Originally Posted by Damn Yankee
When my son was in 10th grade we were talking about the history of civil rights. He had learned the the Republican Party was the champion of civil rights from their inception and the Democrat Party supported slavery and segregation, but sometime in the 1960's the two parties "switched". I've heard this revisionist view of history before, so I asked him a simple question: does that make sense to you? I mean, my parents and my grandparents are all Republicans, and they instilled on me their values, and I've instilled my values to you. Its obvious that these values have been passed down through the generations. I can see how one person in that line, or even a group, might rebel against those values and "switch", but does it make sense for 1/2 the country to all do it, all at the same time?
He realized that he'd been lied to by the education system and became an even better student.
BULLSHIT
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/When_did_republicans_become_democrats_and_democrats_became_republicans
".....
But for the full answer, the entire period of US history from before the Civil War up to the present day must be examined, because the roots of this seeming paradox reach much more deeply into the American consciousness than merely to the struggles of the Progressive Era or the post-1960 Southern Strategy of the Republican Party-- which in reality were the middle and end stages of a much longer political and econmic process.
Because, until recently, mid-westerners had never expressed the same degree of general hatred associated with the culture of violence, entrenched in racism, which raged historically and now rages openly again across significant populations in the South, and is spreading elsewhere. True, the increasing exploitation of illegal Latin American labor to drive down wages at all levels of the American economy by the corporatocracy has successfully been cloaked during the last two decades through fanning the flames of an increasing resentment among the increasingly impoverished remnants of the American working and middle classes into a smokescreen of racist resentment towards illegals by many in the hardest-hit manufacturing and agricultural areas outside the south, diverting attention away from the CEO class which has, over the last several decades, sold the entire nation down the river-- legal citizen and illegal immigrant alike-- to the bottomless pit of economic expropriation and servitude in the bowels of the Global Economy.
So it is easy to see how, in light of all these twists and turns, one might lose sight of an ironic, but extremely important fact-- that the only reason Kansas and the other formerly anti-Confederate Red states west of the Mississippi embrace southern Republicans today and repeatedly vote with them against their own economic interests is because of the legacy of Abe Lincoln himself, the Civil War that was fought to overturn his election, the growing effects of lingering myths and active historical revisionism on the part of the neo-Confederate movement, and what I call the 'Great American Political Flip-Flop-- How Republicans became Democrats, and Democrats became Republicans'.
This is how it happened: The Catholic church and the feudal Lords had an iron lock on a gravy train in Europe for 1000 years before the Protestant Reformation brought the entire process to a crisis. The Crusades, The Inquisition, and bloody religious conflicts like The Thirty Years War had cost hundreds of thousands of lives across Europe and vast sums of gold. The radical Protestants rejected kings as well as bishops, and when the kings and bishops figured out they couldn't burn them all at the stake and couldn't torture them all into submission they launched programs which sent the most troublesome of them to the recently discovered 'New World' to burn off all that energy in cutting down forests, planting settlements, and fighting Indians-- leaving the lords of church and state in control of old Europe, where they would remain in one degree of power or another until two world wars brought about by that very system crushed the entire continent and much of the world under the weight of its own contradictions in the first half of the 20th century.
In Anglo-Saxon America, two paths were hewn from the land. In the North, where the rocky ground and temperate climate were not conducive to large plantations and slavery anyway, and where by historical accident and poor navigation the anti-hierarchical Puritans and Pilgrims had first landed, many small farms and towns began to spread through the wilderness of New England. These Puritan and Presbyterian "Yankees" with their Calvinist work ethic (and consumption ethic as well) believed that every Christian man was equal before God (which excepted of course the heathen Indians). If Man didn't need a priest/pope to make faith work, then why did he need a king/lord to make politics work?
The New Englanders established independent, non-centralized churches, where preachers were elected by the congregations, and where in principle every believer had just as much say as any other, with the Bible as final arbiter of truth. In the South, settled by less radical folks more interested in riches than religious freedom, the centralized, hierarchical Anglican/Episcopalian/Catholic churches retained great power in different regions and wielded strong influence. Most southern colonies had 'state' churches in fact, which had to be conformed to-- unlike Rhode Island and Pennsylvania for instance, and it is no coincidence that nearly all Red state, Republican-supporting, authoritarian/fundamentalist, establishmentarian/Dominionist televangelists speak their Christian heresies and Constitutional contradictions with pronounced southern accents to this very day.
Essentially, the New World at this time was reiterating-- along sectional lines, North and South-- the same struggle that had consumed the larger part of the 17th century in England between the Republican Commonwealth of the Puritan "Roundheads" led by Oliver Cromwell and the Anglican/Catholic Monarchists, or "Cavaliers" who supported re-establishing the Stuart line on the throne-- or what amounted in both lands to the playing out of the death throes of feudalism, and the birth pangs or first, faltering steps of the modern age and elected, representative democracy. In England, of course, the Monarchists won, but the power of Parliament was greatly increased, so that following the Glorious Revolution of 1688 subsequent British monarchs were said to reign, but not rule. And the Church of England became once again the official state religion of the British Empire, where it still remains today.
Radical Protestantism survived in full health in New England however, where near constant upheavals and splits over old and new doctrines roiled the churches with new denominations appearing and disappearing through the years. Nevertheless these core ideas of religious freedom gradually translated into political and economic thought as well. Officials, Magistrates and militia leaders were elected in the North, and a broad and deep class of free farmers, small business owners, and artisans grew there and thrived. Schools and other infrastructure were built and maintained with fair and equitable taxes-- including on the wealthy, who were reminded of Christ's command to "render unto Caesar what is Caesar's and unto God what is God's"-- in line with putting into practice the English concept of the Commonwealth, wherein "common" wealth was used for the "common" good-- defense, general welfare, education, transportation-- with political power in the hands of the "common" man who mostly makes the wealth with his hands, not just for the aristocrats who extract it from those hands and own it in their banks or in their estates.
In the South, the pattern of Old World feudalism quickly began to take root instead. A small minority of hereditary, landed Lords owned most of the land, just like in Europe, and political and economic power there was manifested through land-- and slaves. The planter-class aristocracy used slaves to clear and work the land, just like the European aristocracy used serfs. They built huge, castle-like mansions and manor houses to live in, just like European aristocrats. They ruled the land like a House of Lords, desiring to live like the dukes, barons, counts and even kings back in jolly old Europe. But whereas even Medieval serfs had some standing at law, as well as being protected to some degree by the church, and were often allowed to claim their freedom if they could escape their lord for a year and a day-- this Southern feudalism used chattel slavery instead, where humans were considered mere property, devoid of souls, and relentlessly hunted down with no statute of limitations on their crime of being human property, as the Dred Scott decision by the US Supreme Court proved beyond a shadow of a doubt in 1857, a mere four years before the outbreak of the Civil War.
This Planter class opposed taxes as an article of faith, laughing at those who advocated education for the dirty and filthy poor-- white or black-- or even roads, railroads, canals, hospitals, or public schools and universities for that matter. They shunned industrial production, and marginalized the small farmer and businessman who were barely able to eke out an existence. If they could get their slave-processed agricultural commodities to the nearest river, they could make obscene amounts of money selling them to urbanizing, industrializing Europe and New England. That is all that mattered (forget common-wealth-- it was all "theirs", just as it is today). So the South lagged behind the North in every way-- in infrastructure, technology, education, and freedom-- just as the entire nation is now lagging behind the rest of the industrialized democracies of the world today. This lagging would cost the short-sighted rebels dearly under the harsh conditions of attrition which were to characterize the coming Civil War, and it is costing our entire nation dearly today-- in fact may lead to the extinction of our form of government if something is not done to change the direction in which we are once again heading.
Our modern Red/Blue states are living, ideological fossils of that by-gone age. Color the Red states east of the Mississippi grey instead, and you have nearly redrawn the battle lines from the Civil War-- Union blue vs. Rebel grey. This is no mere coincidence or historical accident. In many ways, we are still fighting that war in our politics today. Certainly, it is clear now that the South never truly gave up, in spite of Lee surrendering his sword at Appomattox, though their antiquated aristocratic system had been soundly trounced by armies of free farmers, shop keepers, artisans and an industrial working class representing the advancing and superior infrastructural engines of the North.
Indeed, instead of conceding defeat when it was dealt to them, many in the south spread whispers of the 'stab in the back' or 'the noble, lost cause', attempting by any and all means to blame their loss on anything but the superior economic, political and cultural realities in the North. The Yankees had been the aggressors, they cried. They had invaded their sovereign lands in a gentleman's squabble over tariffs and state's rights; according to these latter-day apologists the war had nothing to do with slavery, in spite of overwhelming evidence to the contrary, including these following words, spoken by the future president of the Confederate States of America, on the floor of the US Senate, just one year before the outbreak of war:
"The condition of slavery with us is, in a word, Mr. President, nothing but the form of civil government instituted for a class of people not fit to govern themselves. It is exactly what in every State exists in some form or other. It is just that kind of control which is extended in every northern State over its convicts, its lunatics, its minors, its apprentices. It is but a form of civil government for those who by their nature are not fit to govern themselves. We recognize the fact of the inferiority stamped upon that race of men by the Creator, and from the cradle to the grave, our Government, as a civil institution, marks that inferiority." (US Senator Jefferson Davis, February 29, 1860)
And, in spite of all propaganda to the contrary, that the war had nothing to do with racism or slavery but everything to do with state's rights and tariffs, less than a decade following the end of the war, as the national will to continue to spend money on Reconstruction in the south wavered, and as soon as federal troops began to be withdrawn accross the region southern racists launched the bloody era of night-riding terror, such as was most notoriously characterized by the Ku Klux Klan (organized by pardoned rebel general Nathan B. Forest). Disguising their identities behind sheets and hoods to terrorize the black population into submission, using fire and the rope to take out on them their rage at having lost the war, members of such organizations set about systematically denying blacks access to economic opportunity and such civil rights as one man one vote, reducing the population nearly again to the status of slaves, and perfecting the process of regularly stealing elections in order to regain and retain local and state power so that they could operate their deviant schemes with impunity for more than a century after their defeat in the Civil War.
While most victorious nations would have seen a good number of such rebel officers shot and a similar percentage of such rebel politicians hanged for treason-- in 1865 this was not Abraham Lincoln's way. Preaching malice towards none, he commanded that the defeated rebels be not molested and instead offered full forgiveness to all, allowing them to return to their homes, encouraging the nation to forgive and begin to heal-- but a conspiratorial circle of assassins left him mortally wounded in treacherous repayment, shooting him to death from behind in Ford's Theater under cover of darkness. And with his death so was his hand removed from the rudder of the ship of peace which emerged from the horrific storm through which he had guided the nation, a peace which he should have overseen and implemented, as he had overseen and implemented the war. Who knows what this nation lost by that dastardly and cowardly deed, what he might have accomplished in his second, third, and fourth terms? Yet with their many treasons forgiven, their right to vote returned, and along with these things the right to hold office, thousands of unrepentant and still racist southerners traitors set, with bloody hands, about re-gaining political and economic power with one ultimate goal in mind-- the replacement of chattel slavery with American apartheid.
Through the spread of Jim Crow laws, the systematization of poverty, the nurturing of ignorance and superstition, and the on-going use of racial terror, the South was all but returned to the social system as it had been before the war. Freed slaves-- their hoped for promise of 40 acres and a mule having been denied-- were returned instead into poverty-stricken share croppers, stripped of the right to vote or even travel, in a region so historically dependent on their unpaid labor for the creation of wealth that it wallowed in backwardness without it for generations, never again able to return to antebellum glory. But like some insidious parasite, these un-reconstructed rebels merely bored into the flesh of the nation-- and waited.
In the North after the Civil War, under Lincoln's successors in the Republican Party-- a party which had been derided as consisting of "filthy operatives (factory workers), greasy mechanics, tight-fisted farmers, and moon-struck theorists" by a southern demagogue in 1860 (McPherson, 'Battle Cry of Freedom')-- the rise of industry, surging immigration, technological innovation, and the opening of the west to agriculture and mining led to unprecedented wealth creation, urban growth, and upward mobility. But there was a dark side. Union war heroes-- like Sheridan and Custer-- had almost immediately been sent west, and employing the well-honed tactics and industrially-produced weaponry of mass destruction developed over the course of history's first Industrial Total War, began "pacification" programs against the Commanche, Kiowa, Plains Apache, Cheyenne, and Sioux. For the most part, this meant either wiping them out or driving them onto useless tracts of land called reservations-- that is, until something useful was found there, and then someplace even more useless would have to be proferred, with the ratifying "treaty" dangling from the barrel of a gun.
As is usually the case with history's greatest crimes, most of the blood and gore spilled in this relentless process fell away from center stage, in rugged canyons and along the banks of lonely rivers and streams, the old and weak falling on forced marches, or killed by the policies of scorched earth, out of sight and so out of mind. That it mirrored what Britain and Belgium were doing at the same time in Africa, or the French in Indochina, or the Russians in central Asia does not excuse it, but merely contextualizes it. In any case, the vast prairies and mountains of the North American west-- gradually swept empty of man and beast by this inhuman, post Civil War extermination program-- soon lured hundreds of thousands of Union veterans and immigrants from Europe-- who mostly took up the plow-- onto the central plains, while Confederate veterans who first went to Texas and New Mexico, then later to Colorado, Wyoming and Montana mostly took up the lariat and clothing of the Mexican vaquero, pushing cattle north or south to railheads in Kansas, sometimes combining the attitude of vengeful rebel with that of the pistolero/bandito in such outlaw manifestations as the James Gang, among others.
It would require an entire history unto itself to document how the largely pro-Union Republican sodbusters fought the largely pro-Confederate Democratic cowboys along barbed-wire fence lines and in the streets and saloons of rail head towns and frontier outposts from Tombstone in the far west to Dodge City, Abilene and Wichita in Kansas, to a large extent carrying on the Civil War for decades after it had officially ended. It is useful to remember that this was actually the case, for it plays a pivotal role in understanding why to this day those farming/ranching states of the Great Plains and Mountain West remain Republican while their Union brethren above the Mason Dixon line east of the Mississippi have become Democrats, such that their descendants now find themselves in political bed with the descendants of the sworn ancestral enemy. Suffice it to note the further ironic fact that both Republican homesteader and Democratic free grazer took root on land which Lincoln's federalist vision had led him to appropriate, and they shipped their products over railroads which he had facilitated building for that purpose, utilizing the latest scientific research collected and made available by his US Department of Agriculture and growing R&D infrastructure-- eventually sending their children to various Land Grant colleges which he had the foresight to sign into existence:
"without excluding other scientific and classical studies and including military tactic, to teach such branches of learning as are related to agriculture and the mechanic arts, in such manner as the legislatures of the States may respectively prescribe, in order to promote the liberal and practical education of the industrial classes in the several pursuits and professions in life." (Morrill Land-Grant College Act, 1862)
That Lincoln had been willing to launch such massive national programs as these at all during such a desperate, blood-drenched war for the very survival of the Union, the outcome of which was by no means certain at any time, leaves little doubt that these expensive, federally-funded initiatives represented his second line of defense after the actual military campaigns of the war themselves-- in effect an economic second front to guard against any possibility of an economic and cultural victory for the rule of an aristocratic "few" over the democratic "many" in his dreamed-of post-war America. By spreading economic AND political power in the hands of millions of everyday American farmers, workers, and shopkeepers (and providing educational opportunities for their children) instead funneling the bulk of the nation's wealth and power into the hands of a handful of hereditary lords, Lincoln hoped that his beloved Union might have the opportunity to enjoy his much hoped for "rebirth of freedom" after victory over its internal enemies and historical contradictions had once and for all been achieved through so much blood and sorrow.
His willingness to expend such huge quantities not only of mortal flesh, but also of precious capital at such a time is overwhelming evidence of Lincoln's belief that there was no other way to give hope to his dream that, "government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth". He did not envision a corporatocracy to rule his beloved Union, though one unfortunately came to pass with his assassination. Nor did he envision the creation of a cradle-to-grave nanny state of bloated bureaucracies and entitlements-- though his hand had signed into existence the United States Department of Agriculture. Most certainly he did not envision an Orwellian police state-- for if he had the door to his balcony compartment at Ford's Theater would have certainly been better guarded on the night of April 14, 1865. No, he was adamant up to that bloody end in his support for a Union made strong and free by an environment of liberty and prosperity which he was convinced would always flow from America's rugged, hard-working common folk (for he was one), small farms (for he had grown up on them), small businesses (for he had run them as a young attorney), and small towns (for he had lived in them most of his life).
Lincoln was convinced, as Jefferson had been before him, that such rural/agricultural environments alone are capable of forging the kinds of men and women with the character a nation needs if conditions are to remain such that self-government "can long endure". A nation "so conceived and so dedicated" requires not the "bad morals" and "bad economics" of "heedless self-interest" (Franklin Delanor Roosevelt), but people willing to give "their lives that that nation might live", and who will pour out "the last full measure of devotion" to its ideals, as so many hundreds of thousands of Union soldiers-- and Lincoln himself-- ultimately did in that Civil War. Furthermore, his domestic policies were clear evidence of his conviction that an educated, well-informed citizenry-- and the institutions which they build and nurture, and which build and nurture them in turn-- must always form the backbone of our free and Constitutional state and produce leaders like himself who need never erect barriers-- either of economic class or military cordon-- between themselves and those in whose names they govern.
Part I. , con't.