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stu2002
07-01-2010, 05:07 AM
Robert Byrd, Democrats, and the KKK
Posted by Jim Goad on June 30, 2010

Robert Byrd, after living nearly as long as Methuselah and having served in the US Senate since shortly after Brutus stabbed Caesar, has died. Throughout his unpardonably lengthy stint as a public servant, he represented the rollingly rural hills of West Virginia, America’s third-whitest state.

Upon his death, Byrd was the only living member of Congress known to have been a member of the Ku Klux Klan. But despite that, and despite his white-knuckled opposition to Civil Rights legislation in the 1960s, and his characterization of MLK as a “trouble-maker,” and his impenitent use of the “N-word” (i.e., “******”) on TV as recently as 2001—his public legacy remains only slightly tarnished rather than the character-murder he’d have faced if, say, he’d been a Republican. Since he apologized, and since he was a Democrat, he’s been forgiven.

After all, Byrd claimed to have been affiliated with the Klan for only a year. Then again, it was enough time for him to have ascended to the roles of Kleagle and Exalted Cyclops, both of which sound frighteningly authoritative to me, who has never been so much as invited to a Klan meeting. At least three years after Byrd purportedly severed ties with the dastardly Hate Group, he wrote a letter to a Grand Wizard in which he stated, “The Klan is needed today as never before and I am anxious to see its rebirth here in West Virginia.” Byrd also didn’t seem all too fond of darkies when, in opposing integration of the US Armed Forces, he wrote, “Rather I should die a thousand times, and see Old Glory trampled in the dirt never to rise again, than to see this beloved land of ours become degraded by race mongrels, a throwback to the blackest specimen from the wilds.”

A full two decades after leaving the Klan, Byrd led the filibuster against the Civil Rights Act of 1964, foaming and frothing and fulminating for over 14 hours until Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen—a Republican and one of the law’s authors—invoked cloture and passed the bill through Byrd’s intolerantly knobby knees. By the by, a much higher quotient of Republicans voted for the Civil Rights Act than did Democrats. Same thing happened during the next year’s Voting Rights Act.

“Truth is, the Democrats had been rolling with their own ‘Southern Strategy’ for a full century prior to Nixon’s presidency. But unlike Nixon, their strategy involved beatings and lynchings and voter fraud.”

I’ve often heard the terms “Republican” and “Klansman” used as if they were synonymous. But who actually birthed the Ku Klux Klan, the White League, the Red Shirts, and the countless other white-supremacist organizations who terrorized, torched, and lynched blacks during and after Reconstruction?

Though hearing this news might hit you like a knee to the groin, these mobs were all organized and supported by the Democrats—at a time, mind you, when nearly all black voters were Republicans and the Party of Lincoln was electing black legislators in, um, spades.

Who wrote the Black Codes and the Jim Crow laws? Democrats. Who fought against the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments? Democrats. Who consistently opposed anti-lynching legislation? Democrats. Who endorsed Anglo-Saxon destiny and white racial purity? Democrats. Who came up with the poll taxes, literacy tests, residency requirements, and wholesale disfranchisement of the poor? Democrats, And which party did the Solid White South vote for starting from Reconstruction all the way up to the 1960s? Democrats, Democrats, Democrats.

Of course, you never hear about any of that. The way history is spun these days, Richard Nixon cynically concocted racial politics with his “Southern Strategy” sometime around 1970. Truth is, the Democrats had been rolling with their own “Southern Strategy” for a full century prior to Nixon’s presidency. But unlike Nixon, their strategy involved beatings and lynchings and voter fraud.

Who was that dude who opposed those integrated lunch counters in South Carolina? Why, it was Democratic Senator Ernest Hollings. Who stood in front of an Alabama schoolhouse in 1963 and proclaimed, “Segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever”? That was Alabama Governor George Wallace—also a Democrat. Who was that fella who wielded an axe handle at Negroes and permanently closed his Atlanta restaurant rather than serve them? That would be Lester Maddox, a Democrat who eventually became Georgia’s governor. And who used his own state police to block the integration of a Little Rock high school all the way back in ’57? We all know the answer to that one— Democratic Arkansas Governor Orval “Born With a Racist-Sounding Name” Faubus.

“But that was then and this is now,” you say. Yes, yes, I get it—times have changed. These days, the Democrats are all about Ghetto Luv. But for a huge chunk of their history, they were the Klan’s Best Friend. And through it all, they’ve been so fixated on race, it’s as if they’ve impaled themselves with it.

I give props to the Democrats for successfully selling the Big Lie that they always have been, and will always remain, the post-racial party. By casting Republicans—a group founded in 1854 primarily to end slavery—as The Racist Party, the Democrats appear to have pulled off one of the most impressive cases of large-scale guilt-projection in political history. Really, it took a jumbo-sized set of donkey balls to accomplish what they’ve done.

Article URL: http://www.takimag.com/site/article/robert_byrd_democrats_and_the_kkk/

bobbyw24
07-01-2010, 05:10 AM
I’ve often heard the terms “Republican” and “Klansman” used as if they were synonymous. But who actually birthed the Ku Klux Klan, the White League, the Red Shirts, and the countless other white-supremacist organizations who terrorized, torched, and lynched blacks during and after Reconstruction?

Though hearing this news might hit you like a knee to the groin, these mobs were all organized and supported by the Democrats—at a time, mind you, when nearly all black voters were Republicans and the Party of Lincoln was electing black legislators in, um, spades.

Who wrote the Black Codes and the Jim Crow laws? Democrats.

Aratus
07-01-2010, 08:13 AM
i had accepted his word and very public apology.
Oprah, Teddy K. and Bobby Byrd are indeed the three
power people who helped BARACK OBAMA get elected... so
was ROBERT BYRD always into being a "yellow dawg" democrat?
if he was always a southern old school jacksonian at times
who over time went sorta into a gov't socialism via the
gov't projects he tucked away inside west virginia...

catdd
07-01-2010, 08:29 AM
I posted something about this a few months back and it slid off the boards like a conspiracy theory. The democrats have a long racist history; "Ah, but this is all in the past," say the Democrats. "Now we push a pro-African-American agenda." But the reality differs significantly from the claim...
http://www.ashbrook.org/publicat/oped/owens/02/racism.html

Aratus
07-01-2010, 08:42 AM
FDR's NEW DEAL presidency was a seismic shift...
prior to that many African-Americans voted G.O.P

lester1/2jr
07-01-2010, 08:55 AM
Goad is my good friend

South Park Fan
07-01-2010, 10:58 AM
A lot of those racist Democrats were also New Dealers. Many of them left after Civil Rights, such as Strom Thurmond and others, which is why the Republican Party is also infested with big government "social conservatives".

osan
07-01-2010, 03:20 PM
I posted something about this a few months back and it slid off the boards like a conspiracy theory. The democrats have a long racist history; "Ah, but this is all in the past," say the Democrats. "Now we push a pro-African-American agenda." But the reality differs significantly from the claim...
http://www.ashbrook.org/publicat/oped/owens/02/racism.html (http://www.ashbrook.org/publicat/oped/owens/02/racism.html)

Given the history, one must give credit where due, both to the Democrats for having managed this, and to Johnny Average for his nearly immeasurable gullibility. That any American of African extraction would vote for a Democrat is something of mind numbing when one considers what is required to arrive at such a choice in such a context. But never fear, there's plenty of stupidity to go around.

catdd
07-01-2010, 08:05 PM
I've heard a few that see through the liberal trick but many are content to live off the welfare state and vote democrat.

LibForestPaul
07-01-2010, 08:45 PM
Thread hijack...

90+, was he really casting any votes conscious?

rich34
07-02-2010, 12:00 AM
Thread hijack...

90+, was he really casting any votes conscious?

I'm from WV. There were some things that I did appreciate, but others I didn't. But as far as casting votes consciously I'd say yes he did. The man was very frail, but his mind was still very much there. Most probably don't know, but he actually attacked Obama pretty harshly not more than a year ago over all of those "czars" that he was appointing and how unconstitutional they were. Obviously the man is no Ron Paul, but for a politician, who is? I had no idea that he was one of the main people that helped Obama get elected because actually he didn't endorse Obama until late in the game. On the other hand our Jr. Senator, now Sr. Senator, Rockefeller did come out very early and back Obama and the people of WV really blowed up his office here in Charleston over doing it because WV wanted Hillary big time. I would have thought that Rockefeller was more instrumental in helping Obama getting elected than Byrd. When Obama came here to Charleston to campaign Byrd wasn't even there, but ole Rocky was. My wife is a sign language interpreter and she actually did the sign language part for Obama when he gave his speach. But don't worry guys, I let them know right up front that we were very STRONG Ron Paul supporters! Even after the speech the guy that took us back stage started asking questions if that speech swayed us and I said HELL NO I'm a Ron Paul supporter even if I have to write his name in! Believe it or not, but the guy actually said he liked Ron Paul and if there was a republican that he liked the most it was him. There was more to our conversations, but I'll leave it at that.

michaelwise
07-02-2010, 12:07 AM
Robert Byrd is dead. Long be dead Robert Byrd.

South Park Fan
07-02-2010, 12:07 AM
I'm from WV. There were some things that I did appreciate, but others I didn't. But as far as casting votes consciously I'd say yes he did. The man was very frail, but his mind was still very much there. Most probably don't know, but he actually attacked Obama pretty harshly not more than a year ago over all of those "czars" that he was appointing and how unconstitutional they were. Obviously the man is no Ron Paul, but for a politician, who is? I had no idea that he was one of the main people that helped Obama get elected because actually he didn't endorse Obama until late in the game. On the other hand our Jr. Senator, now Sr. Senator, Rockefeller did come out very early and back Obama and the people of WV really blowed up his office here in Charleston over doing it because WV wanted Hillary big time. I would have thought that Rockefeller was more instrumental in helping Obama getting elected than Byrd. When Obama came here to Charleston to campaign Byrd wasn't even there, but ole Rocky was. My wife is a sign language interpreter and she actually did the sign language part for Obama when he gave his speach. But don't worry guys, I let them know right up front that we were very STRONG Ron Paul supporters! Even after the speech the guy that took us back stage started asking questions if that speech swayed us and I said HELL NO I'm a Ron Paul supporter even if I have to write his name in! Believe it or not, but the guy actually said he liked Ron Paul and if there was a republican that he liked the most it was him. There was more to our conversations, but I'll leave it at that.

Even if true, Byrd did still support Obamacare, the Bailouts, the PATRIOT Act, and REAL ID

Flash
07-02-2010, 12:17 AM
On the other hand our Jr. Senator, now Sr. Senator, Rockefeller did come out very early and back Obama and the people of WV really blowed up his office here in Charleston over doing it because WV wanted Hillary big time

Why would the people want Hillary Clinton over Obama so passionately? Didn't they realize they agree on almost everything? Or was there another reason?

rich34
07-02-2010, 12:28 AM
Why would the people want Hillary Clinton over Obama so passionately? Didn't they realize they agree on almost everything? Or was there another reason?

Dude, WV is the third whitest state in the country. Why did Kentucky vote overwhelmingly for Hillary as well? I'm sure race did play a factor, but why not go ahead and call out the states where blacks overwhelmingly voted over 90% for Obama? That shit goes both ways. I agree though, they are both the same..

rich34
07-02-2010, 12:31 AM
Even if true, Byrd did still support Obamacare, the Bailouts, the PATRIOT Act, and REAL ID

I agree, he was very much establishment. Never said he wasn't. Or as Ron Paul says maybe he and the democrats truely believe their philosophy really helps people, I don't know. Imo, both democrats and republicans at the upper levels are one in the same. Republicans talk shit about cutting spending, cutting the size of government, cutting taxes, deficits etc...but when you look at Reagan and Bush what happened? There's no difference.. Pro intervention overseas and here at home, nuff said.

Aratus
07-02-2010, 08:23 AM
the senator's body is now in charleston, the washington leg of the memorial services was more
private than that we saw for teddy kennedy. talk is of a special election to fill his seat by this january.
to his dying breathe he may have kept us out of iran as he questioned what we were doing in iraq.

rich34
07-02-2010, 04:46 PM
the senator's body is now in charleston, the washington leg of the memorial services was more
private than that we saw for teddy kennedy. talk is of a special election to fill his seat by this january.
to his dying breathe he may have kept us out of iran as he questioned what we were doing in iraq.

Believe me guys, as a West Virginian, he'll be replaced by someone that is ALOT worse! Watch and see! Aratus, this is the first I've heard of a possible special election. I'm actually a state worker and while I admit I haven't read any of the local media today, the last I heard is that our governor is still going to appoint someone to fill his seat and then they're will be a special election in 2012. If there's honestly a special election this year, hell with it I'll go to the secretary of states office and file the papers. I'm a nobody (see above "state worker), but everyone at work calls me Ron Paul:) I'll give it a whirl, after all, this is the year of the "outsider."

Aratus
07-03-2010, 11:50 AM
the Washington Post yesterday was speculative...