July 13, 2019
MY CORNER by Boyd
Cathey
Senator Ted CRUZ
Condemns General Bedford Forrest as A Racist, Denounces State of Tennessee for
Honoring Him
Friends,
Those familiar with the over 300 installments in
the MY CORNER series (and before that, with CONSERVATIVE CRACK-UP) will know
that one of my primary objectives has been to distinguish historic and
traditional “conservatism,” a conservativism that traces its roots back to the
Founding and the intent of the Framers, from what is generally termed “Neoconservatism.”
Over the past several years, through excellent essays
by various historians and authors such as Drs. Paul Gottfried, Clyde Wilson, and
Jack Kerwick, and columnists such as Patrick J. Buchanan, Christopher DeGroot, Ilana Mercer, and "The Dissident Mama," I have attempted to examine the very real and stark
differences both ideologically and historically between Neoconservatism and
traditional conservatism. And going further back, I have cited commentary by
the late Russell Kirk and Mel Bradford, plus detailed studies by scholars like Gary Dorrien (The
Neoconservative Mind, 1993), and Stefan Halper and Jonathan Clarke (America Alone: The Neo-Conservatives
and the Global Order, 2004).
And of the Neoconservatives, I have taken a highly critical
look at some of their leading propagandists, including Ben Shapiro, Jonah
Goldberg, Victor Davis Hanson, Dinesh D’Souza, and Rich Lowry, and what these
gentlemen propound.
One of the central differences between traditional
conservatives—henceforth, I call them “traditionalists”—and the Neocons, is how
they view the South, in particular, how they view the Confederacy and its
important figures…how they view the public monuments to Confederate veterans…and
what they think should happen to them in the face of the unrelenting and
unhinged campaign by the lunatic social justice warriors of the left to topple
them.
Monuments, flags, and markers are inanimate symbols,
but they represent something far more palpable and real: who we honor in our
history, how we do it, and the importance of remembering who we are as a people.
And on these questions the Neocons have
essentially been on the side of the frenzied Neo-Marxist iconoclasts, or, at
least, silent in the face of the fierce campaign to erase and deconstruct a
critical part of our history.
And that is very significant.
Of course, a major reason for this has been the
Neocon genealogy which can be traced to a universalist mid-twentieth century
Marxism and their embrace of the Lincolnian idea of the nature of the American
union (for them unitary and expansive), and their ahistorical positing of the idea
of equality as fundamental in and to the American Founding, that is, an “equality”
of individuals basically across the board. And, of course, that egalitarianism
is carried forward not just in their domestic propositions, but also in their
intense desire to “make the world safe for democracy” and “impose equality” on
the rest of the globe.
During the 1970s into the 1990s the
Neoconservatives displaced the once more significant voice of the
traditionalists in “conservative” media and foundations. Journals that once
featured the writings of Southerner Mel Bradford and traditionalist Russell
Kirk, magazines and foundations that once heralded the participation of Paul
Gottfried and Joseph Sobran and Sam Francis, now withdrew the welcome mat. And
to replace these writers and academics came the likes of Goldberg, Lowry, Shapiro,
and others of their ilk.
The differences were startling, for not only did
the entire focus of the old “conservative movement” become altered, but the
quality of writing declined perceptibly. And the heritage and traditions of the
Southland and the profound appreciation for the heroes of the Confederacy—a sure
characteristic of the traditionalists of the Older Right—were met with, at
best, silence and ignored, or more commonly with the Neocons joining in with
the hysterical progressivists and decrying the “racism” and “white supremacy”
of the South.
Thus, the shameful praxis of a Ben
Shapiro during the Virginia gubernatorial race in 2018, or the outright
condemnations of Confederate heritage by National Review editors and
writers Rich
Lowry and Victor
Davis Hanson. And these are just a few examples of the stridently
anti-Confederate, anti-Southern bias of leading Neoconservatives. Watch Fox
News most any day to see this on full display….
It is quite ironic to see the fatuous and
historically ignorant (the best that can be said of him) Dinesh D’Souza
pontificate on Fox News about American history, and in particular, about how
today’s current Democratic Party is essentially the same as the old Democratic
Party of the post-War Between the States period, or how—somehow—the current
crop of Democratic presidential wannabees are just like, in the same mold as
the old “segregationist” (AKA states’ rights) Democrats like Senators Richard
Russell of Georgia or John Stennis of Mississippi. (Witness the recent hullabaloo
over Joe Biden’s reference to Stennis and the late Senator Herman Talmadge of
Georgia.)
In other words, for D’Souza the Democratic Party is
the “racist” party, while the GOP represents the enlightened, egalitarian and
anti-racist heritage of the post-War Republican Party. And thus, the Republican
Party, representing as it does “equality” for all, expansive “democracy” and “true
anti-racism,” stands at counter-purposes to Democratic Party…. You know, which
opposed the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Bills of the 1960s and objected to
the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision (1954): legislation and
a legal decision that fatally weakened what remained of the
constitutionally-enshrined rights of the states over education, accommodations,
and voting.
This, we are told by the Necons, is what “conservatism”
is all about; and since we are the “exceptional nation,” chosen by God to spread this egalitarian notion all
around the globe, then it is our “moral” duty to do so.
But the so-called “conservatism” heralded,
propagated and defended by these individuals is nothing more than a
warmed-over, slightly less toxic mix of the same venom served up by those
further to their left. Indeed, given their own Trotskyite origins and genealogy,
this is only logical. And in so many ways it helps normalize the leftward
trajectory that this nation has been on for the past 150 years.
Perhaps even more significantly, this intellectual fervor
among the Neocons has had significant repercussions and effects politically. For
Neoconservatism in practice is the dominant narrative of most “conservative”
Republican politicians in 2019, in contradistinction to, say, the views of the
late Republican Senator Robert Taft, or the first couple of terms of the late
Senator Jesse Helms, whose understanding of America was in accord with the
older traditional vision.
And that brings me to the latest emanation of what
I would call the Neoconservative “Neo-Reconstructionism” regarding the South
and Southern tradition. And it brings me to that “conservative voice,” Senator
Ted Cruz of Texas.
A number of my friends supported Cruz in the GOP
primaries in 2016; he was, we were informed, a “true conservative” and not a
rabble-rousing, bull-in-the-china shop like Donald Trump. And many of those
friends were good Southern men who love our Southern and Confederate heritage.
And Ted Cruz, certainly, good conservative that he was, would not oppose it,
would he?
Think again.
Cruz is just like the other timorous,
historically inept politicians infected with the intellectually poisonous Neocon
virus which manifests both its ignorance of and disdain for Southern heritage
and the symbols of that heritage, which are, in effect, the symbols of the
older America and its Founding.
Cruz considers General Nathan Bedford
Forrest a horrible racist; his statues should come down, and under no
circumstances should he be memorialized by the State of Tennessee. Rather, Cruz
celebrates zealous Abolitionist and supporter of women’s suffrage, Frederick
Douglass, whose extra-marital relationship with German Marxist revolutionary, Ottilie Assing, may have
shaped his thinking.
I pass on an article from Fox News:
Ted
Cruz leads backlash after Tennessee gov signs proclamation honoring early KKK
leader
Tennesse Gov. Bill Lee was under fire from Republicans and
Democrats alike Friday after signing a proclamation designating Saturday, July
13 as Nathan Bedford Forrest Day, a state "day of special
observance" honoring a Confederate general and early leader of the Klu
Klux Klan.
"I
signed the bill because the law requires that I do that and I haven’t looked at
changing that law," Lee said Thursday according to reports by the
Tennessean.
Senator
Ted Cruz, R-Tx., took to Twitter to demand that the state "change the
law."
"This
is WRONG. Nathan Bedford Forrest was a Confederate general & a delegate to
the 1868 Democratic Convention. He was also a slave trader & the 1st Grand
Wizard of the KKK. Tennessee should not have an official day (tomorrow)
honoring him," Cruz said.
Tennessee law
stipulates that the governor must declare six days to be "days of special
observance" and "invite the people of this state to observe the
days in schools, churches, and other suitable places with appropriate
ceremonies expressive of the public sentiment befitting the anniversary of such
dates.”
Those
days include Robert E. Lee Day, honoring the commander of the Confederate
Army, on Jan. 19; Abraham Lincoln Day on Feb. 12; Andrew Jackson Day on
March 15; Confederate Decoration Day, celebrating the birthday of Confederate
President Jefferson Davis, on June 3; and Veterans Day on Nov. 11.
Lawmakers
have previously and failed to repeal the law mandating the observance.
"This
a reminder of the painful and hurtful of the crimes that were committed against
black people," Democratic Tennessee Rep. Vincent Dixie told WTVF.
"Now you're signing a proclamation honoring the same people that fought to
keep people that look like me, African Americans in slavery."
"I
haven’t even looked at that law, other than knowing I needed to comply with it,
so that’s what I did," Lee said after he signed the proclamation on
Wednesday, according to The Tennessean. "When we look at the law, then
we’ll see."
"I
plan on working with legislators to correct this issue," Dixie said.
"If
the governor is sincere about really being the governor for all Tennesseans and
not some Tennesseans then he would get behind me, and do the right thing."
In
addition to his role as a member of the Klan, Forrest amassed a fortune as
a plantation owner and slave trader in Memphis before the Civil War.
A
bust of Forrest sits outside the Senate and House chambers in the
state Capitol building. During his successful gubernatorial campaign last
year, Lee said that he did not want to "whitewash history"
by having it removed.
The Associated
Press contributed to this report.
Vincent Dixie needs to do something about changing his surname.
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