We’re told the victors write history. This was not the case with the American Civil
War.
But first, a digression. I lived and worked in the Southeast during
much of my twenties and early thirties, beginning with a stint in Alabama
immediately following college. It was an
adventure for a West Coast boy, living an hour’s drive from the nearest
freeway. The slower pace of life aside,
I quickly adjusted to my surroundings.
I remember a sense of trepidation in the weeks preceding
my move. I’d never been to Alabama or
anyplace else in the South. The civil
rights upheavals of the 1960s were then recent events in our collective memory
and I envisioned burning crosses and police dogs lunging at protestors.
I needn’t have worried. Everyone I met was nice. Folks you didn’t know would wave to you as
you passed on the road. Perfect
strangers would greet you with a smile. Store
clerks would strike up conversations if no other customers were waiting. When I left three years later, I found I
missed the place and the people. I still
experience the occasional pang of nostalgia, though I couldn’t imagine wanting
to live there again.
Their pleasantness notwithstanding, there was
plenty of support for certain stereotypes of rural Southerners and their sensibilities. Confederate flags appeared
everywhere you looked, flown from private homes and public buildings and
adorning the back windows of pickups. Monuments
to Jeff Davis and Bobby Lee occupied more than a few town squares and main
streets, not to mention those dedicated to lesser champions of the Lost
Cause.
When people did mention it, they faithfully described
it as the War between the States. Oftentimes
they would take pains to make sure you understood that the conflict concerned
the South’s defense of the sacred principle of states’ rights and not the
unsavory reasons given by outsiders. And,
to punctuate the public relations effort in furtherance of an image of a benign Confederacy,
T-shirts and bumper stickers emblazoned with the Battle Flag and the slogan, “Heritage,
not Hate.”
The events of the past few days have made me
think hard about this particular conceit.
The Confederate flag has been brandished as a symbol of white
nationalism and resistance to equal rights for people of color at least since
the middle of the last century. Since
the November election, the fringe right and its white nationalist comrades have
been emboldened to raise the movement's public profile.
This week’s tragedy in Charlottesville was foreshadowed by the increased
media attention right-wing agitators have received since Donald Trump’s
election and the semi-respectability such attention confers.
The angry young men with their bulged-eyed shouts
of “White Power!” we see on TV are interspersed with the occasional calm,
soothing talking head telling us that they’re not really racists. They’re just standing up for their rights as European
Americans in the same way African Americans and Latinos and Asian Americans and
Native Americans have. They just want
their own civil rights. And the
Confederate paraphernalia? That’s
heritage, not hate.
None of this would be comment worthy if it wasn’t
for this point of view resonating among mainstream whites. Over the past months I’ve heard veiled
approval from acquaintances not just for Trump but for the increasingly
high-profile opinions of media figures belonging to the fringe and “alt” right. The gist of their attitude is that while some of the agitators are rough
around the edges, they’re saying what has to be said in the face of political
correctness.
Such low key murmurs of approval among ordinary people surely have not gone unnoticed. The public pronouncements of our leaders haven't done much to discourage, either. The President’s bizarre and
muddled initial response to the violence at this week’s Unite the Right rally
in Charlottesville can be interpreted as further license by the extremists.
But by now we’ve become desensitized to expressions
of extremism. James Fields, the man who
drove his car into the counter-protestors in Charlottesville, openly expressed
Nazi sympathies in high school. They
were probably dismissed as drivel from an attention-seeking misfit, but in this
case Fields’ thoughts eventually had awful consequences.
However, most loudmouthed jerks don’t end up committing
violent acts on this scale, and murdering whackjobs like James Fields are
mercifully rare. It’s the quiet,
well-spoken apologists, the “heritage-not-hate” contingent, who present the
greater threat long term.
Their task is made all the easier because of
our collective amnesia. Memorials to Confederate
leaders and the Confederate dead saturate the South a century and a half after
the guns fell silent. Public school history
textbooks treat Jefferson Davis as the near moral equivalent of Abraham
Lincoln.
Ditto for Robert E. Lee versus Ulysses
Grant. As recently as the 1980s, a
school district in Texas seriously considered adopting a high school history
text which insinuated that the slaves were content with their lot. (Which sounds a lot like claims we’ve heard lately
from the far right that African Americans were better off as slaves.) The subtext that the Confederacy and all it stood for was not all that bad and perhaps good or even noble permeates prevalent views on race and of race relations.
The implications of the current discourse are unsettling. Charlottesville will fade from memory as time
moves on and other, newer tragedies befall us.
But the attitudes which are gradually polarizing the public will have
lasting and possibly dire consequences if we don’t craft a compelling
counternarrative.
Because in addition to failing to define a
viable alternative to the economic immiseration of the neoliberal epoch, the
progressive left is quickly losing what may be its last best
opportunity to convince the white mainstream that racial equality is in
its best interest. The lesson from
Charlottesville is that time is short.
© 2017 The Unassuming Scholar
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