July 13, 2021
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
How Southerners Committed Cultural and Political Suicide
Friends,
Today I pass along the latest installment of the Kennedy Twins Newsletter.
As undoubtedly many of you know, both James “Ron” Kennedy and
his brother, Walter “Donnie” Kennedy, are prolific writers and staunch
defenders of (what is left of) Southern tradition and heritage. Among the
titles of their books are, most notably: The
South Was Right! (newly revised edition 2020), Punished
With Poverty: The Suffering South, and Yankee
Empire: Aggressive Abroad and Despotic at Home…all strongly recommended to
Southerners interested in how their heritage and traditions have been subverted
and devastated by the forces that dominate modern America…and how just possibly
a revival of that heritage and those traditions might occur.
But only—only—if Southerners begin to understand how we
reached our present disastrous state of affairs.
The task of understanding has been and is incredibly
difficult. And it has much to do with the present politics of the former
Confederate states and the fact that good intentions and normal reactions to
adverse conditions can lead to bad results.
How we got here, a comprehension of how we arrived at our
present woeful situation, demands that we understand the lineaments of post-War
Between the States history, in particular the choices our ancestors—and we—have
made.
After Appomattox and the other Confederate surrenders, the
South, the former Confederate States, experienced first occupation, then
Reconstruction. Eventually coming out from under those onerous impositions, in
virtual poverty and shorn of most of the political influence that they had
prior to the War, most Southerners, naturally, inclined toward the Democratic
Party. Indeed, it had been the Democrats, including many in the North, who had
either opposed the War on the South, or, at least, advocated more reasonable
and, as it were, “softer” policies after the War’s conclusion.
The Republican Party was seen, rightly so, as the party of
conquest, of harsh Reconstruction policies, and anti-Southern bigotry. Not that
it was in principle necessarily pro-black or favored expansive “civil rights”
measures: only when directed at the conquered South were such actions merited,
certainly not at home in their Northern bastions.
The South, the states of the former Confederacy, thus became
uniformly Democratic strongholds—“the Solid South.” And, growing up in rural
North Carolina how many times did I hear my elders declare: “I’d vote for the town
drunk if he ran on the Democratic ticket!” Voting straight party became second
nature to Southerners; granddad had done so. Indeed, some of us had
grandparents even born in the late nineteenth century who knew and heard from their parents about the barbarity and
degradations that came after 1865.
Thus, the Democratic Party became a kind of refuge for most
Southerners. And Northern Democrats, at least for a goodly part of the century
after Appomattox, welcomed them and allowed them to occupy positions of
authority. Even under such social liberals as Franklin Roosevelt and Harry
Truman, Southern solons in Congress—remember Senators Harry Byrd Sr., Josiah
Bailey, Richard Russell, and others, who controlled the US Senate and Senate
committees (and thus legislation)—and not to mention the various Southern
Congressmen who dominated equally in the House of Representatives—held a
considerable amount of power.
Of course, both Northern Democrats and their Southern allies
had to find compromise at times. Generally, the Northerners let the South alone
in its local governing, as long as Southerners generally supported measures
nationally that their brethren advanced. Along with this occasionally
troublesome collaboration, Northern Democrats—and Northern folk in general—agreed
to let the South celebrate its history and its heroes and its heritage.
As Professor Clyde Wilson and others have described it, the
years between the end of the nineteenth century and the election of Lyndon
Johnson were a kind of “second era of good feeling” for the South. Southern
honor, Southern heroism, Southern history and heritage were celebrated not just
in the South, but everywhere in the nation. Summing up the view of most
Americans of that period, President Eisenhower spoke admiringly of General
Robert E. Lee, and he was in many ways expressing the general view of most
Americans of the South
back in 1960:
“General Robert E.
Lee was, in my estimation, one of the supremely gifted men produced by our
Nation. He believed unswervingly in the Constitutional validity of his cause
which until 1865 was still an arguable question in America; he was a poised and
inspiring leader, true to the high trust reposed in him by millions of his
fellow citizens; he was thoughtful yet demanding of his officers and men,
forbearing with captured enemies but ingenious, unrelenting and personally
courageous in battle, and never disheartened by a reverse or obstacle. Through
all his many trials, he remained selfless almost to a fault and unfailing in
his faith in God. Taken altogether, he was noble as a leader and as a man, and
unsullied as I read the pages of our history.”
But not just on the lips of our national leaders, but in the public
imagination, in the popular media, and in Hollywood, the South, and in particular
Southerners in the War for Southern Independence, were treated largely with
respect, if not outright admiration. Southerners had fought nobly and
honorably, and were depicted as such in works of literature, by movie-makers,
and by our political leaders.
Hollywood gave us not only a cinematic treatment of Margaret
Mitchell’s “Gone With the Wind,” but numerous other pro-Southern and Confederate-friendly
films. Who of a certain age cannot
recall such major Hollywood products as “Jesse James” (with Tyrone Power and
Henry Fonda) and its sequel, “The Return of Frank James”? Or any of several
epics starring Errol Flynn (“Santa Fe Trail” and “Rocky Mountain”) or several
of the memorable John Ford-directed masterpieces: “Judge Priest,” “The Sun
Shines Bright,” and “The Prisoner
of Shark Island,” from 1936 (on the brutal and extra-legal imprisonment of
Dr. Samuel Mudd after the Lincoln assassination)? And most actors in Western
movies—John Wayne, Randolph Scott, Joel McCrea, Audie Murphy, and others—carried
the theme of Southern honor and respect into that popular genre.
In fact, in the classic Western I would suggest that there
exists a sub-genre which I would call “the Southern Western,” essentially using
the War and its aftermath as a plot basis for dozens of films…a trend that has
continued in a small way into more recent times with the continued fascination
with Jesse James and the Border conflicts (e.g., “The Long Riders,” 1980; “Ride
With the Devil,” 1999; “American
Outlaws,” 2001; and “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford,”
2007.)
The great “Civil War Centennial” of 1961-1965, with its
commemorations and celebrations, marked the end of the “bargain” between North
and South, a final salute to the South as a noble adversary in “the late Unpleasantness.“
Dramatic changes in American culture and the way many
Americans saw themselves in the 1960s and 1970s, would alter Southerners’ attachment
to the old Democratic Party and perhaps just as significantly, radically
transform the Northern branch of the party into something incompatible with the
views of most Southern folk.
But even as late as the 1960s John F. Kennedy had a successful “Southern
Strategy” which enabled him to win election in 1960 (with Southern votes),
despite his later alterations and the turn-around of President Lyndon Johnson.
But in many ways that was the “last hurrah” for the “solid Democratic
South.” The rise of Goldwater Republicanism, Kevin Phillips’ “Southern Strategy”
(outlined most notably in his 1969
book, The Emerging Republican Majority),
and the emergence of the avowedly conservative Ronald Reagan in 1976 and 1980,
signaled the final demise of the second era of good feeling. Phillips worked
closely with President Richard Nixon, and outlined his plan to win the South
(and Middle America) for a newly-christened “conservative” and victorious GOP.
And by the ‘70s, and more like a tidal-wave in the 198os, conservative
Southerners turned Franklin Roosevelt’s picture to the wall and became Republicans
(at least in their voting habits). The solid Democratic South would continue to
be “solid,” but not Democrat.
Increasingly, in the years even before the election of George
W. Bush in 2000, signs of unease and doubt arose among a few more thoughtful
Southerners. Yes, the GOP paid initial lip-service to traditional values and
commonly-held views which most Southerners shared. But in action many leaders
of the Republican Party, including a new crop of home-grown Southern GOP politicos
(think here of Senators Lindsey Graham and Tim Scott of the thoroughly “red”
state of South Carolina), had traveled much further to the definable political
and social Left, further than many Southern folk realized, even as many blindly
followed along.
“I’d vote for the town drunk if he ran on the…Republican…ticket!”
And how many times do we hear: “I HAVE to vote for the GOP candidate, even if he
is terrible, since the Democrat is even worse”?)
It should have been apparent when Graham urged the removal of
Confederate symbols from the South Carolina Capitol (“The
flag had to come down. And thank God it has!”), or when he (and other
Southern GOP leaders) essentially endorsed
same sex marriage. But they are just the tip of the political iceberg, the
chameleons who inveigle far too many Southern conservatives.
Influenced profoundly by the feculent remnants of a zealous Trotskyite
globalism and its radical commitment to an expanding concept of “civil rights”
(same sex marriage, transgenderism, etc. are now increasingly acceptable among
conservative elites), and by a constant diet of Neoconservative commentary
spouted by Fox News, Newsmax, and so-called “conservative” talk radio,
incorporating that template, in large part Southern Republicanism and establishment
Southern “conservatives” have become largely indistinguishable from their
Northern brethren.
How many times each day do we hear representatives of what Old
Right scholar Paul Gottfried calls “Con Inc.”—Establishment Conservatism—praise
the legacy of radical Frederick Douglass or the “vision” of Communist-inspired
Martin Luther King Jr.? Victor Davis Hanson, Mark Levin and Brian Kilmeade on
Fox, Rich Lowry at National Review,
Michael Anton and cohorts at the Claremont Institute, Larry Arnn at Hillsdale
College—you take your pick: they all condemn the historic South, its traditions
and heritage. They all accept a warmed-over and refashioned post-Marxist
globalism and expansive view of “rights,” even if they also support Donald
Trump.
It’s a vision that has no room for Confederate symbols and
monuments. It’s a vision that has led almost all Southern Republican solons in
Congress to vote to do away with names of American military installations and
forts if they bear the names of Confederate generals (or slaveholders).
It is, in fact, a Neo-Reconstruction, this time led by our
supposed defenders who came to power when the old Democrat Party went bad. But,
as we now find, the Leopard has not changed its spots. Despite all the pious campaign
promises for this and for that, despite the soothing words of assurance and the
pledges to defend what is left of our traditions and heritage, slowly at first
and now more rapidly, our reputed defenders have, when not poisoning
progressively our minds and outlook, delivered us over to those very enemies, those
very forces that seek our elimination and extermination.
I never tire of quoting the great Southern writer, Robert
Lewis Dabney’s superb description of “establishment conservatives,” written 140
years ago, but absolutely applicable today.
Here is what he wrote:
“This is a party [established conservativism] which
never conserves anything. Its history has been that it demurs to each
aggression of the progressive party, and aims to save its credit by a
respectable amount of growling, but always acquiesces at last in the
innovation. What was the resisted novelty of yesterday is to-day one of the
accepted principles of conservatism; it is now conservative only in affecting
to resist the next innovation, which will to-morrow be forced upon its timidity,
and will be succeeded by some third revolution, to be denounced and then
adopted in its turn. American conservatism is merely the shadow that follows
Radicalism as it moves forward towards perdition. It remains behind it, but
never retards it, and always advances near its leader. This pretended salt hath
utterly lost its savor: wherewith shall it he salted? Its impotency is not
hard, indeed, to explain. It is worthless because it is the conservatism of
expediency only, and not of sturdy principle. It intends to risk nothing serious,
for the sake of the truth, and has no idea of being guilty of the folly of
martyrdom. It always—when about to enter a protest—very blandly informs the
wild beast whose path it essays to stop, that its ‘bark is worse than its bite,’
and that it only means to save its manners by enacting its decent rôle of
resistance. The only practical purpose which it now subserves in American
politics is to give enough exercise to Radicalism to keep it ‘in wind,’ and to
prevent its becoming pursy and lazy from having nothing to whip."
Until Southern folk conscious of their heritage and traditions
comprehend what has and is occurring, until they—we—become far more discerning
and willing to stand forth and demand an accounting, the same rot, the same
inevitable hemorrhaging, the same putrefaction of the South we love, the South
we remember, the South now rapidly slipping away, will continue. The efforts of such enterprises as The
Abbeville Institute, Clyde Wilson’s Reckonin.com,
journals such as Chronicles
Magazine are laudable and to be strongly encouraged, but they are still far
from being well known.
Every Southerner, aware of who he is, “remembering who we are,”
to use the late Mel Bradford’s phrase, should become a true missionary for a
re-conversion of “our people” before that becomes an impossibility in the Behemoth
State we now inhabit.
The pro-Southern poet Robert Lee Frost, in his poem “The Black
Cottage,” sums up both our hope and our task:
“For, dear me, why abandon a
belief
Merely because it ceases to be
true.
Cling to it long enough, and not
a doubt
It will turn true again, for so
it goes.
Most of the change we think we
see in life
Is due to truths being in and out
of favour.
As I sit here, and oftentimes, I
wish
I could be monarch of a desert
land
I could devote and dedicate
forever
To the truths we keep coming back
and back to.”
That must be our task, our role: to keep alive our heritage,
our past, our memory, to rededicate ourselves “to the truths we keep coming
back and back to,” before our Ancestors and before Almighty God.
*****
I urge you to read Ron Kennedy’s latest commentary (link below),
on the continuing treason of our elected leaders, Southern Republicans, who
joined with Democrats to rid Statuary Hall in the US Capitol of all
Confederates and “racists.” Until we
rise up and denounce them, and defeat them, this will continue…and time is becoming our enemy:
http://www.kennedytwins.com/articles/Responding%20to%20Southern%20Congressmen.pdf
Mr Cathey,
ReplyDeleteFor my dumbness but I cant figure out how to subscribe to you blog...???
Not to worry...just send me your email address (at:
ReplyDeleteparsifalCSA@aol.com) and I will add you. You don't even have to give your name, if you wish...just the email address. And I will be pleased to add you.
There's some rather lively reader commenter activity on this article over at Unz Review.
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