steer attention away from the populist resistance to corporate rule that’s slowly and steadily sweeping all over the country.

Our goal should be to make #BankOnStudents the new top trend on Twitter, and spread word about Warren’s bold new bill far and wide. Call your senators and demand they support it if they want your vote. Let’s help Elizabeth Warren stick it to the banks and the corporate tyrants and refuse to get distracted by the shiny objects they flash at us.



Carl Gibson, 25, is co-founder of US Uncut, a nationwide creative direct-action movement that mobilized tens of thousands of activists against corporate tax avoidance and budget cuts in the months leading up to the Occupy Wall Street movement. Carl and other US Uncut activists are featured in the documentary "We're Not Broke," which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. He currently lives in Madison, Wisconsin. You can contact him at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , and follow him on twitter at @uncutCG.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Corporate Cowards Divert Shareholder Funds Into 'Dark Money' Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=6907"><span class="small">Jim Hightower, Creators Syndicate</span></a>   
Wednesday, 08 May 2013 12:18

Hightower writes: "The millions of dollars the executives are using to play politics don't belong to them - it is shareholder money. And by no means do shareholders march in lockstep on which political candidates to support or oppose."

Texas' progressive political curmudgeon, Jim Hightower. (photo: JimHightower.com)
Texas' progressive political curmudgeon, Jim Hightower. (photo: JimHightower.com)



Corporate Cowards Divert Shareholder Funds Into 'Dark Money'

By Jim Hightower, Creators Syndicate

08 May 13

 

f corporations are people, as the Supreme Court pretends, they certainly are loudmouths, constantly telling us how great they are and spreading their names everywhere.

Amazingly, though, these corporate creatures have suddenly turned demure, insisting that they don't want to draw any attention to themselves. That's because, in this case, corporations are not selling, they're buying - specifically, trying to buy public office for their pet political candidates by funneling millions of corporate dollars through such front groups as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. In turn, the fronts use the money to air nasty attack ads that smear the opponents of the pro-corporate candidates.

Why do corporations need a middleman? Because the ads are so partisan and vicious that they would appall and anger millions of customers, employees and shareholders of the corporation. So, rather than besmirch their own names, the corporate powers have meekly retreated behind the skirt of Republican political outfits like the Chamber.

But don't front groups have to report (at least to election authorities) who's really behind their ads, so voters can make informed decisions? No. Thanks to the Supreme Court's infamous Citizen United edict in 2010, such groups can now pour unlimited sums of corporate cash into elections without ever disclosing the names of their funders. This "dark money" channel has essentially established secret political campaigning in America.

That's why shareholders and other democracy advocates are asking the Securities and Exchange Commission to rule that the corporate giants it regulates must reveal to shareholders all political donations their executives make with corporate funds. After all, the millions of dollars the executives are using to play politics don't belong to them - it is shareholder money. And by no means do shareholders march in lockstep on which political candidates to support or oppose.

Hide and seek can be a fun game for kids, but it's infuriating when CEOs play it in our elections. Last year, corporate interests sought to elect their candidates by hiding much of their politicking not only from company owners but also from voters.

In all, $352 million in "dark money" poured into our 2012 elections, the bulk of it from corporations that covertly pumped it into secretive trade associations and such scams as "social welfare charities," run by the likes of Karl Rove and the Koch brothers.

Since underhanded, anonymous electioneering puts a fatal curse on democracy, the SEC should at least compel corporate managers to tell their owners - i.e., the shareholders - how and on whom their money is being gambled in political races. It's a simple reform, but - oh, lordy - what a fury it has caused among the political players.

A rare joint letter from the U.S. Chamber, Business Roundtable and National Association of Manufacturers has been sent to the CEOs of the 200 largest corporations in our country, rallying them to the barricades in a frenetic lobbying effort to stop this outbreak of honest, democratic disclosure.

House Republicans are even going to the extreme of trying to make it illegal for the SEC to let shareholders (and the voting public) know which campaigns are being backed by cash from which corporations. Hyperventilating, these powerful scaredy cats claim to be intimidated by the very suggestion that they tell the people what they're doing in public elections.

Their panic over having a little sunlight shine into their deepest bunker reveals just how destructive they intend dark money to be for our democracy. Ironically, the Supreme Court's chief assumption in allowing unlimited corporate cash into the democratic process was that shareholders would be informed and involved, and provide public accountability for their companies' political spending.

Even Justice Antonin Scalia, long a cheerleader for corporate politicking, is no fan of hiding it from the electorate: "Requiring people to stand up in public for their political acts fosters civic courage," he has written, adding that a campaign "hidden from public scrutiny" is anathema to self-governance. He also deems it cowardly: "This does not resemble the Home of the Brave," he pointedly noted.

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The Dark Side of Home Schooling: Creating Soldiers for the Culture War Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=16235"><span class="small">Katherine Stewart, Guardian UK</span></a>   
Wednesday, 08 May 2013 12:16

Stewart writes: "Several decades ago, political activists on the religious right began to put together an 'ideology machine'. Home schooling was a big part of the plan. The idea was to breed and 'train up' an army of culture warriors."

The home schooling student population doubled in between 1999 and 2007, to 1.5 million students. (photo: unknown)
The home schooling student population doubled in between 1999 and 2007, to 1.5 million students. (photo: unknown)



The Dark Side of Home Schooling: Creating Soldiers for the Culture War

By Katherine Stewart, Guardian UK

08 May 13

 

everal decades ago, political activists on the religious right began to put together an "ideology machine". Home schooling was a big part of the plan. The idea was to breed and "train up" an army of culture warriors. We now are faced with the consequences of their actions, some of which are quite disturbing.

According to the Department of Education, the home schooling student population doubled in between 1999 and 2007, to 1.5 million students, and there is reason to think the growth has continued. Though families opt to home school for many different reasons, a large part of the growth has come from Christian fundamentalist sects. Children in that first wave are now old enough to talk about their experiences. In many cases, what they have to say is quite alarming.

When he was growing up in California, Ryan Lee Stollar was a stellar home schooling student. His oratory skills at got him invited to home schooling conferences around the country, where he debated public policy and spread the word about the "virtues" of an authentically Christian home school education.

Now 28, looking back on his childhood, it all seems like a delusion. As Stollar explains:

"The Christian home school subculture isn't a children-first movement. It is, for all intents and purposes, an ideology-first movement. There is a massive, well-oiled machine of ideology that is churning out soldiers for the culture war. Home schooling is both the breeding ground – literally, when you consider the Quiverfull concept – and the training ground for this machinery. I say this as someone who was raised in that world."

Too frequently, Stollar says, the consequences of putting ideology over children include anxiety, depression, distrust of authority, and issues around sexuality. This is evident from the testimonials that appear on Home schoolers Anonymous, the website that Stollar established, along with several partners.

Stollar's own home schooling experience started off well. But over time, as his family became immersed in the world of Christian home schooling, his "education" became less straightforward and more ideological. "I particularly remember my science curriculum," he says. "We used It Couldn't Just Happen, which wasn't really a science textbook. It was really just an apologetics textbook which taught students cliché refutations of evolutionism."

Many parents start off home schooling with the intention of inculcating their children in a mainstream form of Christianity. However, as many HA bloggers report, it is easy to get sucked into the vortex of fundamentalist home schooling because extremists have cornered the market – running the conventions, publishing the curricula, setting up the blogs.

As HA blogger Julie Ann Smith, a Washington state mother of seven, says:

"If you are the average Christian home schooler with no agenda, and you have the choice between attending a secular home schooling convention and a Christian one, chances are you'll choose the Christian convention. But they only allow certain speakers who follow their agenda. So you have no clue. What you don't realize is that they are being run by Christian Reconstructionists."

Smith is referring to the Calvinist movement, founded by Rousas John Rushdoony, that advocates a Christian takeover of the political system in order to "purify" the nation and cleanse it of the sin of secularism. Rushdoony taught that public schools – "statist education," in his words – promote chaos, primitivism, and "a vast disintegration into the void". He advocated home schooling as a way to rear a generation that could carry out the mission of retaking the nation for Christ.

Much of fundamentalist home schooling is driven by deeply sexist and patriarchal ideology. The Quiverfull movement teaches that women need to submit to their husbands and have as many babies as they possibly can. The effects of these ideas on children are devastating, as a glance at HA's blogs show.

"The story of being home schooled was a story of being told to sit down and shut up. 'An ideal woman is quiet and submissive,' I was told time and time again," writes Phoebe. "The silence and submission I was pushed into was ultimately a place of loneliness, bitterness and almost crippling insecurity."

The fundamentalist home schooling world also advocates an extraordinarily authoritarian view of the parental role. Corporal punishment is frequently encouraged. The effects are, again, often quite devastating. "People who experienced authoritarian parents tend to turn into adults with poor boundaries," writes one pseudonymous HA blogger. "It's an extremely unsatisfying and unsustainable way to live."

In America, we often take for granted that parents have an absolute right to decide how their children will be educated, but this leads us to overlook the fact that children have rights, too, and that we as a modern society are obligated to make sure that they get an education. Families should be allowed to pursue sensible homeschooling options, but current arrangements have allowed some families to replace education with fundamentalist indoctrination.

As the appearance of HA reminds us, the damage done by this kind of false education falls not just on our society as a whole, but on the children who are pumped through the ideology machine. They are the traumatized veterans of our culture wars. We should listen to their stories, and support them as they find their way forward.

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FOCUS | Whitewash Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=6853"><span class="small">Frank Rich, New York Magazine</span></a>   
Wednesday, 08 May 2013 10:50

Rich writes: "This is all happening as the GOP makes a big postelection show of trying to jettison its image as an all-white party hostile to almost every minority group in the nation."

Strom Thurmond, whose primacy in the GOP’s racial realignment is the most incriminating truth the right keeps trying to cover up. (photo: Mark Peterson/Redux)
Strom Thurmond, whose primacy in the GOP’s racial realignment is the most incriminating truth the right keeps trying to cover up. (photo: Mark Peterson/Redux)



Whitewash

By Frank Rich, New York Magazine

08 May 13

 

hen you start talking about race and the Republican Party, Republicans tend to say the following things. First, they tell you that most Republicans are not bigots (true) and that Democrats can be bigots, too (also true). Then you're reminded that during the decades when southern segregationists made their home in the Democratic Party, Republicans were instrumental in founding the NAACP, in 1909; a Republican chief justice (Earl Warren) presided over Brown v. Board of Education, in 1954; a Republican president (Eisenhower) called in troops to desegregate Little Rock's schools, in 1957; and another Republican president (Nixon) created the first federal affirmative-action program with teeth. (All true.)

Then you ask, what about today? You're told that Newt Gingrich calling Barack Obama "the food-stamp president" and Sarah Palin's invocation of "shuck and jive " were just ephemeral campaign-season gaffes from sideshow clowns soon to get the hook. Rush Limbaugh's perennial race-baiting? Yesterday's news. Mitt Romney's alliance with the off-the-rails birther Donald Trump? Just clueless Mitt being Mitt. Those sightings of racist placards at tea-party rallies? Cherry-picked, planted, or invented by the liberal media. And besides, the Democrats have their own history of race-baiting ranters - queue up the Reverend Jeremiah Wright's greatest hits on YouTube.

The only fact that can't be easily batted away by defensive Republicans is that actual black Americans almost never vote for Republicans in a national election. What's up with that? Why have they been so ungrateful for the good works of Warren and Ike, year after year? Today the answer to that question matters more than ever. In the Obama era, the spike in GOP efforts to pursue policies punitive to minorities is unmistakable. State and local governments in every region have been in a race to enact restrictive new voting laws. Congressional Republicans are adamant in preserving the sequestration cuts for Head Start, Job Corps, and unemployment insurance, even as they carve out a self-serving exception for air-traffic control. Next month, a conservative-dominated Supreme Court is poised to eviscerate a crown jewel of civil-rights law, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, at a time when, if anything, it should be expanded to address the growing obstacles to voting in ever more jurisdictions: long lines, the mischievous purging of voting rolls, and new registration requirements redolent of the Jim Crow South.

Paradoxically, this is all happening as the GOP makes a big postelection show of trying to jettison its image as an all-white party hostile to almost every minority group in the nation. The GOP chairman, Reince Priebus, announced a $10 million outreach plan to minorities. Congressional leaders, gobsmacked by the discovery that Hispanics were more inclined to vote Democratic than to "self-deport," have manacled themselves to Marco Rubio and started slouching toward immigration reform. A smattering of Republican senators and Fox News personalities has even joined the Democratic stampede to "evolve" on same-sex marriage. And African-Americans? Well, that's now, as always, where it gets truly embarrassing.

Romney may have received a paltry 27 percent of the Latino vote, but that was an incipient landslide next to his 6 percent of the black vote. Six percent is the exact percentage of blacks who voted for the GOP in the 1964 presidential election, when its standard-bearer, Barry Goldwater, kick-started the metamorphosis of the Party of Lincoln into the Party of Strom Thurmond by defying most of his own Republican senatorial colleagues to oppose that year's landmark Civil Rights Act. You'd think the persistence of the GOP's near-total estrangement from black America almost a half-century later would merit the most drastic corrective action in its new outreach effort. But you would be wrong. The party still believes it can spin its racial history and, when required, literally and figuratively whitewash it.

For the moment, the GOP is recycling its time-honored, if increasingly threadbare, publicity stunts to address the problem. As part of a postelection "listening" tour, damned if Priebus didn't listen to twenty - count 'em, twenty - bona fide African-Americans at a megachurch in East Brooklyn in March. He has hired not one but two blacks to staff the Republican National Committee's minority-outreach program: the 24-year-old son of the Fox News commentator Juan Williams and a suburban-Washington real-estate agent whose brief career as a legislative assistant on the Hill ended in 2002. The party has also recruited a new telegenic black conservative with no record of public service, the Johns Hopkins neurosurgeon Benjamin Carson, to take on the Alan Keyes–Herman Cain role of delivering incendiary sound bites (inevitably describing the Democratic Party as a "plantation") while pretending to be a plausible presidential candidate.

Such ruses won't fool anyone now any more than in the past. It's not a stretch to imagine that the party chairman knows this and that neither he nor anyone around him cares. As McKay Coppins of BuzzFeed discovered three weeks after Priebus parachuted into Brooklyn to genuflect before authentic urban blacks, there's still "not a single racial minority among the twenty most senior officials who run the Republican National Committee, National Republican Congressional Committee, and National Republican Senatorial Committee - the three wings of the GOP apparatus charged with promoting candidates and winning elections." This newfangled integration fad doesn't come easy to the right. At the Conservative Political Action Conference's annual conclave in Washington in March, a black "Frederick Douglass Republican" had to fend off a white attendee defending slavery at the Tea Party Patriots' panel "Trump the Race Card: Are You Sick and Tired of Being Called a Racist and You Know You're Not One?" (Trump may not have been the mot juste to deploy in this particular title.)

Perhaps some GOP leaders can still rationalize the party's racial status quo, not to mention its all-white hierarchy, because scant black support has not been a bar to winning past presidential elections. Mathematically, the GOP doesn't need African-American voters. Blacks, who made up 12 percent of the population at the start of this decade (versus 17 percent for Latinos), are likely to remain a fairly static demographic in the future - rising to only 13 percent of the population in 2050, by which time Latinos could be at 29 percent, according to Pew projections. Their votes will rarely be decisive in the Electoral College.

But in a more and more diverse America, the real political risk in the GOP's continued apartheid is greater than ever. The party's alienation from black Americans threatens to turn off larger and larger blocs of nonblack voters - white, Latino, young - who don't want to be associated with a brand still carrying a whiff of twentieth-century, and even nineteenth-century, racial animus. From the birth of the GOP's "southern strategy" in the Nixon years until now, that risk has defined the party's most vexing political calculus: How does it convince mainstream, non-racist America that it is still the color-blind, racially ecumenical party it purports to be, even as it has remarkable luck in attracting whatever die-hard bigots are still out there and perennially fails to win over any but a fringe of black voters? The ascent of America's first black president has only compounded that challenge by inspiring the GOP's racial provocateurs to be more uninhibited, and hence more visible, than they have been since Anita Hill testified in Clarence Thomas's confirmation hearings in 1991, or perhaps since the George H.W. Bush political strategist Lee Atwater exploited a black felon, Willie Horton, to slime Michael Dukakis in 1988.

There have been various public-relations strategies throughout the years for finessing this conundrum, many of them as silly as Priebus's listening tour. Few who were present will ever forget the legions of break-dancers and gospel singers tossed onstage at the 2000 GOP convention in Philadelphia to distract from the lily-white delegate pool in the hall. But the most durable and effective tactic has been the right's transparent effort to sanitize its own modern history on race to hide it from voters who might find it distasteful. As last year's election results proved yet again, black Americans, who lived through this history firsthand and were sometimes victimized by it, aren't fooled for a second. They remember what happened. But as more time goes by and the right's concerted mythmaking about its history takes root in the culture, many other Americans don't question it. Indeed, a new generation of conservatives seems to be downright cocky about its ability to falsify the Republican past and peddle the fictions to an inattentive or ill-informed public.

This was most recently illustrated by the new Great White Hope of the GOP base, Rand Paul, the winner of CPAC's presidential straw poll this year and a man who is not shy about his White House ambitions. In pursuit of higher office, the image-conscious Paul took his own stab at outreach last month, giving a speech at Howard University. Facing a mostly young and African-American audience, he was determined to airbrush history - even very recent history of his own. He had "never wavered" in his "support for civil rights or the Civil Rights Act," he claimed, when in fact he had done exactly that in a Louisville Courier-Journal interview during his 2010 Senate campaign. Back then he'd argued that while it was "abhorrent" of Woolworth's to refuse to serve Martin Luther King Jr. at its lunch counter, a private business still should retain the freedom to do what it wants. He espoused similar views in a contemporaneous prime-time appearance with Rachel Maddow, who replayed her interview with Paul the night of his Howard address.

But far more representative of the larger Republican effort to neutralize its racial history in the civil-rights era was another passage in Paul's speech. "How did the Republican Party, the party of the Great Emancipator, lose the trust and faith of an entire race?" he asked rhetorically. "From the Civil War to the civil-rights movement, for a century, most black Americans voted Republican. How did we lose that vote?" After a meandering account of the party's glorious record on black emancipation in the post–Civil War era, Paul arrived at the Great Depression and this answer: "The Democrats promised equalizing outcomes through unlimited federal assistance while Republicans offered something that seemed less tangible - the promise of equalizing opportunity through free markets." In other words, African-Americans of the thirties were deadbeats bought off by FDR's New Deal, much as those of the sixties (in the right's eyes) were bought off by LBJ's Great Society entitlements and those of the present day (along with the rest of America's downtrodden "47 percent") were seduced by Democrats brandishing still more of what Romney called "free stuff" and "gifts," starting with Obamacare. In this telling, the GOP's growing opposition to civil-rights laws in the past half-century (Rand's opposition included) is blameless for black defections; the party was just too high-minded, too egalitarian, too devoted to freedom to compete with Democratic bribery.

This kind of historical fantasia - and worse - has become more brazen than ever since Obama arrived on the scene. Three years ago, while contemplating his own presidential run, Haley Barbour, the former Mississippi governor and Republican leader, went so far as to praise the rabidly segregationist White Citizens' Councils of his youth for their opposition to the Ku Klux Klan. (The racist Councils had opposed the Klan, a rival, in the same sense that the Capone gang opposed the Moran gang in the St. Valentine's Day Massacre.) Barbour also boasted about attending integrated schools in Yazoo City, Mississippi, in the sixties, even though the courts didn't step in to finally enforce desegregation there until 1970 (when he was 22). "I just don't remember it as being that bad," he said of the racial climate in his hometown in 1962. That was the same year that a riot killing two and injuring more than 300 broke out 150 miles away, in Oxford, Mississippi, when the then-governor, Ross Barnett, defied a court order forcing the university to admit a black student, James Meredith. Almost matching Paul and Barbour in historical fabrication is another Republican with presidential ambitions, Governor Bob McDonnell of Virginia, who in 2010 omitted any mention of slavery from his already dubious declaration of Confederate History Month; he explained he wanted to focus on issues he thought "were most significant" for his state. (McDonnell, like Barbour, soon had to undertake a public reeducation tour and backpedal.)

Yet the most insidious and determined campaign to rewrite racial history on the right has come not from yahoo political hacks but from a coterie of writers who pop up at relatively highbrow conservative publications like The Wall Street Journal, National Review, and The Weekly Standard. Their work, often underwritten by conservative think tanks like the American Enterprise Institute and Heritage Foundation, feeds the politicians their source material. Some of these writers' spurious output makes it into the so-called liberal media as well, including that of Gerard Alexander, an AEI "scholar" who published a piece titled "Conservatism Does Not Equal Racism. So Why Do Many Liberals Assume It Does?" in the Washington Post in September 2010. Alexander, the author of a previous Weekly Standard article defending the GOP as "the party of civil rights," wrote in the Post that "many white conservatives swoon when members of minority groups proudly share their values" and that "the old conservatism-as-racism story has outlived all usefulness and accuracy." Oh, really? In just the six months before his article appeared, a short list of conservatism-as-racism stories would include Andrew Breitbart's attempted high-tech lynching of the black Agriculture Department official Shirley Sherrod; the epithets hurled at the civil-rights hero John Lewis, among other members of the Congressional Black Caucus, in a mêlée on the Capitol grounds; and a "parody" letter by a Tea Party Express spokesman in which the "NAACP head colored person" called Lincoln the "greatest racist ever."

The history that such Republican water-carriers want to blot out was succinctly summarized recently by the Princeton historian Sean Wilentz: "Everybody knows that in 1964, a proud southern Democratic president, Lyndon Johnson, pushed hard to secure the civil-rights bill, with the aid of a coalition of northern Democrats and Republicans. This sent the defeated segregationist southern Democrats (led by Strom Thurmond) fleeing into the Republican Party, where its remnants, along with a younger generation of extremist conservative white Southerners, including Rand Paul, still reside." The only part of this that is not true are Wilentz's first two words: In our amnesiac country, everybody does not know what happened 50 years ago, which is why the revisionists have an opening to fill the vacuum.

And so we have Kevin Williamson's essay "The Party of Civil Rights - It Has Always Been the Republicans" (in National Review last year) asserting that the rise of the GOP in the South in the sixties was mostly about economic issues, the Vietnam War, the counterculture, law and order, and anti-communism, because race was then in "decline" as "the most important political question." (That decline may have been less evident to black Southerners of that time who witnessed, among other seminal events, Bloody Sunday in Selma in 1965 and the King assassination in Memphis in 1968.) Williamson also stated that Goldwater's vote against the 1964 civil-rights bill was only that of a "principled critic," as opposed to that of a candidate pandering to segregationists in southern states, five of which just happened to go Republican that year for the first time since Reconstruction. In a new National Review essay last month, Williamson goes further still, portraying Goldwater as a civil-rights hero next to the "low-rent" LBJ.

It's a leading plank among these revisionists that Goldwater and other conservative heroes opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 championed by that "low-rent" Johnson only because of constitutional objections (much like those Paul raised about the law in his 2010 Senate campaign). As Noemie Emery tried to make this case in 2011 in The Weekly Standard, "the law was opposed by leading members of the emerging conservative movement - Barry Goldwater, Ronald Reagan, and William F. Buckley Jr. - for reasons having to do with small-government principles that nonetheless permitted their theories and the interests of the segregationists for that moment in time to converge."

She and her fellow travelers in racial revisionism protest too much. To believe that the convergence between lofty conservative theory and expedient racial politics was innocent, you have to forget Buckley's 1957 declaration that "the white community in the South is entitled to take such measures as are necessary to prevail, politically and culturally, in areas in which it does not predominate numerically." You have to ignore Goldwater's famous 1961 political dictum that the Republican Party "go hunting where the ducks are" and pander to southern white conservatives. You have to believe that it was a complete accident that Reagan chose Philadelphia, Mississippi, the site of the "Mississippi Burning" slaughter of three civil-rights workers, to deliver a speech on "states' rights" in 1980. You also have to disregard the political game plan codified by Kevin Phillips, the Nixon political strategist whose book The Emerging Republican Majority helped cement the party's "southern strategy" of mining white backlash to the civil-rights movement. Speaking to the Times in 1970, Phillips said, "The more Negros who register as Democrats in the South, the sooner the Negrophobe whites will quit the ­Democrats and become Republicans. That's where the votes are." Or, in Goldwater's earlier parlance, the ducks.

To buy that it was only "small-government principles," uncorrupted by cynical racial politics, that led these conservative leaders to oppose the Civil Rights Act of 1964, you most of all have to redact the crucial role played by Thurmond when he bolted to the GOP in 1964 and enlisted in the Goldwater campaign. By all accounts, Goldwater himself was not a racist. But he knew the political value of playing the race card. There was no reason for him to welcome the militant white supremacist Thurmond into the GOP except for the obvious one: His presence sealed the deal with voters who wanted confirmation that, whatever Goldwater's "principled" opposition to the Civil Rights Act, his election as president would help assure that similar laws would be resisted for years to come. (Goldwater, not so incidentally, was the only senator in either party who filled in for Thurmond when he took a bathroom break during his record filibuster against the Civil Rights Act of 1957.) Thurmond gave the Republican ticket - and by extension the entire party - the imprimatur of a top-tier bigot. The South Carolina senator had previously left the Democrats to run as a third-party Dixiecrat in 1948 - "All the bayonets of the Army cannot force the Negro into our homes," he had declaimed then - and had opposed civil-rights legislation, even anti-lynching laws, ever since.

The primacy of Thurmond in the GOP's racial realignment is the most incriminating truth the right keeps trying to cover up. That's why the George W. Bush White House shoved the Mississippi senator Trent Lott out of his post as Senate majority leader in 2002 once news spread that Lott had told Thurmond's 100th-birthday gathering that America "wouldn't have had all these problems" if the old Dixiecrat had been elected president in 1948. Lott, it soon became clear, had also lavished praise on Jefferson Davis and associated for decades with other far-right groups in thrall to the old Confederate cause. But the GOP elites didn't seem to mind until he committed the truly unpardonable sin of reminding America, if only for a moment, of the exact history his party most wanted and needed to suppress. Then he had to be shut down at once.

A decade-plus after Lott's fall, the whitewashing of Thurmond and his role in defining the modern GOP continues. When Joseph Crespino, a historian at Emory University, published the most authoritative study on Thurmond to date, Strom Thurmond's America, last year, The Wall Street Journal assigned a review to a writer named Lee Edwards, whom it identified as a Goldwater biographer and "a fellow at the Heritage Foundation in Washington." What the Journal didn't say - but Crespino did, in his book - is that Edwards was also "an assistant press secretary in the Goldwater campaign and editor of a 1965 exposé of alleged Communist connections to the civil-rights movement." Unsurprisingly, Edwards's review portrayed old Strom as a principled constitutional conservative and a "shrewd pragmatist who loved the Old South but welcomed the New South, with its voting rights for all citizens." In Edwards's estimation, "the majority of South Carolina voters, black as well as white," would accept so benign a judgment. Edwards also praised Thurmond for being a generous dad to his secret African-­American daughter, Essie Mae ­Washington-Williams, who had revealed her paternity six months after the senator died in 2003. "Her mother had worked for Thurmond's parents" was how the Journal's writer blandly described the circumstances of ­Washington-Williams's birth.

What he might more accurately have written was that Washington-Williams's mother was a family maid, and that Thurmond, then in his early twenties, had impregnated her when she was only 15. For all the racial hypocrisy this episode entails, let's not forget that today such a scenario might also be grounds for a charge of rape, an avenue of justice not open to Essie Mae's mother in the South Carolina of the twenties. It's an indicator of how much the Republican Party and the conservative movement want this shameful history to go away that when Washington-Williams, the human embodiment of Thurmond and segregation's legacy, died at 87, in February, her death went unmentioned in National Review, The Weekly Standard, and most other conservative outlets, and unacknowledged by any conservative columnist at the Times, the Journal, or the Washington Post.

As an accident of timing would have it, Washington-Williams died a few weeks before the Supreme Court heard arguments in Shelby County v. Holder, the Alabama challenge to the Voting Rights Act of 1965 that Thurmond and his fellow segregationists - Republican, Democrat, Democrat-soon-to-turn-Republican - tried so hard to defeat and then to thwart. It's no coincidence that the case has come before the court simultaneously with the proliferation of those new local laws abridging voting rights. This is a calculated two-pronged effort to fix the GOP's minority deficit by extra-democratic means.

The boosters of the new voting regulations would have us believe instead that their efforts are in response to a (nonexistent) rise in the country's minuscule instances of voter fraud. Everyone knows these laws are in response to the rise of Barack Obama. It is also no coincidence that many of them were conceived and promoted by the American Legal Exchange Council, an activist outfit funded by heavy-hitting right-wing donors like Charles and David Koch. In another coincidence that the GOP would like to flush down the memory hole, the Kochs' father, Fred, a founder of the radical John Birch Society in the fifties, was an advocate for the impeachment of Chief Justice Warren in the aftermath of Brown. Fred Koch wrote a screed of his own accusing communists of inspiring the civil-rights movement.

The current chief justice, John Roberts, has made his perspective on the landmark civil-rights laws of that era clear. His now notorious pseudo-aphorism - "The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race" - is nothing if not an echo of Goldwater's (ghostwritten) laissez-faire philosophy of racial justice as delineated in his 1960 manifesto The Conscience of a Conservative. Goldwater said that while he supported school desegregation in principle, he believed it wrong "to impose that judgment" on "the people of Mississippi or South Carolina" or to instruct them on how to achieve that goal. "I believe that the problem of race relations, like all social and cultural problems, is best handled by the people directly concerned," he concluded. Or, in other words: The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race. No law enforcement is required.

Should the Goldwater-Roberts view prevail next month, it will be a setback for American voting rights. But I also wonder if so reactionary a decision could backfire on a GOP that has tried and is still trying so hard to disguise its role in the history that necessitated the Voting Rights Act in the first place - as well as the act's repeated extension by Congress, most recently with near-unanimous bipartisan support in 2006. It's that history, not happenstance or habit or "free stuff," that drove African-Americans to give the Republican ticket the exact same 6 percent of its votes in both 1964 and 2012.

A gutted Voting Rights Act might spark an uproar so raucous that a whole new generation of voters could be compelled to learn just how we got there. The more Americans who are armed with the truth, the better it is for the country, of course, but also for a party that is unlikely to move forward in a fast-changing 21st-century America until it is forced to free itself from its past.

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Giving Up Our Privacy? Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=5494"><span class="small">Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Wednesday, 08 May 2013 08:15

Weissman writes: "But freedom is best defended by using it, and continuing to say 'No!' is a damned sight better than giving Big Brother our permission to do with us what he will."

Big Brother is watching us. (illustration: TIME Magazine)
Big Brother is watching us. (illustration: TIME Magazine)



Giving Up Our Privacy?

By Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News

08 May 13

 

was delighted when Mitt Romney was caught on 'film' dissing the 47%, and I was impressed at how quickly law enforcement was able to identify the alleged Boston Marathon bombers from video clips," wrote Lenny Siegel, an old friend from my salad years at Stanford.

"Today, millions of Americans carry video cameras in their pockets or purses, while commercial enterprises and government buildings routinely record normal activity on and near their premises," he went on. "I can see how the technology can be used to discourage the pistol-whipping of liquor-store clerks like my late uncle or catch police brutalizing or even murdering innocent citizens."

"But," he added, "I'm worried that the infrastructure is being created to continuously monitor the movements of people who have not committed crimes, making it easier for authoritarian government officials to quash dissent."

In Lenny's view, the problem we face is the willingness of average citizens to let Big Brother do what he will, even at the expense of our personal freedom and privacy. Contrary to the song many of us learned as children, when it comes to protecting our civil liberties, the policeman is not our friend. Nor are the ubiquitous closed-circuit television cameras, or CCTV, which people in England already seem to have accepted.

Lenny is no right-winger obsessed with the threat of government tyranny, the fear that President Obama urged graduates to reject Sunday in his commencement address at Ohio State University. A non-violent activist on the non-communist Left, Lenny works as an environmental specialist advising the Pentagon on cleaning up toxic waste sites – an idealistic rather than ideological calling.

Note that Lenny does not accuse bad guys in government of purposely setting out to create a police state. Some of them might be doing just that, others not. That remains a question of hard evidence, which Lenny does not pretend to have, and he's much too smart to fall back on half-baked conspiracy theories, truther tales, and vague notions of shadowy plotters lurking behind every bush – or Bush.

Lenny's concern, and mine, is more certain. Consider how the Obama administration has threatened journalists and prosecuted Bradley Manning and other whistleblowers under the Espionage Act of 1917, a long discredited law that initially led to the jailing of Socialist presidential candidate Eugene V. Debs for merely speaking out against military recruiting, and to the post-World-War-I Red Scare, Palmer Raids, mass arrests, and mass deportation to the Soviet Union of "disloyal" immigrants like Emma Goldman.

Or think about how the former Constitutional Law professor from Chicago has built on the repressive infrastructure of the George W. Bush years to justify even more warrantless wiretapping, increased surveillance, corporate and government collection of enormous databases on everyone, and even the targeted killing of American citizens without trial.

Future presidents will similarly start from Obama's already over-reaching attacks on our civil liberties. New technologies like surveillance drones over our cities will build on the way police departments have used helicopters to chase suspects or hover over unhappy ghettos. And who knows what lessons other lawmen will draw from the recent lockdown of Boston and shoot-first rampage of our cherished "first responders?" We only know that they will draw the lessons they want.

Repression will always find ways to justify itself in available fears, whether of Communists, terrorists, Blacks, Muslims, Jews, or an octogenarian nun slipping into a supposedly secure nuclear facility at Oak Ridge. And where fears need fueling, police and intelligence agencies around the world have a long, nasty history of deploying provocateurs, as J. Edgar Hoover did with his counter-intelligence program, or COINTELPRO. That was one that Lenny and I knew only too well.

Add the GPS tracking on a gazillion smart phones with personal cameras, on which the police can always call, and all the personal information on the social networks, and not even North Korea has such an invasive security system. As Lenny puts it, "the Genie is already out of the bottle. Americans (and the English, to be sure) seem to accept that 'Big Brother is watching.'" We "have given up the presumption of privacy."

That, I'm afraid, is spilt milk and we gain nothing by crying over it. But those of us who demand the right to dissent can still have faith by drawing on our own past. When antiwar activists were building opposition to America's war in Vietnam, we regularly defied the Espionage Act of 1917 and other laws by stopping troop trains and burning our draft cards. We did not wait to ask the Supreme Court for permission. We did not always ask the American Civil Liberties Union. We just did what we had to do and generally got away with it.

Similarly, when serious journalists find a story they think worth risking prosecution, they tell government to "Go to Hell!" And when whistleblowers Left or Right think the people have a right to know, they spill the beans at whatever risk to themselves.

This anti-authoritarian spirit can pose enormous problems, as the diehards at the National Rifle Association remind us ad nauseam with their tedious defense of the rights of gun manufacturers. But freedom is best defended by using it, and continuing to say "No!" is a damned sight better than giving Big Brother our permission to do with us what he will.


A veteran of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and the New Left monthly Ramparts, Steve Weissman lived for many years in London, working as a magazine writer and television producer. He now lives and works in France, where he writes on international affairs.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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