Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Removing Confederate Flag is Just the Start — The Left Will Demand Reparations for Slavery

Yep, from the radical left's point of view, the political end of the Confederate Flag is the beginning of the final assault on American conservatism. The left's hatred and bloodlust is insatiable.

Reparations for slavery. That's the next frontier in the debate, and then once that's done, the final demonization of traditional values. You're getting your "Hope and Change." Stand in the way, and expect the knock in the night. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn is turning as we speak.

From Jill Lawrence, at U.S. News and World Report, "Getting Rid of the Confederate Flag Is the Easy Part – Hard Work Remains":

It's not what anyone wants to hear, but compassion and prayers and even rejecting the Confederate flag – as South Carolina appears poised to do -- are the simplest tasks facing America after Charleston.

Rarely is there a tragedy that fuses so many troubling and inflammatory elements. Race and racism, guns and mental illness, religion and terrorism, slavery and the Civil War, all in a terrible roiling stew. Confronting all of that will be divisive and expensive, especially if we do what we should and offer reparations for slavery.

As a first response, compassion and prayers are commendable, as is appreciation of the grace and forgiveness shown by relatives of the victims in the Mother Emanuel AME church shooting. Saddleback Church Pastor Rick Warren has more ideas in that vein: Be peacemakers and healers, stand for justice, "model integration in our churches." Those are constructive suggestions for everyone.

But there's no way to address our fundamental problems without diving deep into politics. That starts with the flag, which only now is being called out by many for what it is: a symbol of slavery and a breakaway self-proclaimed nation built on a pernicious belief in white superiority....

Exiling that flag is, in the end, symbolic. There are at least four more steps we need that go well beyond that. I've arranged them in the order that I consider least to most controversial.

First, we need to track and treat mental illness to a much greater degree than we do. This will involve more spending and more support for people who suspect a friend or relative might pose a danger. One immediate opportunity to increase access to mental health care is for Texas, Florida and other holdout states to adopt the Medicaid expansion in the Affordable Care Act.

We also need to track domestic terrorism, including groups based on hatred of blacks and other minorities...

These are political realities. The shooter was enamored of the Confederate flag. Earl Holt, leader of the council the shooter admired, has contributed money to many Republicans and their political action committees, including 2012 presidential nominee Mitt Romney and 2016 candidates Ted Cruz, Rand Paul and Rick Santorum.

The GOP might also want to ponder this: According to Sylvia Johnson, whose cousin died in the Charleston attack and who spoke with one of the survivors, the shooter told his victims: "I have to do it. You rape our women, and you're taking over our country. And you have to go." How different is that from what Donald Trump said of Mexicans in his announcement speech? "They're bringing drugs. They're bringing crime. They're rapists ... It's gotta stop, and it's gotta stop fast."

The sooner Republicans explicitly reject the flag, Holt's money and Trump's rhetoric, the better.

Broadly popular gun safety measures such as comprehensive background checks present the next level of challenge....

Finally, and most controversially, we should consider reparations...
Read the whole thing at the link, but as you can see, the left won't stop with the flag. And without a doubt, tearing it down is the right thing to do, but conservatives must beat back the left, mercilessly so. The left's allegations of racism won't stop, and demands for gun control won't either. Conservatives have the high ground now coming out of Nikki Haley's announcement and leftists can't stand it. They have to seize the day and raise the standard of moral clarity before it's too late.



Confederate Flag Sales Surge

Folks should be able to fly the flag privately, and wear Confederate paraphernalia all they want.

At this point, it's massive resistance against the radical left's massive hate campaign.

I'm sure Stogie'll be pleased.

At the New York Times, "As Retailers Move to Halt Confederate Flag Sales, Some Buyers Stock Up":

Entering a debate that has played out for years mostly in the political realm, many of the nation’s largest retailers abruptly decided this week to stop selling merchandise tied to the Confederate battle flag.

One by one, beginning with Walmart on Monday night, companies including Sears/Kmart, eBay, Amazon, Etsy and Google Shopping disavowed, sometimes in strong moral terms, merchandise that has been sold quietly for decades.

“We have decided to prohibit Confederate flags and many items containing this image because we believe it has become a contemporary symbol of divisiveness and racism,” eBay said in a statement, echoing the sentiments of others in the aftermath of the fatal shooting last week of nine black parishioners in a South Carolina church and the arrest of a white suspect.

The killings have renewed a focus on the Confederate flag, which had been displayed in a photograph of the accused gunman. Large segments of the public have demanded that it be removed from its perch at the State House grounds in Columbia. On Tuesday, as the flag continued to be held up as a symbol of hatred and slavery, South Carolina lawmakers were considering whether to have it taken down....

Yet even as companies were vowing to discontinue the items, sales of them were soaring. Confederate flags jumped to the top of Amazon’s Patio, Lawn & Garden category, with purchases of some items spiking by more than 5,000 percent.

By midafternoon Tuesday, the Dixie Flag Company in San Antonio had sold 25 Confederate flags in 24 hours, according to the company’s president, Pete Van de Putte. Usually, the company has no more than three orders a week for the flags and sometimes only three in a month, he said.

The reasons for the purchases varied significantly. One customer at a small Georgia shop told the owner she wanted to line her front yard with Confederate flags. Mr. Van de Putte said a black man had come into Dixie Flags on Monday with his young daughter seeking to buy the biggest Confederate flag in the store. He said he was buying it to burn it.

While large retailers were feeling public pressure to pull the items from their shelves and websites, a number of smaller companies refused to stop selling Confederate-related merchandise, no matter how controversial...
Better stock up while supplies last. You never what the left will try to shut down next.

That said, I prefer the California Bear Flag.

More at Pajamas, "Confederate Battle Flag Sales Through the Roof."

What GOP Candidates Need to Speak to, Now

From Hugh Hewitt, at Town Hall:
"This is not about guns. This is about evil. Here at home, and evil abroad."

No GOP candidate for president has yet used those words but I hope some and perhaps all of them will before a week or more passes. I do not fault any of them as they have waited on Governor Haley to make her declaration about the flag of the Confederacy that flies on the grounds of the South Carolina state house. Governor Haley's actions and words Monday were powerful because they were not the consequence of demands made on her by her colleagues from other states, but because she, as the leader of a sovereign state, acted to do the right thing. In a federal system, this is the correct order of things, and the GOP candidates who waited on Governor Haley demonstrated the very sort of presidential leadership we should hope for come 2017 --one that recognizes the governors and their states as partners in a federal system, not errand-runners of a New Rome.

Now, though, the would-be presidents ought to heed Michael Gerson's advice delivered on "Face the Nation" Sunday.

When I was asked to be on Sunday's FTN panel, I had gladly accepted because the new host John Dickerson is a pro admired throughout media and especially because I have just put out a new book about Hillary Clinton and the GOP field, The Queen: The Epic Ambition of Hillary and the Coming of a Second "Clinton Era". I of course hadn't anticipated being part of a discussion on a national tragedy, one of the worst events of our country's life since 9/11.

I was smart enough to attend Mass Sunday morning at The Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle before FTN taped, and so had the benefit of prayer and of hearing a tremendous sermon that helped prepare me for the discussion that was ably led by Dickerson and in which I, Gwen Ifill, David Ignatius and Michael Gerson participated.

Gwen Ifill had also been to church that morning -- Metropolitan AME in D.C. -- and had also heard a sermon preached on the portion of the fourth chapter of the Gospel of Mark that follows a few lines after those which the martyrs of Emmanuel AME had been studying Wednesday night. The lines my priest and her pastor dwelt on, Mark 4: 35-41, are about Jesus calming the storm and rebuking the apostles for not having faith and for being afraid. The GOP candidates ought to be thinking about calming words now, and about rebuking fear and inspiring hope.

In the course of our conversation Sunday, The Post's Michael Gerson urged the GOP field to step up and into the conversation about violence and race in America, and I completely agree. They ought to be thinking about being very clear that the discussion of guns is not the right discussion, and that various proposals of gun control are not responsive to the two-sided crisis of violence we face -- violence in our streets and homes and the looming threat of terrorism which is again peaking as the Islamic State and its allies launch a thousand appeals for wanton killing in the name of their fanatical beliefs. Even as they speak about the events that stretch from the killing of Trayvon Martin through the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson and other events through to the carnage of last week, they have to keep reminding people that terrorists want nothing more than an American body count far in excess of what happened last week, and that they are positioning themselves to gain that objective.

Philip Rucker of the Washington Post wrote yesterday that Mrs. Clinton has declared "We have to face hard truths about race, violence, guns and division." Of course she has done nothing of the sort, choosing instead to issue a string of cliches and a broadside at Donald Trump -- to which he responded on my show yesterday.

But that Mrs. Clinton is trying to politicize the event should not deter Republican leaders from stepping up to meet Gerson's challenge...
More.

States Rush to Banish the Confederate Flag

This is going to be viewed as a huge victory for the radical left.

At WaPo, "Once politically sacrosanct, Confederate flag moves toward an end":

After decades of bitter debate over whether the Confederate battle flag is a proud symbol of regional heritage or a shameful emblem of this nation’s most grievous sins, the argument may finally be moving toward an end.

South Carolina is leading the way for other states, as it considers removing the flag from its capitol grounds in the wake of a horrific racial hate crime.

The historical poignancy is heavy and resonant, given that the killings last week of nine African Americans took place in a church basement just a few miles from where the first shots of the Civil War were exchanged in 1861. Photos that have since surfaced of the accused killer, Dylann Roof, show him posing with the Confederate flag.

The banner was long considered politically sacrosanct in the South, at least among conservative whites. It now appears that a rush is on to banish it, along with other images that evoke the Confederacy and sow racial divisiveness.

“It’s a baby step of progress, but we had to step through the blood of nine dead people,” said former College of Charleston president Alex Sanders, a longtime critic of the flag.

On Tuesday, Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) said his state will quit issuing license plates with the insignia and replace those already on the road. Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam and North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory, both Republicans, also said they want to get rid of such license plates in their states.

And in Mississippi, the top Republican in the state House of Representatives, Philip Gunn, has called for the Confederate battle cross to be removed from the upper left corner of his state’s flag. As recently as 2001, Mississippi voters weighed in by more than 2 to 1 to retain the rebel badge as the dominant feature of their flag.

Meanwhile, businesses are moving quickly to remove the symbol from their inventory. In the space of less than 24 hours, retailing giants Wal-Mart, Sears, eBay and Amazon.com all announced that they would no longer sell Confederate-themed merchandise. Valley Forge Flag, a leading flagmaker, said it will cease to make the banner...
Other flagmakers will step up to meet the demand, but now more than ever brandishing this flag is going to foment a harsh backlash. Folks like my old friend Stogie at Saberpoint are going to be digging in for their final stand.

Continue reading, in any case.

Cubs Fan Holding His Baby Catches Foul Ball, Interference Called

Heh.

Adrian Gonzales had a sure out.

At the Chicago Tribune, "Cubs fan nabs foul while bottle-feeding his infant son."

Also at MLB, "Video: Dodgers challenge ball in play."


Denise Milani Rule 5 Flashback

Haven't seen this babe in awhile.

Flashback: "Midweek Diversions Roundup."

(A number of those are dead links. That was five years ago, eons in blog years.)

Ms. Milani's on Twitter.

Bonus: At the Other McCain, "Rule 5 Sunday: Pipe Dreams," and Theo Spark's, "Is That an HB Pencil?"

Denise Milani photo denise_milani_look_black_6_big_zpsqazj0dr4.jpg

Demi Moore Bikini Pics

She looks great.

At London's Daily Mail, "She's Flawless! Demi Moore, 52, flaunts her AMAZING bikini body posing in tiny two-piece for Instagram snap with daughters Tallulah and Scout."

The Left's Liberal Fascism

Via Serr8d on Twitter.

And buy the book, Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left, From Mussolini to the Politics of Change.


Curvy Kelly Brook

She's so lovely.


'Sodomite Suppression Act' Struck Down in Sacramento County Superior Court

It's a good thing.

What a nasty proposal and demonic idea.

At LAT, "Judge strikes down proposed 'Sodomite Suppression Act' calling for killing of gays."

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Pakistan Heatwave Leaves Hundreds Dead as Government Cuts Electrical Power

This is an astonishing loss of life.

At the BBC, "Pakistan heatwave: Death toll crosses 700 people in Sindh":
There is anger among local residents at the authorities because power cuts have restricted the use of air-conditioning units and fans, correspondents say.

Matters have been made worse by the widespread abstention from water during daylight hours during the fasting month of Ramadan.
Wouldn't want to get Allah pissed off or anything, and no doubt the government's cutting power to appease the gods of global warming.

Sad.

More at Euronews, "Anger at Karachi power cuts as hundreds die in Pakistan heatwave."

Hillary Clinton Urges Retailers to Remove #Confederate Flag Merchandise

Convenient, that.

Especially since eBay was proffering the Hillary Clinton 2008 Confederate flag buttons.

And she used to be on Wal-Mart's corporate board, as a director even? Wonders never cease.

At the Los Angeles Times, "More retailers should remove Confederate flag products, Hillary Clinton says":
Hillary Rodham Clinton on Tuesday praised Wal-Mart and other retailers for refusing to sell products bearing the Confederate flag, as she pushed for a broader conversation about modern-day, institutionalized racism and policies to address it.

Speaking at a black church near Ferguson, Mo., Clinton, who once served on the Wal-Mart board, urged “all sellers” to follow the lead set by the Arkansas-based retailer, as well as eBay, Amazon and Sears. Those companies have announced plans to purge their inventories of the Confederate symbol in the wake of the massacre in a Charleston, S.C., church.

Clinton also praised South Carolina leaders for steps toward removing the flag from the statehouse grounds. Republican Gov. Nikki Haley and other state leaders have recognized the Confederate banner "as a symbol of our nation’s racist past that has no place in our present or our future,” Clinton said to cheers. “It shouldn’t fly there, it shouldn’t fly anywhere.”

The remarks represented Clinton's second extended discussion of racism in America since the shooting in a historically black church left nine black churchgoers dead last week.

As the leading Democratic contender for the presidency, Clinton has jumped into the national conversation that has followed the shooting. It has given her an opportunity to burnish her standing among her party’s liberal core, including African American voters, and to strike a strong contrast with Republicans.

The U.S. and South Carolina flags are seen flying at half-staff behind the Confederate flag, which is erected at a war memorial on the South Carolina Capitol grounds. Controversy over displaying the Confederate flag, which some say is a symbol of white supremacy and hatred, has ensued after the Charleston, S.C., shooting.

On Tuesday, she took her campaign to Florissant, Mo., less than four miles from the spot where Michael Brown, a black 18-year-old, was shot last August by a white police officer, fueling the recent national debate over race and inequities in the justice system.

"All lives matter," Clinton declared, picking up on the rallying cry -- "black lives matter" -- of the movement that grew out of the protests in Ferguson, Mo.
All lives matter?

That's racist. I expect she'll get a pass for that, though, seeing how she's scooping up Democrat voter with all this pandering.

eBay to Ban Sale of Confederate Flag Merchandise

At CNN.

Well, eBay had all the Clinton Confederate flags, so faster than you can say Dixie! eBay pulled the goods off their site.

And it's not just eBay. See, "Walmart, Amazon, Sears, eBay to stop selling Confederate flag merchandise."



Dashcam Video of Dylann Roof Arrest

I can't believe anyone would think this controversial, but the cops celebrated on arresting the f-ker.

Via Memeorandum.



New Response at Saberpoint! Stogie Got Game!

Word brah, the old Stogie's got game!

See his classic left-wing "fisking" here: "A Point by Point Rebuttal of Donald Douglas on 'Why the Civil War Was Not About Slavery'."

And my response:
Stogie: Pounding your chest and harrumphing about how you're "winning" the argument is hardly convincing, and actually kind of pathetic.

I don't think you know what a straw man is. This so-called "myth" you talk about isn't part of the mainstream history and standard interpretations of the antebellum institution of slavery, especially conservative interpretations. You're clearing grasping. Further, I don't think you know what federalism is, and you completely ignore my discussion of congressional action on slavery since 1800. You ignore it because it doesn't fit your narrative of the innocent South and the evil North. Just because you hate federalism, and especially the doctrine of national supremacy emerging out of McCulloch, that doesn't mean you can blow off such central historical moments in American political development. In that you're like Livingston, who completely decontextualizes the issues and distorts and lies about what Lincoln believed and actually said.

Plus, it's a false premise that "Congress did nothing" to end slavery. Congress continued to regulate slavery right through the 1850s. Remember, as you say, the North was racist just like the South. Abolition wasn't the burning issue for anyone. What was burning is the balance of power in Congress, and the desire of folks like Lincoln to keep slavery out of the North --- because of political questions of power. They did this, of course, because they simultaneously believed Jeffersonian notions of inalienable rights. Racist ideologies among Northerners do nothing to change that fact. Livingston's argument is lame. It's like name-calling. You're doing the same thing, and it's childish. Both you and Livingston distort Lincoln's views on slavery and you ignore his actual words. That's what leftists do. You're both Gramscian and Derridean in constructing false narratives that bear no resemblance to reality. I quoted Lincoln's own words and contextualized them the way Lincoln himself did in his 1862 address to Congress. Just because you don't like it isn't a justification to be dishonest about not only what he said, but about my analysis as well.

Livingston indeed does discuss "presentist ideological agendas." Talking about Senator James DeWolff of Rhode Island, Livingston writes that "it is difficult for us to­day to read the expression anti-slavery without importing our own 21st centu­ry moral sensibilities into it." That is presentist epistemology, and those who employ it are taking history out of context (see historian Gordon Wood, "History in Context": http://www.weeklystandard.com/articles/history-context_850083.html). Unfortunately, Livingston's piece employs the very same kind of presentism to decontextualize the development of slavery in antebellum America. He does this throughout his discussion of moral philosophies. Are you sure you've read this article carefully, Stogie, or is your response just more boilerplate "Lincoln is evil" ideology lifted from the radical libertarian fever swamps?

Well, Stogie, the piece certainly is an "ideological screed," as I've shown throughout my essay, but since you share that ideology, you're forced to desperately defend it. Indeed, despite your furtive attempts to rebut Livingston's lies and decontexualization, you simply declare victory, and write that my comments "are those of someone losing an argument, and knows it." Actually, I don't know it. I'm only going on to say what I think of Livingston's writing, and I don't think well of it. He's a hack historian with an ideological ax to grind.

And by the way, my so called "ad hominem" arguments are not in fact the key arguments against this hack. I noted that I'd append a "bloggy" section simply because there's so much low hanging fruit. You yourself have slammed Lew Rockwell numerous times, so it's no surprise you'd blow off Livingston's fringe connections as "irrelevant." I think you're a good man, and I know you're better that that from reading this blog for 8 years.

In any case, thanks for the discussion. I'm learning a lot, as always!
More to come, especially if Stogie's still got game!

PREVIOUSLY: ICYMI, "Response to Stogie at Saberpoint and 'Why the Civil War Was Not About Slavery...'"

President Obama on 'WTF with Marc Maron': 'I know what I'm doing and I'm fearless...'

Obama's comments came on Marc Maron's show, "WTF Podcast - Episode 613 - President Barack Obama."

Also at Big Government, "OBAMA USES THE ’N WORD’ DURING INTERVIEW ON COMEDIAN’S PODCAST."

And at the New York Times, "Making a Point, Obama Invokes a Painful Slur."

Look, he's fearless and he can spout the hateful "n-word" with no political recriminations.



Hillary Clinton 2008 Campaign Confederate Flag Merchandise on eBay

Here's the debate we should be having.

When will Hillary Clinton and the Democrats renounce their ties to the racist symbolism of Jim Crow, domestic terrorism, and the Confederate Battle Flag?



Added: Here's another button, via the Evil Blogger Lady:


Further Response to Stogie at Saberpoint and 'Why the Civil War Was Not About Slavery...'

Okay, following up on my morning entry, "Response to Stogie at Saberpoint and 'Why the Civil War Was Not About Slavery...'"

Stogie commented at the post. Here's my response:
Stogie, I broke the commentary into two sections. Focus on section one, where I make three augments. You do not contest these? And you're arguing a straw man here. I never said Lincoln didn't think blacks were inferior. I also don't deny that the North was racist. You can't address what I actually said so you attack me as "unethical." Frankly, Livingston's argument is shoddy. It's shit. On top of that he's a crank. I entered into this discussion with good faith. You said you had nothing further to discuss until I read the Livingston piece. I've read it. It's a terrible attempt at historical analysis. Do you want to respond to the points I've actually raised?
And I left another response at Saberpoint:
Okay, Stogie, I've read Professor Livingston's piece and I find it to be a terrible piece of historical writing. Here, "Response to Stogie at Saberpoint and 'Why the Civil War Was Not About Slavery...': http://americanpowerblog.blogspot.com/2015/06/response-to-stogie-at-saberpoint-and.html...

At your comment you don't respond to my substantive points. You don't respond to them at all. Livingston makes all kinds of juvenile logical fallacies. Frankly, he's arguing against straw men and phantoms. No one denies the North was racist. You yourself continue to point out the North's racism as if this exonerates the South. The entire country was racist. Further, I've never said Lincoln was anti-racist. I said at the post that Livingston completely decontextualizes Lincoln's positions on slavery, and he issues bald-faced lies about what Lincoln actually said (on the 1862 address to Congress, for example). You don't respond to these because you can't. You fall back to the same tired arguments about how racist the North was, to which all I can say is I agree with you. The difference is that the South seceded. It did not secede because of the tariff. The tariff was a smokescreen for the real issue, which was the freedom of Southerners to own slaves. It doesn't matter how well slaves were treated. It's against universal human rights, the inalienable rights of the Declaration of Independence, to keep and perpetuate chattel slavery. Also, I don't discount the Southern heritage argument and never have. The problem is that those honorable elements of Southern heritage cannot be hermetically sealed off from the deadly and immoral institution of slavery. I'll be glad to continue to discuss the issue. It's not personal to me, frankly. I have no investment in Southern honor. I do have an investment in defending conservatism against the left's diabolical attacks on the right. Why do you insist on helping leftists attack conservatives?
I think I know why Stogie's helping the left? He's proud. He's proud of his Southern heritage. I have no problem with that. I just don't think you can whitewash the South while hysterically demonizing the North and Abraham Lincoln as racist.

Response to Stogie at Saberpoint and 'Why the Civil War Was Not About Slavery...'

Okay, continuing with the discussion from yesterday, Stogie remarked at my comment that you "should read the article I referred you to ... until you do, you are wasting my time."

My comment at issue was elaborated here, "Response to Stogie at Saberpoint on Southern Heritage and the Confederate Flag."

The article Stogie's referring to is Professor Donald Livingston, "Why the Civil War Was Not About Slavery," which is published in full at Stogie's blog.

There's a couple of ways to respond to Livingston's essay. The first way, and more professional, is to pick apart the essay's historical and logical arguments, highlighting especially Livingston's egregious logical fallacies, historical inaccuracies, and frankly, outright lies.

The second way, more partisan and bloggy, is to attack Livingston as a rank ideological hack, driven by fringe ideological tendencies with about as much mainstream acceptance as Holocaust denial. Purportedly a reputable historian, Professor Livingston's professional biography includes links to some rather steamy Southern revisionist outfits --- the kind of organizations with which I'd never associate and of which I lend very little professional credence. Seriously, the guy comes off as rather a crank.

But more about that later. Let's look at a number of problems with his essay from a straightforward historical and political analysis.

First, Livingston argues that to correctly understand the debate on Southern slavery is to expand the playing field to include the entire United States, and to go back to the Founding of 1787 to grasp the universal acceptance of slavery --- with the concomitant national ideology of white supremacy --- in the Northern states, in New England America especially, shortly after the overthrow of British colonialism. By doing this, one can see that slavery as an ideological system of political, social, and economic racial domination wasn't unique to the American South, but rather was a nationwide phenomenon with uniquely Northern characteristics.

The problem with this argument is that it's an extremely simplistic straw man. I mean, I don't claim to have anything nearing a scholarly familiarity with the historical scholarship on antebellum America, North and South. But just frankly from my wide reading of history and my professional teaching of the Founding, the Constitutional Convention, and the growth of slavery throughout the 19th century, to say that slavery was a "national enormity, an American sin for which every section of the Union bore some responsibility," and to use this as an argument against those who attack the South, is simply irrelevant. Of course slavery was a national institution. Slavery was a thoroughgoing institution in all the 13 colonies by the end of the 17th century. Who argues otherwise? Slavery developed in the colonies and after the Constitution of 1787 for almost 150 years. It did break down into regional varieties, as part of the economic regionalism that took hold in the country. For example, by the early- to mid-1800s, rural agrarianism came to be predominantly associated with the South, and with the invention of the cotton gin, the Southern economy become increasingly the locus of cotton production in the U.S., on the backs of slave laborers.

The debate we're having today is the persistence of racial supremacy symbolism in the present day South, like the Confederate Flag, hardly a sign of Northern white supremacy. But the "national enormity" argument is a logical diversion, a fallacy that's easily exposed.

Second, Livingston argues that in antebellum American "no nation" had developed, in the sense of the national unification seen contemporaneously among the European continental states as Britain and France. Further, he claims that the national government couldn't interfere with slavery in the states, that "Congress simply had no constitutional authority to interfere with slavery in the States." This is just a bunch of ideological hooey. It is true that the U.S. remained a largely agrarian, decentralized nation-state in the early 19th century, but the argument ignores monumental developments in constitutional law that created the foundations for what legal and political analysts identify as national supremacy within the system of political federalism. Crucially, majestic Supreme Court cases such as McCulloch v. Maryland expounded nationalist doctrines that placed federal authority as supreme to conflicting state power. Of course the debate on federalism wasn't (practically) resolved until decades later, perhaps not even until the 20th century. But it's absurd to claim that there was no national ideology or national consensus on federal power in the years before the Civil War. Indeed, why would the Southern states bother developing doctrines of nullification and so forth if no national culture and constitutional power had developed?

Livingston goes on, "Since Congress had no power over slavery, and did not want such power, the only way to abolish slavery would be through individual state action or by an amendment to the Constitution." This makes no sense. While any individual state could abolish slavery within its boundaries, all the 27 amendments to the Constitution have been passed by Congress and ratified by the states, including the 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery. Further, major congressional action on slavery took place in 1808 with abolition of the international slave trade, in 1820 with the Missouri Compromise,  and in 1854 with the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Frankly, Congress was at the center of regulatory activity involving slavery right up to the Civil War. Maybe from the perspective of radical states rights' theory Congress "had no power over slavery," but in reality Congress did have such power and passed consequential legislation that shaped national events over decades of time.

Third, Livingston makes a number of bizarre arguments regarding President Abraham Lincoln's positions on slavery, and some of these appear to be bald-faced lies. He argues, for example, that "Lin­coln did not object to slavery as long as it was confined to the South." This is again a red herring, for it's widely recognized that Lincoln was no abolitionist and that even at the time of secession in 1861, Lincoln's fundamental war aims were the preservation of union. Livingston goes on with a number of selective quotations in an attempt to paint Lincoln as pro-slavery as any Southern rebel. The reality is way more complicated, as any historical review of Lincoln political career would recognize. During the Lincoln-Douglas debates, for example, Lincoln made a clear distinction between his acquiescence to slavery in the North and his clearly foundational belief that the Declaration of Independence made all men equal in the eyes of God, and that in the long run the U.S. could not survive with slavery as an institution. When he said a "house divided upon itself cannot stand" it wasn't a political program of abolition as much as a recognition that at some point one side would prevail over the other, either the pro-slavery forces would prevail and slavery would win out over the land or the abolitionists would prevail and slavery would die out altogether.

Livingston in fact lies about the meaning of Lincoln's statement that the United States as "the last best hope of earth." He claims that Lincoln supported colonization of American blacks back to Africa, and that "The 'last best hope of earth' referred to a purely white European polity free of racial strife, and not to a land of freedom for all as it is absurdly interpreted today." Actually, voluntary colonization of slaves and compensated emancipation were just policy alternatives that Lincoln included in his message to Congress in December 1862. A simple reading of the conclusion of his address reveals Lincoln's exceptionalism and his faith in Jefferson's ideals in the Declaration:
Fellow-citizens, we cannot escape history. We of this Congress and this administration, will be remembered in spite of ourselves. No personal significance, or insignificance, can spare one or another of us. The fiery trial through which we pass, will light us down, in honor or dishonor, to the latest generation. We say we are for the Union. The world will not forget that we say this. We know how to save the Union. The world knows we do know how to save it. We -- even we here -- hold the power, and bear the responsibility. In giving freedom to the slave, we assure freedom to the free -- honorable alike in what we give, and what we preserve. We shall nobly save, or meanly lose, the last best hope of earth. Other means may succeed; this could not fail. The way is plain, peaceful, generous, just -- a way which, if followed, the world will forever applaud, and God must forever bless.
I don't know why Livingston would so blatantly distort what Lincoln actually said, other than to chalk it up to dishonesty. Lincoln's views were complicated and developed along with the political necessities of his day.

And it's important to remember that we can't read present-day moral sentiments into history. That is, we cannot apply 21st century normative commitments to the political mores of the mid-19th century. Livingston in fact attacks his critics as adopting a presentist ideological agenda, but much of his essay employs the exact type of presentist commitments that he so decries.

Finally, Livingston breaks down "the main anti-slavery episodes in the antebellum period," from the Constitutional Convention to the Kansas-Ne­braska Act of 1854. Again, there's a lot of arguments against straw men and even more tendentious connections to the historical record. I'm going to eschew a longer analysis simply to avoid repetition. Suffice it to say that Livingston provides completely decontextualized and selective interpretations of historical events, spurts of analysis that really add up to more of an ideological screed than a dispassionate historical critique.

And that brings me to my second, more partisan and bloggy criticism of Professor Livingston. He is indeed a genuine scholar and is Professor Emeritus at Emory University and an expert on the writings of Scottish Enlightenment philosopher David Hume.

But he's a lot more than that. Livingston's a radical libertarian whose ideas place him at the fringes of respectable historical scholarship. The Ludwig von Mises Institute, which originally published "Why the Civil War Was Not About Slavery," is a radical libertarian outfit co-founded by the bona fide crackpot Lew Rockwell. Another co-founder, Murray Rothbard, has the dubious distinction of holding down the lunatic wing of the far-right ideological fringe. (See Jamie Kirchick's discussion of Rothbard's associations with former GOP presidential candidate Ron Paul, at the New Republic, "TNR Exclusive: A Collection of Ron Paul’s Most Incendiary Newsletters," and "TNR Exclusive: More Selections From Ron Paul’s Newsletters." Also, an interesting anonymous online article, "Is it possible for a Jew to also be anti-Semitic? The case of Murray Rothbard.")

Plus, Livingston at one time served as the Director of the League of the South Institute for the Study of Southern Culture and History. Make what you want of this --- and Stogie and Robert Stacy McCain are former members of the League of the South --- but certainly some of the positions of this organization are at the least unsavory and at most completely crackpot, for example, in the group's February celebration of the assassination of President Lincoln (see, "Honoring John Wilkes Booth").

Livingston was profiled at the Chronicle of Higher Education in 2009, "Scholars Nostalgic for the Old South Study the Virtues of Secession, Quietly." According to the piece, in 2003, Livingston founded "the Abbeville Institute, named after the South Carolina birthplace of John C. Calhoun, seventh vice president of the United States and a forceful advocate of slavery and states' rights." And it continues:
On his own campus, Abbe­ville's founder is anything but a pariah. "Mr. Livingston has a great reputation as a professor among his students," says John J. Stuhr, chair of the philosophy department at Emory. "His connection with this institute has not impacted his teaching, research, or campus service by any standard professional measure."

The other Abbeville scholars teach history, philosophy, economics, and literature at institutions including Emory, the University of South Carolina, the University of Georgia, and the University of Virginia. They write books with titles like Defending Dixie: Essays in Southern History and Culture (published by the Foundation for American Education, a nonprofit group "dedicated to the preservation of American culture and learning") and The Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, his Agenda, and an Unnecessary War (Prima). They say the institute's work, although academic in nature, is ­really about values. Its members study the South in search of a history of piety, humility, and manners. The scholars acknowledge a history of bigotry and slavery, but they focus primarily on what they say are the positive aspects of Southern history and culture.

To do so, they have created their own guarded society, something of a secession in its own right. Mr. Livingston will not provide Abbeville's entire list of scholars and participants, because he fears "academics who claim to find something valuable in the Southern tradition are sure to suffer abuse." Institute members say they rarely submit work in the field to mainstream journals. Now they are creating a Web periodical, called Arator, as an outlet. The title is taken from an 1813 book by a Virginia planter and senator named John Taylor, who defended "the socioeconomic and political order of an agrarian republic," according to one description.

Still, the outsiders who have heard of Abbeville tend not to like what they hear. One historian, whose research includes the cultural history of racism and white supremacy in the United States, and who asked for anonymity to avoid becoming a target of "Southern identity groups," says the lectures he has listened to on the Abbeville Web site (http://www.abbevilleinstitute.org) are dominated by racialism and are "ideological, through and through." There is the condemnation from the Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil-rights group. In 2005, Time magazine pegged Abbeville as a group of "Lincoln loathers." Mr. Livingston initially declined to be interviewed for this article, citing bad experiences with the news media. But he eventually agreed to talk, as did a handful of scholars and students involved with the institute...
I want to discount the article's allegations of racism and its reference to the Southern Poverty Law Center, an organization to which I have nothing but disdain. I do not know if Professor Livingston is racist. I think it's noteworthy, though, that Livingston's work through the Abbeville Institute is considered way outside the mainstream of historical scholarship and the members of his groups are in fact self-cloistered into an extreme isolation that goes dramatically against the ideal of a universal community of scholars.

In any case, I know Stogie will take exception to the discussion of Livinston's fringe associations, and I've heard it before. Mostly, the point is Livingston's "Why the Civil War Was Not About Slavery" is the product of a programmatic ideological commitment that is so far outside of the mainstream it's literally ridiculous. Thus, on grounds of both shoddy historical analysis and fringe ideological foundations, the case that the Civil War was not in fact about slavery is preposterous. The notion of "national enormity" is a pathetic straw man and Livingston's substantive historical narratives are either red herrings, inaccurate, or outright falsehoods. The man's as fervent an ideologue as anyone writing on the far-left of the ideological spectrum, at outlets such as Rolling Stone or the Nation, to say nothing of the Jacobin or the New Left Review. In any of these examples, you're going to get partisan advocacy rather than scholarship. Unfortunately in Livingston's case his agenda is to disguise radical libertarian screeds under the nominal institutional respectability of a scholarly think tank.

Finally, as noted above, all this debate on the origins and ideologies of the Confederacy distracts from the fact of the matter: the post-Civil War regime of racial segregation, oppression, and terrorism was a product and foundation of the Democrat Party. I mean jeez, President Wilson showcased "Birth of a Nation" at the White House and President Lyndon Johnson bragged, upon passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, that he'd have them "niggers" voting Democratic for the next 200 years.

And as I've pointed out in a number of posts this past couple of days, the Democrats did not abandon their racist ideologies after the 1960s. Indeed, as recently as 2008 the Clinton-Gore campaign trafficked in all kinds of Southern segregationist sentiments and Confederate Flag sensibilities. Hillary Clinton, in fact, still has much for which to answer (see, "Hillary Clinton’s History With the Confederate Flag").

I doubt that I'll have much success in changing Stogie's mind about things with this essay. I understand the cultural heritage argument, and as I've said, I respect it. And in fact, I've been learning a lot from Stogie these last few years and I'm thankful. Writing this piece as been further edification for me, and I'm open to further information to help me refine my views. But as it is, the national GOP has read the writing on the wall and it's clear that expressions of public support for the Confederate Flag are out. In fact, it now looks as though all the recrimination over the flag is in fact a liability for the Democrats, and if Republican candidates rightly point out the Democrat Party's ugly racist history then leftists will be eating crow on all their "blame-righty" demonizations.

Until then, check back for further iterations of the discussion.

The Danger of a New Arms Race in Europe

This was bound to happen with the U.S. withdrawing leadership from international relations.

Power abhors a vacuum, and it's getting filled by Russian capabilities in Europe. Sooner or later the stress of conflict will reach a boiling point. Putin will continue to grab territory to the west, or the European states will stand up to Russian expansionism. Logically, strategic arms will be implicated because Moscow's been saber-rattling its nuclear capabilities.

At Der Spiegel, "Cold War Resurgent: US Nukes Could Soon Return to Europe":
Washington is once again talking about stationing nuclear warheads in Europe. Russia, too, is turning up the rhetoric. Europeans are concerned about becoming caught in the middle of a new Cold War.

It's been more than three decades since the vast peace protests took over Bonn's Hofgarten meadow in the early 1980s. Back then, about half a million protesters pushed their way into the city center, a kilometer-long mass of people moving through the streets. It was the biggest rally in the history of the German Federal Republic.

Today, the situation isn't quite that fraught, but it seems feasible that a similar scene may soon play out in front of the Chancellery in Berlin. For some time now, the Americans have once again been thinking about upgrading Europe's nuclear arsenal, and in the past week, a rhetorical arms race has begun that is reminiscent of the coldest periods of the Cold War.
Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier warned of an "accelerating spiral of escalating words and then of actions." He described them as "the old reflexes of the Cold War."

Berlin is concerned that Europe could once again become the setting of a new East-West confrontation -- and that Germany might once again become a deployment zone. A source in the Defense Ministry suggested that "more (military) equipment may once again be stockpiled in Germany." Washington plans to station tanks, weapons and heavy equipment for 5,000 soldiers in Germany and the eastern NATO countries. US President Barack Obama hopes that doing so will soothe the fears of the Baltic States and countries in Eastern Europe, which, since the Ukraine crisis, are once again fearful of Russian aggression. He also hopes to quiet his critics in US Congress.

For German Chancellor Angela Merkel, this prospect is not a pleasant one. She shies away from publicly criticizing her American allies, but Merkel is loathe to do anything that might heat up the conflict with Moscow. Furthermore, a new debate on rearmament would hardly be winnable on a domestic front. The chancellor would potentially look like a puppet of the United States, one who not only allows herself to be spied on, but who also stands by as her carefully established link to Putin is damaged.
Keep reading.