July 6, 2019
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
New Book by Ronald and Donald KENNEDY, Yankee Empire – My Review
Friends,
I pass on another commissioned book review essay, this one of
the Kennedy Brothers’ (James Ronald and Walter Donald) latest volume, Yankee Empire: Aggressive Abroad and Despotic
At Home, their latest salvo in the ongoing war to recapture, revive and
richly illustrate Southern heritage, and to offer to modern day Southerners a
strong historical and political basis for our future. For as the American
nation continues to decay, decline, and, in fact, apparently disintegrate in so
many ways before our eyes, it behooves us to re-examine our history and the
postulates about union which we have accepted since the end of the War for
Southern Independence.
Those assumptions have collapsed.
The Kennedys have been doing that re-examination in a
series of easily readable, but powerful books over the past few years; and in
so doing, they have been in a forefront of a growing movement among writers and
historians and those interested in the preservation (and renewed flourishing)
of our Southern culture and society.
My review appeared in the July/August issue of Confederate Veteran magazine, and has
not appeared previously in the MY CORNER series. It is not online, only in the
magazine…and here:
CONFEDERATE VETERAN MAGAZINE
July/August 2019
REVIEW of
Walter Donald Kennedy and James Ronald Kennedy. YANKEE EMPIRE: Aggressive Abroad and Despotic At Home (Columbia,
SC: Shotwell Publishing, 2018), 380 pp. paperback.
By Boyd
D. Cathey
Once again the
Kennedy brothers—Walter Donald and James Ronald—have written a block buster
that should be in the hands of every Southerner. Indeed, it would pay
tremendous dividends if some of our brethren above the Mason-Dixon Line were to
read and digest its insights, as well.
Yankee Empire: Aggressive Abroad and
Despotic at Home (words used by General Robert E. Lee in a letter to Lord
Acton in 1866, warning of what a post-War America might become) ranks with
their earlier books, The South Was
Right!, Punished With Poverty,
and Dixie Rising: Rules for Rebels,
as essential reading as the present-day American—let’s call it Yankee-dominated—nation
descends into a truly unprecedented time of fierce and unbridgeable division,
unprecedented, that is, since 1860-1861.
Yankee Empire is basically an attempt to
chart what has happened to America since then—that Confederation of independent
states that came together in 1787 to create the old American republic with so
much expectation and hope. But a republic that was destroyed in four short
years of terrible conflict unleashed by an anti-Constitutional, usurping Yankee
government, intent on subjugating the Southern states and turning the very
region of the republic largely responsible
for that republic into a plundered and vassalized region, dependent on crony
capitalists, unelected political elites, and a managerial class that operates
with impunity, ignoring the wishes and needs of the population.
The Kennedys recount
that after the War and the First Stage of Reconstruction (the Second Stage is
upon us now), a kind of tacit peace between the regions was established, a kind
of “period of good feeling.” The South
was permitted to honor its heroes and remember its honored fallen veterans,
observe its holidays, fly its flags and sing it songs. In return, it was
impelled to accept the Northern version of patriotism and, eventually, the
Northern version of history, which at first was somewhat respectful, even
anodyne, when treating the War for Southern Independence. Most of its “new
South” leadership class (to use the terminology of historian Paul Gaston in his
book The New South Creed) was soon
convinced, or, rather, bought off by the enticements of Northern crony
capitalism.
The young Henry
Grady, editor of The Atlanta Constitution,
enthusiastically summed up this trend. The South must show itself
ready and eager for what he termed “progressive development” and Northern
capital. The South would have to discard its conservative ways when these
conflicted with modern ideas and innovation…and fealty to the dominant
commercialist and expansionist Yankee ideology.
This version of
history soon had its global effects, as the Kennedys recount, with the virtual
seizure and then annexation of the Kingdom of Hawaii (actually a prepared coup
d’etat by Northern financiers, who then presented the country to President
McKinley), followed by a series of “involvements” by the united American
nation—the Spanish-American War (and the taking of the Philippines),
intervention in Nicaragua and in Latin American, entry into World War I “to
make the world safe for Democracy,” and Franklin Roosevelt’s “back door to war”
(to used historian Charles Tansill’s expression) to get the country into World
War II.
Through it all
Southerners had been cajoled and educated to think that this misplaced
nationalism was the correct form of patriotism they needed to exhibit. And,
indeed, beginning with the Spanish-American War, Southern military figures have
played a singularly outstanding, even admirable role.
Yet, as the
Kennedys illustrate the so-called “compromise” reached after Southern defeat in
1865 was chimerical, fraudulent, and ultimately one-sided, as more recent
history has overwhelmingly proved. It did not last. And in the process too many Southerners seem
to have lost their very souls to a contrary spirit, a philosophy that, in fact,
turns its back on our most hallowed and appreciated Southern traditions and
inheritance, turns its back on “who we are.”
Since the late
1960s the old “solid South” has ceased to exist as it once was: while the
Democratic Party veered wildly to an openly anti-Southern and hostile Left, the
Republicans took advantage of the opportunity to attempt to replace them. But
the type of conservatism offered by most representatives of the current GOP
largely deny or reject our heritage in the name of a universalized crony
capitalism, which seems mostly incapable of connecting with our remembered
past, much less defending it.
In very readable
and accessible language, yet amply supported by solid documentation, the
Kennedys chart this history, but, like their other volumes they also offer
reasons for hope: the American nation is coming apart at the seams, more
Southerners—given the assaults on our heritage—are becoming cognizant of what
is occurring and at stake. Yankee Empire, then, becomes an
important guide book, a significant source for information and history…and a clarion
call to action, for us and for our children and grandchildren. May it signal
our awakening.
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